Academic literature on the topic 'Poésie – Collections'

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Journal articles on the topic "Poésie – Collections"

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Hagen, Lorrie EM, Tal Schechter, Adam Gassas, and John J. Doyle. "High Alpha-1 Antitrypsin Clearance Predicts Severity of Gut Graft Versus Host Disease (GVHD) In Children." Blood 116, no. 21 (November 19, 2010): 1242. http://dx.doi.org/10.1182/blood.v116.21.1242.1242.

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Abstract Abstract 1242 The clinical evaluation and management of gut GVHD is a significant challenge in pediatric hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). It is often difficult to obtain pathological evidence to confirm the GVHD diagnosis and/or determine response to treatment. The severity of the disease itself may not just be related to the associated classic symptoms. Our objective herein was to prospectively study the effect of gut GVHD on protein losing enteropathy (PLE) as measured by alpha-1 antitrypsin clearance (AATC) in stools. Thirteen patients who were diagnosed with gut GVHD by clinical criteria were recruited; 5 patients were excluded as 4 had gut GVHD ruled out by biopsy and 1 was unable to complete study due to stool collection issues. Therefore, 8 patients; 6 males and 2 females, were studied. The median age was 9.5 years (range 6–17). Diagnoses included ALL (4), AML (2), Lymphoma (1) and Adrenoleukodystrophy (1). Donor types were; 7 unrelated (BM n=4 and cord n=3) one matched related BM donor. All patients received cyclosporine for GVHD prophylaxis, in addition 4 patients also received methotrexate and 3 others received prednisone as the second agent. All patients had negative stool EM for viruses and cultures for C.difficile on their first collection. Two 24 hour stool collections were taken from each patient at a mean of 8.5d (range 7–13d) apart. Patients’ gut GVHD staging is summarized in Table 1.Table 1:Summary of Stage gut GVHD and PLEPatientsAATC Median(range)normal = <22Stool outputml/kg/d Median(range)Stage of gutGVHD (n=)# with PLECollection #1831 (3-339)28 (10-109)Stg 1 (2) 4/8Stg 2 (3)Stg 3 (1)Stg 4 (2)Collection #2856 (8-561)19 (0-85) Stg 1 (0) 5/8Stg 2 (0)Stg 3 (3)Stg 4 (1) At the time of 1st collection, 6 patients had ≥ stage II gut GVHD and at 2nd collection 4 patients had ≥stage II gut GVHD and 4 collections were of non-diarrheal stool. A total of 7 stool collections were taken at a diagnosis of ≥stage III gut GVHD. Mean alpha-1 antitrypsin clearance (AATC) from all 16 collections was 143 mls/day (range 3–561), levels >22 mls/day indicate the diagnosis of protein-losing enteropathy (PLE). Nine of the collections (56%) showed PLE with a mean AATC of 247mls/day (range 31–561). Six out of the 7 samples from patients with ≥stage III gut GVHD were positive for PLE. Five collections with stool volumes >30 ml/kg/day were positive for PLE. Stool volumes were significantly higher on second collection (Wilcoxon signed ranks test, p = 0.003) consistent with the second stool collections being significantly more likely to have an elevated AATC, therefore more severe PLE over time (p<0.001). We conclude that a highly significant positive correlation exists between the severity of PLE and the stage of gut GVHD, particularly obvious in patients with stage 3–4 GVHD (ANOVA, p=0.015). See Table 2.Table 2:Stage of gut GVHD and AATCStage ofGVHDNumber ofcollectionsMeanAATCStd.Deviation0426.0020.801217.0019.802384.67136.2934171.50176.2143406.33134.32 When patients were grouped as stage 0–2 GVHD vs. stage 3–4 GVHD, those with stage 3–4 GVHD had significantly higher AATC values (p =0.02). Despite the small number of patients recruited, this study emphasizes the need to consider PLE as a useful aspect of the clinical picture. We suggest that in order to see a response to therapy and therefore a decrease in AATC, clinicians should not repeat stool collections before 2 weeks from the initiation of therapy. In light of the significant morbidity and mortality associated with grade 3 and 4 gut GVHD, and as an important therapeutic decision for these patients, one may consider escalating GVHD therapy if a patient's AATC is rising. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.
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Faisal Bakti and Rezi Ariawan. "DEVELOPMENT OF MATHEMATICAL LEARNING DEVICES BASED ON THE POE (PREDICTION, OBSERVATION, EXPLANATION) MODEL IN THE MATERIAL OF CONSTRUCTING FLAT SIDE SPACES." Mathematics Research and Education Journal 5, no. 1 (February 28, 2021): 14–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.25299/mrej.2021.vol5(1).9208.

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Mathematical creative thinking is the ability to produce varied answers or ideas to solve problems in mathematics. This study aims to build a valid learning device on flat-sided geometry using the POE model (Prediction, Observation, Explanation). The learning tools developed were syllabus, lesson plans, and LKPD on the flat side space building material. This type of research is development research with the ADDIE model, modified into three stages (Analysis, Design dan Development) without the implementation and evaluation stages. The research data collection instrument was a learning device validation sheet in a syllabus, lesson plans, and LKPD. Analysis of the data used is descriptive data analysis that describes the level of validity of the product. This study yielded a valid syllabus, lesson plans, and LKPD with 83.65%, 87.86%, and 86.31%, respectively. This study concludes that the Development of mathematical learning tools based on the POE model on the flat-sided geometry material has been tested for validity
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Ismayanti, Ismayanti, Indayana Febriani Tanjung, and Khairuddin Khairuddin. "The Effect Of Predict-Observe-Explain (POE) Learning Model On Students' Science Process Skills Biology In MTs Aisyiyah Binjai." Journal Of Education And Teaching Learning (JETL) 4, no. 1 (February 27, 2022): 25–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.51178/jetl.v4i1.441.

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This study aims to determine the effect of the Predict-Observe-Explain (POE) learning model on science process skills in biology learning. This research was conducted at MTs Aisyiyah Binjai in the academic year 2020/2021, and this research was conducted at the end of May to June 2021. The type of research carried out was descriptive quantitative research. In sampling the researchers took two classes, namely the experimental class with 32 students using the Predict-Observe-Explain (POE) learning model and the control class with 32 students. The research method was carried out by preparing research instruments, namely observation sheets and student worksheets, validating instruments with 2 validators, namely North Sumatra State Islamic University lecturers and data collection was carried out by direct observation using observation sheet guidelines to see students' science process skills. The population in this study were all biology students of class VIII MTs Aisyiyah Binjai. Based on the research conducted, it shows the influence of students' science process skills using the Predict-Observe-Explain (POE) learning model. Judging from the results of data processing science process skills students in the experimental class with a percentage of 74% while in the control class with a percentage of only 41%. So that the KPS value of students in the experimental class is higher than the control class.
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Thorn, Annelise, Kelly Gordon, Barry Tong, Daniel H. Kwon, Mallika Sachdev Dhawan, Hala Borno, Rahul Raj Aggarwal, Eric Jay Small, and Amie Blanco. "Disparities in germline testing by race/ethnicity and preferred language in patients with prostate cancer." Journal of Clinical Oncology 41, no. 6_suppl (February 20, 2023): 112. http://dx.doi.org/10.1200/jco.2023.41.6_suppl.112.

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112 Background: A remote Genetic Testing Station (GTS) workflow was implemented at an academic medical institution to expand access to genetic testing for patients with prostate cancer. During a telephone appointment, a genetic counselor assistant collects family history and facilitates genetics education, research consent, and remote sample collection for multi-gene panel testing. We compared testing completion and patient loss from workflow based on race/ethnicity and preferred language to identify disparities. Methods: Metrics were collected prospectively and analyzed retrospectively for patients with metastatic or high-grade prostate cancer referred to genetics between 3/15/2020 – 6/30/2022. Self-reported race, ethnicity, and preferred language were collected by chart review. Testing completion was compared between groups using Fisher’s exact test, with White non-Hispanic (WNH) and Preferred Language English (PLE) cohorts as controls. Odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals were reported. Patient loss at workflow checkpoints (scheduling, consenting, sample collection, and results release) was summarized for each group. Results: 827 eligible patients were identified: 78 (9%) Asian /Pacific Islander (API), 51 (6%) Black non-Hispanic (BNH), 42 (5%) Hispanic, and 625 (76%) WNH. 31 patients reporting other non-Hispanic race were not included in the analysis. 30 patients (4%) self-reported Preferred Language non-English (PLNE) and 797 (96%) PLE. BNH patients were significantly less likely to complete testing compared to WNH patients (OR 0.320, 95%CI: 0.168, 0.632, p<0.001). There was no difference in testing completion in API (OR 0.918, 95%CI: 0.467, 1.944, p=0.797) or Hispanic (OR 0.743, 95%CI: 0.325, 1.918, p=0.466) compared to WNH patients. PLNE were significantly less likely to complete testing (OR 0.393, 95%CI: 0.171, 0.965, p=0.016) compared to PLE patients. Patient loss occurred primarily at consenting and sample collection. 14% of BNH, and 9% of Hispanic patients did not consent, compared to 4% of WNH. 17% of PLNE did not consent compared to 5% of PLE patients. 13% of BNH did not return a sample, compared to 3% of WNH patients. Conclusions: In remote GTS, BNH and PLNE patients were significantly less likely to complete germline testing than WNH and PLE patients respectively. Disparities in patient loss were most pronounced at consenting and sample collection. Measures to mitigate disparities include assisted consenting (with interpreter as needed) and video-assisted or in-clinic sample collection. [Table: see text]
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Azad, Farhan, Ajay Siva, Prutha Patel, Clive Miranda, and Matthew Gravina. "Abstract PO2-20-12: Breast Implant-associated Squamous Cell Carcinoma." Cancer Research 84, no. 9_Supplement (May 2, 2024): PO2–20–12—PO2–20–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1538-7445.sabcs23-po2-20-12.

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Abstract A 54-year-old female with a history of bilateral breast implants presented with intermittent left breast pain for 6 months. She first had bilateral breast implants placed in 1996 and had no reported issues until 2010, when she had bacteremia and seeding infection with subsequent removal of both implants. She then had a second set of silicone-based implants placed in 2012 with no issues for 10 years. Family history was negative for breast cancer or any other malignancy. She had no prior smoking history. Vital signs and laboratory values were unremarkable. On exam, the left breast appeared larger than the right, dense, thickened, and slightly edematous. No lymphadenopathy was palpated. Both mammogram and ultrasound of bilateral breasts, done at the onset of her pain, were normal. Given the patient’s symptoms, an MRI of the breasts was done, with findings concerning an infection or lymphoma. It revealed an irregular fluid collection in the left breast. The fluid collection was rim-enhancing with frond-like areas of enhancing tissue, extending through the inferior aspect of the capsule into the subcutaneous tissue of the lower outer quadrant of the left breast. Enhancement and edema extended off of the superior and posterior aspect of the prosthesis into the pectoralis muscle. It was particularly prominent along the medial aspect of the prosthesis where it extended in the chest wall between the sternum and the costal cartilage. There were 3 mildly enlarged left intramammary lymph nodes measuring up to 7 mm in short axis, with diffuse edema seen within the breast. No axillary adenopathy was seen in the MRI. She was referred to surgery and had both right and left breast implants removed, and a left breast JP drain was placed. The pathology from the left breast capsule excision revealed squamous cell carcinoma, well-differentiated and invasive, associated with a scar and extending to the surgical margin. She was diagnosed with a rare case of breast implant-associated squamous cell carcinoma (BIA-SCC). Subsequent staging imaging showed postsurgical inflammatory changes with no nodal metastatic disease. She continued to follow up outpatient with plans of multidisciplinary meeting to discuss long-term treatment options. Most patients undergoing breast augmentation experience no serious complications. Previously, rare incidences of breast-implant-associated anaplastic large cell lymphoma (BIA-ALCL) had been reported, with 1234 cases as of 2022. More recently, cases of BIA-SCC have been seen. Primary SCC of the breast is extremely rare in both augmented and non-augmented women. 19 cases of BIA-SCC are reported in the literature as of 2022, all seen in females, typically arising from capsular tissue around the breast implant. It is a rare and potentially aggressive malignancy, with unclear etiology and undefined therapy regimen due to a paucity of data. Suggested treatments include resection with a negative margin, although this could require an extensive and complex reconstruction, including plastic surgery soft tissue coverage of the resection defect. Definitive radiation to obtain local control can be considered in an organ-sparing approach. Consideration can also be given to either chemosensitization with agents such as cisplatin or combining radiation with immunotherapy. Citation Format: Farhan Azad, Ajay Siva, Prutha Patel, Clive Miranda, Matthew Gravina. Breast Implant-associated Squamous Cell Carcinoma [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 2023 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium; 2023 Dec 5-9; San Antonio, TX. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2024;84(9 Suppl):Abstract nr PO2-20-12.
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Kasmel, Jaan, and Tiiu Kasmel. "On the background to Karin Mark’s monograph "Finno-Ugric Peoples Physical Anthropology" (2014)." Papers on Anthropology 25, no. 2 (December 21, 2016): 15. http://dx.doi.org/10.12697/poa.2016.25.2.02.

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This article describes how Karin Mark’s (1922–1999) monograph Physical Anthropology of Finno-Ugric Peoples, a bulky and beautifully designed book, (Tallinn: Academy of Sciences Press and Institute of History, Tallinn University, 2014, 542 pp.), reached publication.For better understanding of the background, short summaries are given of the research activities of three major Estonian anthropologists – Prof. Juhan Aul, Karin Mark and Leiu Heapost.When analysing the materials collected from 1955–1976 and preparing her life’s work for print as Origin of Finno-Ugric Peoples According to Anthropological Data, K. Mark passed away, and the book was unfinished. Only the unique collections of materials and manuscripts based on their analysis remained.Based on these, Leiu Heapost began to compile, enlarge and edit K. Mark’s monograph that by today has been published under the new title. Why did L. Heapost decide to do it, what were her aims, by which principles was she guided, where did she consider it necessary to make corrections and additions, etc.? Answers to all of this can be found in the materials L. Heapost included in the monograph compiled by her.It is certain that the unique materials collected by K. Mark and published 15 years after her death open new prospects for researchers for further indepth studies of the theme.
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Nurhaliza, Nurhaliza, Laila Maharani, and Rizki Wahyu Yunian Putra. "Development Of Module Teaching Materials With Predict - Oberve - Explain (POE) Models Based On Gamification On Triangle Materials." Mathematics Education Journal 3, no. 2 (January 22, 2020): 100. http://dx.doi.org/10.22219/mej.v3i2.11051.

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The learning process is certainly not only limited to the increase in students' knowledge or cognitive abilities, but also includes better behavior and thinking abilities, and no less important is how the learning process makes students able to solve problems faced both in learning in school, as well as in the daily life they experience. The development of ICT technology has had an impact on the development of the games industry, which makes educators more creative in designing their learning processes. Some game designers have studied deeper about psychology or other sciences that study human motivation and behavior. The method in this research is research and development (R&D) with the ADDIE development model. Data collection instruments used were questionnaires given to material experts and media experts to find out the feasibility of the product, and given to students and educators, to find out the attractiveness of the products that have been developed as well as pretest and posttest test instruments. Based on the analysis of data obtained from material experts and media experts, it was stated that the teaching materials developed were feasible to be used, and the analysis of the data obtained from students and educators stated that the teaching materials developed were very interesting. The results of the analysis of the effectiveness of class data applied teaching material obtained and calculated with the formula Effect Size obtained is . E_s calculation results are then interpreted to see the effectiveness criteria, the magnitude of , which is in the range of , based on the category determined by the level of effectiveness of the magnitude of the class applied to learning using module teaching materials with the Predict - Oberve learning model - Explain (POE) based on gamification on the material of SMP triangles is categorized quite effective with a classification classified as medium.
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Rahmat, Roni Eka, and Hansi Effendi. "Penerapan Metode Pembelajaran Berbasis Information and Communication Technology pada Mata Pelajaran Pekerjaan Dasar Elektromekanik." Jurnal Pendidikan Teknik Elektro 1, no. 1 (September 25, 2020): 12–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.24036/jpte.v1i1.5.

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The role of the teacher as a learning center in transferring the learning material that is still using the lecture method and abstract will have an impact on the students' lack of activity in the teaching and learning process so that it causes to the student learning outcomes to be under of the minimum completeness criteria. It encourages the researcher to do research about the application of ICT-based learning methods on PDE subjects at SMK Muhammadiyah in Padang. This study used the pre-experimental method with the design of one group pretest-posttest and the subject used was class X TITLA as an experimental class. The data collection used the test instruments in the form of objective questions with the number of questions as many as 20 questions. The data were analyzed using classical completeness and effect size to see the magnitude of the application effect of ICT-based learning methods. Based on the result of the study, the average value of the pretest obtained was 58.83 and the average value of the posttest reached 85.17. The result showed that there was an increase in student learning outcomes after the implementation of ICT-based methods on PDE subjects in class X TITLA SMK Muhammadiyah Padang. The calculation of the data with the effect size was obtained 2.375 with the percentage of the classical completeness of learning was 90%. Thus, the application of the ICT-based learning method was effectively applied to the class X TITLA PDE subjects at SMK Muhammadiyah 1 Padang.
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Benjamin-Ohwodede, Jacinta, Adekunle Mamudu, and Simeon Nyemike Awunor. "The Effectiveness of Hybrid Learning in English Pronunciation Pedagogy in the Nigerian ESL Context." JELITA 5, no. 1 (February 26, 2024): 81–103. http://dx.doi.org/10.56185/jelita.v5i1.550.

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This paper is a study on the effectiveness of hybrid learning; a blend of traditional and technology-based training, vis-à-vis the second language (L2) learner of English pronunciation. Specifically, our motivation is centred on the functionality of combining the habitual classroom teaching style with the Telegram app (a mobile-based technological tool) for studies relating to speech production and perception. The methodical procedure and design for this study is both quantitative and descriptive; employing the use of a multiple-choice questionnaire in data collection from 401 Nigerian undergraduate and postgraduate students in the University of Benin, Nigeria, to ascertain the effectiveness of digital designs and stratagems. Pie charts are employed to display multiple divisions of the study's data comparison. This study emphasizes the Online-Driver Blended Learning Model; such a pedagogical approach exposes the L2 learner to a more involved and effective way of understanding how to avoid imposing an unfamiliar accent upon the target language. Consequently, we see a merger of online practical exercises and exposure to uploaded multimodal texts and native speakers' spoken data (audio-visual recordings/voice notes) with scheduled direct classroom interludes. Findings confirm that exploiting such a hybrid model enhances students' cognitive abilities and retentive capacity regarding English pronunciation. Such digital audio-visual tools are paramount phonetic strategies for learning how to avoid unacceptable phonetic alterations. Thus, we see the effectiveness of integrating the Telegram app into the traditional brick-and-mortar educational method in handling problems associated with speech sound production and second-language phonological interference.
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ADAMS, JIMI. "Glee's McKinley High: Following Middle America's sexual taboos." Network Science 3, no. 2 (May 13, 2015): 293–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/nws.2015.16.

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Writers for popular media frequently draw on insights known about social networks in developing their plotlines and character biographies (whether in books, television, movies, etc.). Perhaps most known to network analysts in this respect, Freeman (2000) presents a collection of network concepts represented in comic strips. These depictions often are consistent with the patterns network analysts observe in real-world empirical examples. For example, the long-running sitcom Friends exhibited strong homophily (McPherson et al., 2001) or assortative mixing on race and socioeconomic status among the main characters. Other times the violation of these typical patterns can serve to generate dramatic tension or a source of comedy. For example transitivity—or the tendency of one's friends to also become friends (Holland & Leinhardt, 1972)—is absent in the movie Hush where Jessica Lange's character plots to kill the daughter-in-law she does not like. P-O-X social balance (Heider, 1948) describes the tendency for friends to share common interests, which was violated to comedic effect in the Seinfeld episode where Jerry's character simply cannot accept his date's refusal to try a taste of the pie he finds delicious, bothering him for days and ultimately leading to his ending the relationship.
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Books on the topic "Poésie – Collections"

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S, Mesmer Edric, and Copyright Paperback Collection (Library of Congress), eds. The best poems ever: A collection of poetry's greatest voices. New York: Scholastic, 2001.

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H, Lonsdale Roger, ed. The New Oxford book of eighteenth century verse. Oxford [England]: Oxford University Press, 1994.

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H, Lonsdale Roger, ed. The New Oxford book of eighteenth century verse. Oxford [England]: Oxford University Press, 1989.

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Spence, Lila A. The whirring windmills: A complete collection of poems ; &, An Iouanaloaon [sic] mermaids's tale : (a narrative poem). Burnaby, B.C: Morning Star Press, 1997.

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Ṅag-dbaṅ-chos-grags. Mkhan chen Ṅag-dbaṅ-chos-grags kyi pod chen drug gi ʼgrel pa phyogs sgrigs =: The collection works of mkyen chen Ngag-dwang-chos-grags (sic). Dist. Darjeeling, W.B: Sakya Choepheling Monastery, 2000.

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Cox, Virginia, and Shannon McHugh, eds. Vittoria Colonna. NL Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789463723947.

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This edited collection presents fresh and original work on Vittoria Colonna, perhaps the outstanding female figure of the Italian Renaissance, a leading Petrarchist poet, and an important figure in the Italian Reform movement. Until recently best known for her close spiritual friendship with Michelangelo, she is increasingly recognized as a powerful and distinctive poetic voice, a cultural and religious icon, and an important literary model for both men and women. This volume comprises compelling new research by established and emerging scholars in the fields of literature, book history, religious history, and art history, including several studies of Colonna’s influence during the Counter-Reformation, a period long neglected by Italian cultural historiography. The Colonna who emerges from this new reading is one who challenges traditional constructions of women’s place in Italian literature; no mere imitator or follower, but an innovator and founder of schools in her own right.
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Condren, Edward I. The numerical universe of the Gawain-Pearl poet: Beyond phi. Gainesvillle: University Press of Florida, 2002.

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1948-, Ferguson Margaret W., Salter Mary Jo, and Stallworthy Jon, eds. The Norton anthology of poetry. 4th ed. New York: W.W. Norton, 1996.

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The Wesleyan Tradition. Wesleyan, 1994.

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Collier, Michael. Wesleyan Tradition: Four Decades of American Poetry. Wesleyan University Press, 2012.

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Book chapters on the topic "Poésie – Collections"

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Weinberg, Gail S. "'Looking backward': opportunities for the Pre-Raphaelites to see 'pre-Raphaelite' art." In Collecting the Pre-Raphaelites, 51–64. Routledge, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429457852-5.

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Henderson, John. "Suck It and See: Horace, Epode 8." In Writing down Rome, 93–113. Oxford University PressOxford, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198150770.003.0004.

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Abstract Three chapters of this book poke into crevices of post-Republican/pre-Imperial Rome—into ‘triumviral’ poetry. Chapter 5 fast forwards to 23 and Horace’s inauguration of the Augustan principate in his chef d’oeuvre, Odes I-III; leaving lyric for the hexameters that occupy the second half of the book, Chapter 6 re-winds to the publication in the early 30s of Virgil’s first collection, the bucolic poetry of the Eclogues. In Part III, we will plunge into the revolutionary period between the coup of Julius Caesar and the installation of Caesar Augustus (49−23) once more, via a poem from Horace’s first publication, Satires I (Chapter 8), from the mid-30s. Virgil and Horace left for Roman and Western posterity a paradigm for the poet’s career (§ 20).
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Lee, A. Robert. "The Business of Poetry." In Harold Norse, 27–42. Liverpool University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781638040163.003.0004.

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How best to “see” and “hear” Norse’s poetry? Reading across the work brought together in In the Hub of the Fiery Force: Collected Poems 1934-2003, and the collections that feed into it, this chapter seeks to establish the unique pitch of Norse’s verse from the more formal early writing to the freer later compositions. Taking a point of departure from the poem “The Business of Poetry” with its celebration of “music and love” as against the ravage of “savage and brutal men,” it so addresses four main arenas: love(s) and sex, geographies, pieces given over to other poets and to visual artists, and those reflexively taken up with poetry about itself. To this end emphasis is centred on issues of fashioning, measure, rhythm, spacing, the due recognition of Norse’s command of voice. Poems like “Paper Bodies,” “I See America Daily,” “Walt Whitman Called Today” and “Why I Am a Poet” supply bearings in this respect. Much as Norse rightly commands notice for his boldness as an out gay poet, a traveller and autobiographer, a key postwar countercultural presence, he left no doubt in design and practice of his commitment to working craftsmanship. The reading at hand explores that forte.
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BURCEA, Dan. "ENTRETIENS AVEC CINQ ÉCRIVAINES ROUMAINES DE LANGUE FRANÇAISE." In Scriitori români de expresie străină. Écrivains roumains d’expression étrangère. Romanian Authors Writing in Foreign Tongues, 153–209. Pro Universitaria, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.52744/9786062613242.13.

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Cristiana Eso is a Franco-Romanian poet and artist born in Constanta, Romania and emigrated at the age of fifteen to France. After earning a master’s degree in French literature at the Faculty of Letters of Nancy, she studied classical singing at the Lorraine Conservatory. She has published several collections of poetry in Romanian or in bilingual editions and she is a member of the Writers’ Union of Romania. This chapter contains two interviews with her.
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"Muriel Rukeyser." In Writing Appalachia, edited by Katherine Ledford and Theresa Lloyd, 181–83. University Press of Kentucky, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813178790.003.0027.

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Born to a wealthy family in New York City, poet and essayist Muriel Rukeyser sought to make sense of the discrepancies she saw between the privileges of her youth, the loss of her family’s money in the Great Depression, and the difficulties faced by other families around her. Her prolific career began at the age of twenty-two when poet Stephen Vincent Benét chose her first poetry collection, ...
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Reno III, Edward A. "Gregory IX and the Liber Extra." In Pope Gregory IX (1227-1241): Power and Authority. Nieuwe Prinsengracht 89 1018 VR Amsterdam Nederland: Amsterdam University Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789463724364_ch11.

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The Liber Extra, the most widely circulated collection of medieval canon law, was commissioned by Gregory IX and assembled by the Dominican Raymond of Penyafort. Gregory IX’s bull of promulgation, Rex pacificus (1234), ordered that it would be the only collection used in the schools and in the courts and that no other collection was to be made without the special approval of the Apostolic See. It would be Gregory IX’s major contribution to the development of medieval canon law. This chapter focuses on the genesis and intentions behind the Liber Extra, the pre-Gregorian sources for the compilation, and Gregory IX’s own contribution, before offering suggestions for the path of future scholarship concerning the Liber Extra and Gregory’s own legal accomplishments.
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Fargnoli, Nicholas, and Michael Patrick Gillespie. "C." In James Joyce A To Z, 27–49. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195110296.003.0003.

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Abstract “Cahra” The title of a poem Joyce wrote in 1903, sometime after the death of his mother on 13 August. The poem was revised in 1919 and retitled “RUMINANTS.” Joyce later rewrote the poem, yet again, renaming it “TILLY,” and placed it first in his collection Pomes Penyeach (1927). Caffrey, Cissy In Ulysses, a minor character and friend of Gerty MACDOWELL and Edy BOARDMAN. In the NAUSIKAA episode (chapter 13) she appears with them on Sandymount Strand, where Leopold BLOOM is lingering after visiting Paddy DIGNAM’s widow.
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Najfonova, Fatima Tasoltanovna. "Переводы Анны Ахматовой из осетинской поэзии." In Eurasiatica. Venice: Edizioni Ca' Foscari, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.30687/978-88-6969-211-6/013.

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The article studies the history of translations of Ossetian poetry by Anna Akhmatova. It is known that Anna Akhmatova had to do translations after she had been banned to work by the official authorities. Among them are the translations of Ossetian poets, whose poems she translated for the first anthology of Ossetian literature - the collection of “Ossetian Literature.” We know that she was attracted to work on the collection by Sergey Shervinsky, one of the editors and translators. The article also notes that there are three versions of translation of Kosta Chetagurov’s poem “Who are you?” by Anna Akhmatova, and the article also addresses the issue of equivalence of the belles-lettres quality of these translations.
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Atkinson, Ted, and Jay Watson. "Natasha Trethewey’s Joe Christmas and the Reconstruction of Mississippi Nativity." In Faulkner and the Black Literatures of the Americas. University Press of Mississippi, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.14325/mississippi/9781496806345.003.0017.

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This essay references the poet Natasha Trethewey’s publicly expressed appreciation of William Faulkner’s Light in August and identification with the novel’s protagonist, Joe Christmas, to establish a point of contact between two authors with lives and literary pursuits indelibly marked by native ties to Mississippi. A focus on Trethewey’s poem “Miscegenation” opens up an examination of themes and tropes that make for a complex and dynamic intertextual exchange between her acclaimed 2006 collection, Native Guard, and Light in August. Natasha Trethewey’s Joe Christmas is a variation on the original, as she enlists one of Faulkner’s signature characters in a personal project of reclamation that draws on literature, history, and memory. Trethewey signifies Faulkner as part of an overarching effort in Native Guard to give voice to the contradictory feelings and experiences of racial trauma and survival, of recollected exclusion, and negotiated belonging that underwrite her claim to “Mississippi nativity.”
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Marcus, Jane. "The Cunard Line." In Nancy Cunard, edited by Jean Mills, 23–48. Liverpool University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781949979299.003.0003.

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The chapter investigates Cunard’s identity as a poet, the challenges she faced as a woman poet, and the early publications of Outlaws (1921), Sublunary (1923), and Poems (Two) (1925). Marcus also explores Cunard’s involvement with the anti-war poetry anthology Wheels, her founding of The Hours Press, and the reception of her work by a male-dominated press. The author also discusses the early impetus behind her collection Negro Anthology and her political activism during the Spanish Civil War on behalf of poets from Harlem, Cuba, and The West Indies.
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Conference papers on the topic "Poésie – Collections"

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Mshaï Mwangola, S. "Bury my bones but keep my words." In SOIMA 2015: Unlocking Sound and Image Heritage. International Centre for the Study of the Preservation and Restoration of Cultural Property, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.18146/soima2015.1.01.

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The author’s experiences preparing and presenting at the 2013 (Nairobi, Kenya) and 2015 (Brussels, Belgium) SOIMA conferences form the basis for this reflection on the work of custodians safeguarding the sound and image heritage of the past. Drawing inspiration from the artistic reflections of acclaimed master poet Ko Awonoor and accomplished writer Yvonne Owuor on death and life viewed through the prism of the dirge singer, the paper explores what it means to be a facilitator bridging the past and the future through the present. Using performance as a catalyst, she identifies three opportunities open to professional archivists seeking to secure the legacy of the past for generations to come: to create within collections conditions for availability, accessibility and adoptability.
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Harmantoro, Akhmad Tutus. "Integrity Management Pass Panel Review Form: A Tool for Reviewing Critical Topside Pressure System Anomaly in an Offshore Normally Unmanned Installation During Drilling and Well Intervention Activities." In SPE/IATMI Asia Pacific Oil & Gas Conference and Exhibition. SPE, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/215416-ms.

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Abstract Normally Unmanned Installation (NUI) is a facility with less severe human consequences because of its minimum manning during normal operations, i.e., 1-3 persons per visit. However, the number of manning increases drastically during well intervention activities. Tens of people dwell in the accommodation building on the liftboat or drilling rig that resides above the NUI platform. This circumstance raises safety issues, especially for the NUI platform with a critical wall thinning in its topside pressure systems since the boat or the rig does not have complete safety protection against the topside hydrocarbon release. Pertamina Hulu Energi Offshore North-West Java (PHE ONWJ) has an Integrity Management Pass (IMPASS) business process to manage the integrity issue during well interventions in NUI. IMPASS requires collecting the integrity status in the respective NUI, highlighting and reviewing the critical pressure system integrity anomaly, and implementing recommendations established in the review. The liftboat or drilling rig may sail heading to the NUI if the relevant parties approve the IMPASS and implement the recommendations. Reviewing the pressure system anomaly is the critical step in IMPASS. The reviewers shall ensure the effectiveness of hydrocarbon leak prevention and readiness to mitigate the probable leak occurrence. A custom programmed spreadsheet form, named IMPASS PREVIEW form, supports the review process to maintain consistency of the review results. IMPASS PREVIEW form summarizes integrity anomaly data, collects operating conditions and existing safety protection system data, and applies process safety and risk-based concept to assess the protection system and establish recommendations. It classifies safety protection into prevention, engineering, and procedural control. Then, it automatically recommends stringent additional measures to the existing safety protection for pressure systems with more severe integrity conditions. It also predicts probable hazardous hydrocarbon events as the basis for the emergency drill plan. IMPASS PREVIEW has been utilized to support approximately 100 well interventions. It promotes a shared understanding among relevant parties that allows early and consistent data collection. It also applies a consistent approach in every review with relatively shorter review duration. Since the recommendations can be immediately acquired, it allows early remediation action to set facilities ready to receive the liftboat and the rig in safe condition.
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Swindell, Paul, and Danielle Stephens. "Federal Aviation Administration’s Probability of Detection Testing Results for Structural Health Monitoring (SHM)." In 2021 48th Annual Review of Progress in Quantitative Nondestructive Evaluation. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/qnde2021-75122.

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Abstract The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has been participating with the Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE) Aerospace Industry Steering Committee (AISC) to develop a methodology for calculating the Probability of Detection (POD) for Structural Health Monitoring (SHM) for damage detection on commercial aviation. Two POD methodologies were developed: one by Dr. William Meeker, Iowa State University, and the other by Dennis Roach, Sandia National Laboratories (SNL). With Dr. Seth Kessler, Metis Design Corp, a test program of 24 samples of aluminum strips to be fatigued on MTS machines was developed. The samples were designed to meet the ASTM E647. Twelve samples had two SHM modalities on the front and back from Metis (PZT and carbon nanotubes), and the other twelve had SHM sensors from Structural Monitoring Systems (SMS) (comparative vacuum monitoring – CVM) and Acellent Technologies (PZT). The tests were performed at the FAA William J Hughes Technical Center in Atlantic City, NJ. The samples were cycled every 1500 cycles and then stopped for SHM data collection. Once the crack exceeded 0.125 inches and provided for a minimum of 15 inspections, a new sample was tested until all 12 samples were completed. The data was provided to each company to be set up in the format needed to run through the POD methodologies. Then the data was provided to Dr. Meeker and Dr. Roach for analysis. This paper will provide the results of those tests.
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Mwansa, P., H. Repilloza, and M. A. Hassan. "Field Development Plan (FDP) Cloud-Based Data Integration Between Geology & Drilling Software Using Python Tools." In SPE Conference at Oman Petroleum & Energy Show. SPE, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/218577-ms.

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Abstract The oil and gas industry generates vast amounts of data throughout its operations, from exploration to production. Collecting, connecting, and optimally utilizing this data is key to maximizing efficiency, accuracy, and access to new disruptive technologies. In a typical well-planning cycle, an engineer will spend a significant amount of time looking for the data they require to do their jobs efficiently. The data are typically locked away in silos - trajectories in one data platform, Pore Pressure Gradient, Fracture Gradient or Targets in another, and so on. A major Middle Eastern NOC and Two Norwegian software service companies teamed up to develop Proof of Concept (PoC) for a new workflow that integrates subsurface and drilling data between on-premises Geology E&P software and Drilling software through a proprietary Python Tool plug-in and Python library. This integration enables a streamlined connection to a cloud-based drilling and well planning software, facilitating collaboration among teams involved in well planning. The project's key challenges are the lack of a standardized communication, integration, and automation of data flows between subsurface and drilling teams, as well as the inability of engineers to access necessary data due to scattered information and access restrictions. The project utilizes a proprietary data science suite, named Cegal's Prizm, which allows easy configuration to integrate data from various applications, sources, and platforms. A proprietary Python Tool is used to merge data from various application silos and data sources, enabling enriched investigation. The process involves connecting to the Geology E&P software retrieving domain objects using the proprietary Python Tool, and converting these domain data objects into common Python data structures. The project aims to develop an innovative workflow that provides easier access to data for experts throughout the organization, leading to better decision-making during the well-planning cycle. This not only makes it easier, but it also ensures collaboration between the G&G and Drilling teams involved in new well planning
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Mwansa, P., B. C. H. R. Hernandez, S. Grebe, M. A. Hassan, A. Torsæter, and F. Jenssen. "Cloud-Based Data Integration Between Geology & Drilling Software Using Python Tools." In SPE/IADC Middle East Drilling Technology Conference and Exhibition. SPE, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/214593-ms.

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Abstract The oil and gas industry generates vast amounts of data throughout its operations, from exploration to production. Collecting, connecting, and optimally utilizing this data is key to maximizing efficiency, accuracy, and access to new disruptive technologies. In a typical well-planning cycle, an engineer will spend significant amount of time looking for the data they require to do their jobs efficiently. The data are typically locked away in silos - trajectories in one data platform, Pore Pressure Gradient, Fracture Gradient or Targets in another, and so on. A major Middle Eastern NOC and Two Norwegian software service companies teamed up to develop Proof of Concept (PoC) for a new workflow that integrates subsurface and drilling data between on-premises Geology E&P software and Drilling software through a proprietary Python Tool plug-in and Python library. This integration enables a streamlined connection to a cloud-based drilling and well planning software, facilitating collaboration among teams involved in well planning. The project's key challenges are the lack of a standardized communication, integration, and automation of data flows between subsurface and drilling teams, as well as the inability of engineers to access necessary data due to scattered information and access restrictions. The project utilizes a proprietary data science suite, named Cegal's Prizm, which allows easy configuration to integrate data from various applications, sources, and platforms. A proprietary Python Tool is used to merge data from various application silos and data sources, enabling enriched investigation. The process involves connecting to the Geology E&P software retrieving domain objects using the proprietary Python Tool, and converting these domain data objects into common Python data structures. The project aims to develop an innovative workflow that provides easier access to data for experts throughout the organization, leading to better decision-making during the well-planning cycle. This not only makes it easier, but it also ensures collaboration between the G&G and Drilling teams involved in new well planning
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Zhang, Shaohui, Weihe Huang, Guoqiang Bi, Jianli Zhang, Xiaohui Zhang, Hucheng Wen, Changjun Ma, Junqing Bai, and Haijun Li. "Intelligent Risk Identification and Warning Model for Typical Drilling Operation Scenes and its Application." In SPE/IADC Middle East Drilling Technology Conference and Exhibition. SPE, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/214599-ms.

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Abstract The drilling operation procedures are complicated and its risks are high. The unsafe behavior of well site personnel and the unsafe state of equipment and materials are the main causes of drilling accidents. At present, these are mainly supervised by drilling supervisors. The supervisors, who's supervising means are single, cannot achieve full coverage of on-site personnel, equipment and materials. In order to realize intelligent identification and warning of drilling operation risks, the intelligent risk identification and warning model for typical drilling operation scenes and its application are carried out. First of all, considering the influence of different environmental conditions, the approach of automatically generating image dataset based on machine learning is proposed, and the typical scene sample image database is established. Meanwhile, the typical scene risk identification model based on YOLOv5 algorithm is designed and established by introducing feature aggregation, loss function and attention mechanism, and the algorithm model is trained and tested by using neural network method. In addition, based on the risk identification of drilling operation, the approach of risk warning and feedback is put forward. Finally, a set of ablation experiments are designed to test the performance of the improved algorithm models in drilling well sites. By using the approach of automatically generating image dataset based on machine learning, the foreground and background images can be automatically fused, and the standardized collection and classified storage of well site video image data are realized, saving a lot of manpower labeling costs. With the use of the risk identification model of typical scenes, typical risks can be automatically identified, with the mAP of 90.3% and the response time of less than 2 seconds. Three ways of mobile phone short message, well site speaker and screen pop-up reminder have been developed to timely send the identified risks to relevant personnel. Through intelligent risk identification and processing, the operation risk is reduced, the operation quality is guaranteed, and the supervision efficiency and effect are improved significantly. The intelligent risk identification and warning models of typical drilling operation scenes are innovatively established by using the approach of combining the drilling operation risk identification theory and artificial intelligence technology, which solves the problem of intelligent risk identification and warning of typical drilling operation scenes, and provides theoretical and practical basis for the development of digital supervision management in the drilling operation.
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Aslam, Muhammad, Eisa Al Balooshi, Abdulla Al Ketbi, Khulood Alshehhi, Bader Al Dhaheri, S. Ahmed, MS Ahmed, and Fareed Ahmed Daudpota. "Deployment of Produced Water Re-Injection; A Tale of Operational Excellence Where Challenges are Realized into Opportunities." In SPE Water Lifecycle Management Conference and Exhibition. SPE, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/219012-ms.

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Abstract This paper presents the full-scale implementation of Produced Water Re-Injection in ADNOC Onshore's largest Oil Producing Field. The paper also engulf the comprehensive detailing of the significant deployment milestones right from the selection, defining, successful pilot demonstration leading to a full-scale re-injection of 95000 BWPD produced water. This paper also penlights the challenges encountered during the course and states how challenges were realized into to the opportunities and waste stream was converted to game changer in reservoir pressure support and sustainability drive by eliminating the need of 19600 MW/year of electrical power and 30 Metric Ton of CO2 / Year. Normally, produced water is considered as waste stream and is disposed to shallow reservoirs. The selection process of various treatments options, identification of suitable reservoir and philosophy of full-scale deployment was executed in three stages: Sub-surface evaluation to define the required produced water specifications to sustain PWRI whilst managing the fracture growth. Surface infrastructure & technological requirements to deliver the required specification, along with the facilities configuration, plot sizes and network to handle the current produced water volumes as well as productions profiles projections to cater future requirements. Identification of opportunities and realization in OPEX optimization, reduction in downtime and sustainability implications The potential of produced water re-injection under the matrix and fractured injection conditions was evaluated. Following the quantification of reservoir rock mechanical properties, determination of stresses in different formations and physical measurements from core flood tests, predictive runs and sensitivities collection were utilized to finalize the mode of re-injection to fractured injection. Facility was than designed to cater the current produced water volumes at central processing facility as wells as future foreseen till 2030, to ensure re-injection into the reservoir for reservoir pressure support. Shallow Aquifer water earlier the premier source of reservoir pressure support was replaced with Produced water volumes of 95000 BWPD, which was being dumped in the disposal wells. 05Electrical submersible pumps stopped with the change of source, resulted in saving of 1.27 MM USD in terms of power tariff and 30 Metric Ton eq. CO2 / Year, facilitating ADNOC in meeting sustainable operations mandates. This paper also demonstrates how the system can reduce the aquifer water consumption, increase the oil recovery factor, minimize the environmental impacts, and optimize the operational costs. Technical challenges and solutions for designing, installing, and operating the system along with an insight about harnessing a new technology right from the concept to full scale implementation covering all major phases e.g. Concept, PoC, Pilot Demonstration, Business Case Study, detailed engineering, execution, realization fiscal benefits in terms of CAPEX, OPEX value addition towards the ESG realization. The paper also highlights lessons learned and best practices for future replication by other Oil & Gas Producers.
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Reports on the topic "Poésie – Collections"

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Arewa, Moyosore, and Fabrizio Santoro. An Introduction to Digital Tax Payment Systems in Low-and Middle-Income Countries. Institute of Development Studies, December 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/ictd.2022.019.

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National tax administrations are increasingly investing in the digital facilities needed to make it possible for taxpayers to go online both to file their routine tax returns (e-filing) and remit the tax payments due (e-payment). These facilities potentially benefit both taxpayers and tax administrations. This paper first maps the landscape, explaining which filing and payment technologies are used for tax collection in Africa. We then examine why these technologies are not used to their full potential. Some constraints are on the demand side. These include taxpayers’ preferences for cash and in-person relations and low familiarity with and trust in digital technology. Other constraints lie in infrastructure deficits and broader political, regulatory, and institutional factors. Unlocking the full potential of e-filing and e-payment systems thus seems to depend on meeting several pre-conditions, including solid political will, sound regulatory frameworks, reliable payment infrastructure and adequate investment in human capital. However, there is relatively little reliable evidence of the actual effectiveness of e-services in tax collection. We conclude by outlining some research priorities.
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Budzich, Jeffrey. PR-685-184506-R04 Potential Monitoring Techniques and Technologies for Real Time Rainfall and Flooding. Chantilly, Virginia: Pipeline Research Council International, Inc. (PRCI), April 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.55274/r0011663.

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Systems to alert pipeline operators of existing or impending flood events of concern are important tools as operators work to protect infrastructure at crossings of concern. A critical return period flood alert allows operators to take pre-emptive actions that may reduce consequences involved in major flood events. Gages are valuable tools for collecting data and information about discharge. Physical in-waterway gages include reference gages, crest stage gages, and recording stage gages. For recording stage gages, data can be transmitted electronically and limit the need for site visits. Online, or 'virtual' gages, such as National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's high-resolution National Water Model and the National Weather Service Weather Prediction Center, are an alternative to using gages to collect data, as they cover larger areas and are typically less expensive than installing, maintaining and operating site-specific gages. This is D1 on the PHMSA table
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Taylor, S., J. Lever, K. Burgess, R. Stroud, D. Brownlee, L. Nittler, A. Bardyn, et al. Sampling interplanetary dust from Antarctic air. Engineer Research and Development Center (U.S.), February 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.21079/11681/43345.

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We built a collector to filter interplanetary dust particles (IDPs) larger than 5 µm from the clean air at the Amundsen Scott South Pole station. Our sampling strategy used long duration, continuous dry filtering of near-surface air in place of short duration, high-speed impact collection on flags flown in the stratosphere. We filtered ~107 m³ of clean Antarctic air through 20 cm diameter, 3 µm filters coupled to a suction blower of modest power consumption (5–6 kW). Our collector ran continuously for 2 years and yielded 41 filters for analyses. Based on stratospheric concentrations, we predicted that each month’s collection would provide 300–900 IDPs for analysis. We identified 19 extraterrestrial (ET) particles on the 66 cm² of filter examined, which represented ~0.5% of the exposed filter surfaces. The 11 ET particles larger than 5 µm yield about a fifth of the expected flux based on >5 µm stratospheric ET particle flux. Of the 19 ET particles identified, four were chondritic porous IDPs, seven were FeNiS beads, two were FeNi grains, and six were chondritic material with FeNiS components. Most were <10 µm in diameter and none were cluster particles. Additionally, a carbon-rich candidate particle was found to have a small ¹⁵N isotopic enrichment, supporting an ET origin. Many other candidate grains, including chondritic glasses and C-rich particles with Mg and Si and FeS grains, require further analysis to determine if they are ET. The vast majority of exposed filter surfaces remain to be examined.
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Rich, Megan, Charles Beightol, Christy Visaggi, Justin Tweet, and Vincent Santucci. Vicksburg National Military Park: Paleontological resource inventory (sensitive version). National Park Service, March 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.36967/2297321.

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Vicksburg National Military Park (VICK) was established for its historical significance as a one of the principle military sieges resulting in a turning point during the American Civil War. The steep terrain around the city of Vicksburg was integral in the military siege, providing high vantage points and a substrate that was easy to entrench for the armies, but unknown to many is the fossil content, particularly a diversity of fossil mollusks. These fossils at VICK are important paleontological resources which have yet to receive focused attention from park staff, visitors, and researchers. The park’s geology is dominated by windblown silt from the last Ice Age which overlays river-transported gravels and bedrock of the late Oligocene–early Miocene-age Catahoula Formation or early Oligocene Vicksburg Group. The park is home to the type section (a geological reference locality upon which a formation is based) for the Mint Spring Formation, one of the most fossiliferous formations in this group (Henderson et al. 2022). Beginning roughly 32 million years ago (Dockery 2019), the early Oligocene deposits of the Vicksburg Group were deposited as the sea level along the Gulf Coast shore repeatedly rose and fell. The eponymously named Vicksburg Group is comprised of, from oldest to youngest, the Forest Hill, Mint Spring, Marianna Limestone, Glendon Limestone, Byram, and Bucatunna Formations. Each of these formations are within VICK’s boundaries, in addition to outcrops of the younger Catahoula Formation. Paleozoic fossils transported by the ancestral Mississippi River have also been redeposited within VICK as pre-loess stream gravels. Overlying these layers is the Quaternary-age silt which composes the loess found throughout VICK, meaning the park’s fossils span the entire Phanerozoic Eon. The fossils of VICK consist mostly of near-shore marine Oligocene invertebrates including corals, bryozoans, bivalves, gastropods, scaphopods, ostracods, and more, though terrestrial and freshwater snails of the loess, microfossils, plant fossils, occasional vertebrates, and others can also be found in the park. Notable historical figures such as Charles Alexandre Lesueur, Charles Lyell, and John Wesley Powell all collected fossils or studied geology in the Vicksburg area. The Vicksburg Group is culturally relevant as well, as the Glendon Limestone Formation has been identified by its embedded fossils as a source rock for Native American effigy pipes. This paleontological resource inventory is the first of its kind for VICK. Although Vicksburg fossils have most recently been studied as part of the Gulf Coast Inventory & Monitoring Network (Kenworthy et al. 2007), the park has never received a comprehensive, dedicated fossil inventory before this report. At least 27 fossil species, listed in Appendix B, have been named and described from specimens collected from within VICK’s lands, and VICK fossils can be found at six or more non-NPS museum repositories. Beginning in January 2022, field surveys were undertaken at VICK, covering nearly all the park’s wooded areas, streams, and other portions beyond the preserved trenches and tour road. Fossils were collected or observed at 72 localities. These specimens will be added into VICK’s museum collections, which previously contained no paleontological resources. Considering the minimal attention dedicated to these resources in the past, these newly acquired fossil specimens may be used in the future for educational, interpretive, or research purposes. Future park construction needs should take into account the protection of these resources by avoiding important localities or allowing collection efforts before localities become inaccessible or lost.
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Anderson, Zachary W., Greg N. McDonald, Elizabeth A. Balgord, and W. Adolph Yonkee. Interim Geologic Map of the Browns Hole Quadrangle, Weber and Cache Counties, Utah. Utah Geological Survey, December 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.34191/ofr-760.

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The Browns Hole quadrangle is in Weber and Cache Counties of northern Utah and covers the eastern part of Ogden Valley, a rapidly developing area of the Wasatch Range. The Middle and South Forks of the Ogden River bisect the quadrangle and are important watersheds and recreational areas to the communities of Ogden Valley and the Wasatch Front. The towns of Huntsville and Eden are just west of the quadrangle, unincorporated communities with year-round residents are present throughout the quadrangle, and numerous summer-cabin communities are present in the eastern part of the quadrangle. A portion of Powder Mountain ski resort, which draws year-round visitation and recreation, is present in the northwest corner of the quadrangle. The quadrangle contains the Willard thrust, a major thrust fault with approximately 30 mi (50 km) of eastward displacement that was active during the Cretaceous-Eocene Sevier orogeny (Yonkee and others, 2019). In the quadrangle, the Willard thrust places Neoproterozoic through Ordovician strata in the hanging wall over a fault-bounded lozenge of Cambrian strata and footwall Jurassic and Triassic strata (see cross section on Plate 2). Neoproterozoic strata comprise a succession of mostly clastic rocks deposited during rifting of western North America and breakup of the supercontinent Rodinia (Yonkee and others, 2014). These rocks include the Cryogenian-age Perry Canyon and Maple Canyon Formations, and the Ediacaran-age Kelley Canyon Formation, Papoose Creek Formation, Caddy Canyon Quartzite, Inkom Formation, Mutual Formation, and Browns Hole Formation. The Browns Hole Formation is a sequence of interbedded volcaniclastic rock and basalt lava flows that provides the only radiometric age control in the quadrangle. Provow and others (2021) reported a ~610 Ma detrital apatite U-Pb age from volcaniclastic sandstone at the base of the formation, Crittenden and Wallace (1973) reported a 580 ± 14 Ma K-Ar hornblende age for a volcanic clast, and Verdel (2009) reported a 609 ± 25 Ma U-Pb apatite age for a basalt flow near the top of the formation. Cambrian strata in the hanging wall include a thick basal clastic sequence (Geertsen Canyon Quartzite) overlain by a thick sequence of interbedded limestone, shale, and dolomite (Langston, Ute, and Blacksmith Formations). Hanging wall rocks are deformed by Willard thrust-related structures, including the Browns Hole anticline, Maple Canyon thrust, and numerous smaller folds and minor faults. Footwall rocks of the Willard thrust include highly deformed Cambrian strata within a fault-bounded lozenge exposed in the southern part of the quadrangle, and Jurassic and Triassic rocks exposed just south of the quadrangle. The Paleocene-Eocene Wasatch Formation unconformably overlies older rocks and was deposited over considerable paleotopography developed during late stages of the Sevier orogeny. The southwest part of the quadrangle is cut by a southwest-dipping normal fault system that bounds the east side of Ogden Valley. This fault is interpreted to have experienced an early phase of slip during local late Eocene to Oligocene collapse of the Sevier belt and deposition of volcanic and volcaniclastic rocks (Norwood Tuff) exposed west of the quadrangle (Sorensen and Crittenden, 1979), and a younger phase of slip during Neogene Basin and Range extension (Zoback, 1983). Lacustrine deposits and shorelines of Pleistocene-age Lake Bonneville are present in the southwest corner of the quadrangle near the mouth of the South Fork of the Ogden River and record the highstand of Lake Bonneville (Oviatt, 2015). Pleistocene glacial deposits, present in the northwest corner of the map, are likely related to the Pinedale glaciation, commonly expressed by two moraine building episodes in the Wasatch Range (Quirk and others, 2020). Numerous incised alluvial deposits and geomorphic surfaces are present along major drainages and record pre- and post-Lake Bonneville aggradational and degradational alluvial and colluvial sequences. Mass-movement deposits, including historically active landslides, are present throughout the quadrangle. Crittenden (1972) mapped the Browns Hole quadrangle at 1:24,000 scale, which provided an excellent foundation for the general stratigraphy and structure, but the 1972 map lacked important details of unconsolidated surficial units. As part of 1:62,500 scale mapping of the Ogden 30'x60' quadrangle, Coogan and King (2016) updated stratigraphic nomenclature, revised some contacts, and added more details for surficial units. For this map, we utilized new techniques for data acquisition and analysis to delineate surficial deposits, bedrock contacts, and faults more accurately and precisely. Mapping and field data collection were largely done in 2021–2022 using a combination of GPS-enabled tablets equipped with georectified aerial imagery (U.S. Department of Agriculture [USDA] National Agriculture Imagery Program [NAIP], 2009), orthoimagery (Utah Geospatial Resource Center [UGRC] State Geographic Information Database, 2018b, 2018c; 2021a, 2021b), and lidar data (UGRC State Geographic Information Database, 2006; 2011; 2013–2014; 2018a), previously published geologic maps, topographic maps, and applications for digital attitude collection. We also used hand-held GPS units, Brunton compasses, and field notebooks to collect geologic data. Field data were transferred to a Geographic Information System (GIS), where the map was compiled and completed.
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Schiller, Brandon, Tara Hutchinson, and Kelly Cobeen. Cripple Wall Small-Component Test Program: Wet Specimens I (PEER-CEA Project). Pacific Earthquake Engineering Research Center, University of California, Berkeley, CA, November 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.55461/dqhf2112.

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This report is one of a series of reports documenting the methods and findings of a multi-year, multi-disciplinary project coordinated by the Pacific Earthquake Engineering Research Center (PEER and funded by the California Earthquake Authority (CEA). The overall project is titled “Quantifying the Performance of Retrofit of Cripple Walls and Sill Anchorage in Single-Family Wood-Frame Buildings,” henceforth referred to as the “PEER–CEA Project.” The overall objective of the PEER–CEA Project is to provide scientifically based information (e.g., testing, analysis, and resulting loss models) that measure and assess the effectiveness of seismic retrofit to reduce the risk of damage and associated losses (repair costs) of wood-frame houses with cripple wall and sill anchorage deficiencies as well as retrofitted conditions that address those deficiencies. Tasks that support and inform the loss-modeling effort are: (1) collecting and summarizing existing information and results of previous research on the performance of wood-frame houses; (2) identifying construction features to characterize alternative variants of wood-frame houses; (3) characterizing earthquake hazard and ground motions at representative sites in California; (4) developing cyclic loading protocols and conducting laboratory tests of cripple wall panels, wood-frame wall subassemblies, and sill anchorages to measure and document their response (strength and stiffness) under cyclic loading; and (5) the computer modeling, simulations, and the development of loss models as informed by a workshop with claims adjustors. This report is a product of Working Group 4: Testing and focuses on the first phase of an experimental investigation to study the seismic performance of retrofitted and existing cripple walls with sill anchorage. Paralleled by a large-component test program conducted at the University of California [Cobeen et al. 2020], the present study involves the first of multiple phases of small-component tests conducted at the UC San Diego. Details representative of era-specific construction, specifically the most vulnerable pre-1960s construction, are of predominant focus in the present effort. Parameters examined are cripple wall height, finish materials, gravity load, boundary conditions, anchorage, and deterioration. This report addresses the first phase of testing, which consisted of six specimens. Phase 1 including quasi-static reversed cyclic lateral load testing of six 12-ft-long, 2-ft high cripple walls. All specimens in this phase were finished on their exterior with stucco over horizontal sheathing (referred to as a “wet” finish), a finish noted to be common of dwellings built in California before 1945. Parameters addressed in this first phase include: boundary conditions on the top, bottom, and corners of the walls, attachment of the sill to the foundation, and the retrofitted condition. Details of the test specimens, testing protocol, instrumentation; and measured as well as physical observations are summarized in this report. In addition, this report discusses the rationale and scope of subsequent small-component test phases. Companion reports present these test phases considering, amongst other variables, the impacts of dry finishes and cripple wall height (Phases 2–4). Results from these experiments are intended to provide an experimental basis to support numerical modeling used to develop loss models, which are intended to quantify the reduction of loss achieved by applying state-of-practice retrofit methods as identified in FEMA P-1100, Vulnerability-Base Seismic Assessment and Retrofit of One- and Two-Family Dwellings.
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7

Schiller, Brandon, Tara Hutchinson, and Kelly Cobeen. Cripple Wall Small-Component Test Program: Wet Specimens II (PEER-CEA Project). Pacific Earthquake Engineering Research Center, University of California, Berkeley, CA, November 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.55461/ldbn4070.

Full text
Abstract:
This report is one of a series of reports documenting the methods and findings of a multi-year, multi-disciplinary project coordinated by the Pacific Earthquake Engineering Research Center (PEER and funded by the California Earthquake Authority (CEA). The overall project is titled “Quantifying the Performance of Retrofit of Cripple Walls and Sill Anchorage in Single-Family Wood-Frame Buildings,” henceforth referred to as the “PEER–CEA Project.” The overall objective of the PEER–CEA Project is to provide scientifically based information (e.g., testing, analysis, and resulting loss models) that measure and assess the effectiveness of seismic retrofit to reduce the risk of damage and associated losses (repair costs) of wood-frame houses with cripple wall and sill anchorage deficiencies as well as retrofitted conditions that address those deficiencies. Tasks that support and inform the loss-modeling effort are: (1) collecting and summarizing existing information and results of previous research on the performance of wood-frame houses; (2) identifying construction features to characterize alternative variants of wood-frame houses; (3) characterizing earthquake hazard and ground motions at representative sites in California; (4) developing cyclic loading protocols and conducting laboratory tests of cripple wall panels, wood-frame wall subassemblies, and sill anchorages to measure and document their response (strength and stiffness) under cyclic loading; and (5) the computer modeling, simulations, and the development of loss models as informed by a workshop with claims adjustors. This report is a product of Working Group 4 (WG4): Testing, whose central focus was to experimentally investigate the seismic performance of retrofitted and existing cripple walls. This report focuses stucco or “wet” exterior finishes. Paralleled by a large-component test program conducted at the University of California, Berkeley (UC Berkeley) [Cobeen et al. 2020], the present study involves two of multiple phases of small-component tests conducted at the University of California San Diego (UC San Diego). Details representative of era-specific construction, specifically the most vulnerable pre-1960s construction, are of predominant focus in the present effort. Parameters examined are cripple wall height, finish style, gravity load, boundary conditions, anchorage, and deterioration. This report addresses the third phase of testing, which consisted of eight specimens, as well as half of the fourth phase of testing, which consisted of six specimens where three will be discussed. Although conducted in different phases, their results are combined here to co-locate observations regarding the behavior of the second phase the wet (stucco) finished specimens. The results of first phase of wet specimen tests were presented in Schiller et al. [2020(a)]. Experiments involved imposition of combined vertical loading and quasi-static reversed cyclic lateral load onto ten cripple walls of 12 ft long and 2 or 6 ft high. One cripple wall was tested with a monotonic loading protocol. All specimens in this report were constructed with the same boundary conditions on the top and corners of the walls as well as being tested with the same vertical load. Parameters addressed in this report include: wet exterior finishes (stucco over framing, stucco over horizontal lumber sheathing, and stucco over diagonal lumber sheathing), cripple wall height, loading protocol, anchorage condition, boundary condition at the bottom of the walls, and the retrofitted condition. Details of the test specimens, testing protocol, including instrumentation; and measured as well as physical observations are summarized in this report. Companion reports present phases of the tests considering, amongst other variables, impacts of various boundary conditions, stucco (wet) and non-stucco (dry) finishes, vertical load, cripple wall height, and anchorage condition. Results from these experiments are intended to support advancement of numerical modeling tools, which ultimately will inform seismic loss models capable of quantifying the reduction of loss achieved by applying state-of-practice retrofit methods as identified in FEMA P-1100,Vulnerability-Base Seismic Assessment and Retrofit of One- and Two-Family Dwellings.
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8

Fortaleciendo las capacidades de programación centradas en niños, niñas, adolescentes y jóvenes: Cuaderno de trabajo—tercer taller. Population Council, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.31899/sbsr2018.1024.

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Diseñemos juntos nuestro programa [Let’s Design our Program Together] is a collection of tools developed with the objective of complementing the learning of coordinators of the Childhood, Adolescence and Youth Programs (PMIAJ / COMVIDA) that are implemented in different municipalities of Honduras. These tools supplement the material produced by the Population Council as part of a series of workshops called "Strengthening programmatic capacities focused on children, adolescents and young people," taught in 2017. The tools in this collection (see below) will help those who use them to offer advice about recruitment strategies for program participants, identify subgroups of participants in high risk and vulnerable conditions, build protective assets for program participants, and monitor the progress of activities and report participation data for the program. --- Diseñemos juntos nuestro programa es una colección de herramientas elaboradas con el objetivo de complementar el aprendizaje de las y los coordinadores de los Programas de Infancia, Adolescencia y Juventud (PMIAJ/COMVIDA) que se implementan en diferentes municipios de Honduras. Estas herramientas son un complemento al material producido por Population Council como parte de una serie de talleres llamados “Fortaleciendo las capacidades programáticas centradas en niños, niñas, adolescentes y jóvenes,” impartidos en 2017. Las herramientas de esta colección (ver más abajo) ayudarán a quienes las utilicen a asesorar estrategias de reclutamiento de participantes del programa, identificar subgrupos de participantes en mayores condiciones de riesgo y vulnerabilidad, construir activos protectores de las y los participantes del programa, y monitorear el avance de las actividades y reportar datos de participación en el programa.
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9

Fortaleciendo las capacidades de programación centradas en niños, niñas, adolescentes y jóvenes: Cuaderno de trabajo—primer taller. Population Council, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.31899/sbsr2018.1022.

Full text
Abstract:
Diseñemos juntos nuestro programa [Let’s Design our Program Together] is a collection of tools developed with the objective of complementing the learning of coordinators of the Childhood, Adolescence and Youth Programs (PMIAJ / COMVIDA) that are implemented in different municipalities of Honduras. These tools supplement the material produced by the Population Council as part of a series of workshops called "Strengthening programmatic capacities focused on children, adolescents and young people," taught in 2017. The tools in this collection (see below) will help those who use them to offer advice about recruitment strategies for program participants, identify subgroups of participants in high risk and vulnerable conditions, build protective assets for program participants, and monitor the progress of activities and report participation data for the program. --- Diseñemos juntos nuestro programa es una colección de herramientas elaboradas con el objetivo de complementar el aprendizaje de las y los coordinadores de los Programas de Infancia, Adolescencia y Juventud (PMIAJ/COMVIDA) que se implementan en diferentes municipios de Honduras. Estas herramientas son un complemento al material producido por Population Council como parte de una serie de talleres llamados “Fortaleciendo las capacidades programáticas centradas en niños, niñas, adolescentes y jóvenes,” impartidos en 2017. Las herramientas de esta colección (ver más abajo) ayudarán a quienes las utilicen a asesorar estrategias de reclutamiento de participantes del programa, identificar subgrupos de participantes en mayores condiciones de riesgo y vulnerabilidad, construir activos protectores de las y los participantes del programa, y monitorear el avance de las actividades y reportar datos de participación en el programa.
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10

Fortaleciendo las capacidades de programación centradas en niños, niñas, adolescentes y jóvenes: Ejercicio para la construcción de activos protectores—tercer taller. Population Council, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.31899/sbsr2018.1025.

Full text
Abstract:
Diseñemos juntos nuestro programa [Let’s Design our Program Together] is a collection of tools developed with the objective of complementing the learning of coordinators of the Childhood, Adolescence and Youth Programs (PMIAJ / COMVIDA) that are implemented in different municipalities of Honduras. These tools supplement the material produced by the Population Council as part of a series of workshops called "Strengthening programmatic capacities focused on children, adolescents and young people," taught in 2017. The tools in this collection (see below) will help those who use them to offer advice about recruitment strategies for program participants, identify subgroups of participants in high risk and vulnerable conditions, build protective assets for program participants, and monitor the progress of activities and report participation data for the program. --- Diseñemos juntos nuestro programa es una colección de herramientas elaboradas con el objetivo de complementar el aprendizaje de las y los coordinadores de los Programas de Infancia, Adolescencia y Juventud (PMIAJ/COMVIDA) que se implementan en diferentes municipios de Honduras. Estas herramientas son un complemento al material producido por Population Council como parte de una serie de talleres llamados “Fortaleciendo las capacidades programáticas centradas en niños, niñas, adolescentes y jóvenes,” impartidos en 2017. Las herramientas de esta colección (ver más abajo) ayudarán a quienes las utilicen a asesorar estrategias de reclutamiento de participantes del programa, identificar subgrupos de participantes en mayores condiciones de riesgo y vulnerabilidad, construir activos protectores de las y los participantes del programa, y monitorear el avance de las actividades y reportar datos de participación en el programa.
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