Books on the topic 'Projection locale'

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1

Smith, Stanley K., Jeff Tayman, and David A. Swanson. State and Local Population Projections. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/0-306-47372-0.

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2

Barratt, John. Organising for local government: Overhead projection transparencies. Luton: Local Government Training Board, 1988.

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3

Smith, Stanley K., Jeff Tayman, and David A. Swanson. A Practitioner's Guide to State and Local Population Projections. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-7551-0.

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4

Eastern African Coastal Area Management. Secretariat. De uma boa ideia para um projecto bem sucedido: Manual para desenvolvimento e gestão de projectos ao nível local. Maputo, Moçambique: Secretariat for Eastern African Coastal Area Management, 1999.

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5

University of Leeds. School of Geography. Ethnic population projections for the UK and local areas, 2001-2051. Leeds: School of Geography, University of Leeds, 2010.

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6

1948-, Akkerman Abraham, ed. Household and population projections for local government districts of Scotland, 1986-2021. Edmonton, Alta., Canada: DemoSystems, 1988.

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7

Carnahan, Douglas L. A manual on regional and local demographic and economic analysis and projections. Boston, MA (60 Temple Pl., Boston 02111): Metropolitan Area Planning Council, 1990.

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8

Robinson, D. Simulating the local economy: Some projections using Portsmouth 1-0 model 1b. Portsmouth: PortsmouthPolytechnic, Dept. of Economics and Economic History, 1986.

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9

Wingren, Peter. Lipschitz spaces on closed sets, polynomial interpolation, linear projections and local approximation. Umeå: Dept., Univ., 1987.

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10

Victoria. Dept. of the Treasury and Finance., ed. Projections of dwelling commencements, households and populations for statistical local areas in metropolitan Melbourne. Victoria, [Australia]: Dept. of the Treasury, 1990.

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11

GREAT BRITAIN. Office of population censuses and surveys. Revised 1991 - based short-term population projections for local and health authority areas in England. London: Government Statistical Service, 1993.

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12

Leemans, Dimitri. Residually weakly primitive and locally two-transitive geometries for sporadic groups. Bruxelles]: Classe des sciences, Académie royale de Belgique, 2008.

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13

Nath, Giselle. 14-18 van dichtbij: Inspiratiegids voor lokale projecten over de Grote Oorlog. Leuven: Acco, 2012.

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14

Projecto de Descentralização e Governaçao Local (Angola), Angola. Ministério da Administração do Território, and UNDP Angola, eds. Perfil do município de Pombo, Província de Uíge: Projecto de Descentralização e Governaçao Local. Luanda]: República de Angola, Ministerio da Administração do Território, 2007.

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15

Commission, Western Australian Planning. Western Australia tomorrow: Population projections for planning regions 2004 to 2031 and local government areas 2004 to 2021. Perth, W.A: Western Australian Planning Commission, 2005.

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16

Projecto de Descentralização e Governaçao Local (Angola), Angola. Ministério da Administração do Território, and UNDP Angola, eds. Perfil do município de Kilamba Kiaxi, Província de Luanda: Projecto de Descentralização e Governaçao Local. Luanda]: República de Angola, Ministerio da Administração do Território, 2007.

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17

Colenutt, Bob. Inner city regeneration: A local authority perspective : first year report of the CLES Monitoring Projecton Urban Development Corporations. Manchester: CLES, 1990.

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18

Kaduna State (Nigeria). Military Governor's Office., ed. Population census of Kaduna State, 1963 and projections 1981, 1986-94 by local government areas districts and town/village units. Kaduna, Nigeria: Statistics Dept., Directorate of Budget, Planning and Monitoring, Military Governor's Office, 1990.

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19

Panzram and Paulo Pachá, eds. The Visigothic Kingdom. NL Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789463720632.

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How did the breakdown of Roman rule in the Iberian Peninsula eventually result in the formation of a Visigothic kingdom with authority centralised in Toledo? This collection of essays challenges the view that local powers were straightforwardly subjugated to the expanding central power of the monarchy. Rather than interpret countervailing events as mere ‘delays’ in this inevitable process, the contributors to this book interrogate where these events came from, which causes can be uncovered and how much influence individual actors had in this process. What emerges is a story of contested interests seeking cooperation through institutions and social practices that were flexible enough to stabilise a system that was hierarchical yet mutually beneficial for multiple social groups. By examining the Visigothic settlement, the interplay between central and local power, the use of ethnic identity, projections of authority, and the role of the Church, this book articulates a model for understanding the formation of a large and important early medieval kingdom.
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20

Mead, Kenneth M. Mass transit: FTA's projections could better reflect state and local needs : statement of Kenneth M. Mead, before the Committee on Appropriations, Subcommittee on Transportation, United States Senate. Washington, D.C: The Office, 1993.

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21

United States. General Accounting Office., ed. Mass transit: FTA's projections could better reflect state and local needs : statement of Kenneth M. Mead, before the Committee on Appropriations, Subcommittee on Transportation, United States Senate. Washington, D.C: The Office, 1993.

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22

(Mozambique), Conselho Nacional de Combate ao HIV/SIDA. Relatório do projecto de triangulação de Moçambique: Síntese dos dados sobre as tendências das epidemias nacionais e locais e a cobertura e intensidade dos esforços de prevenção : processo, principais constatações. [Maputo]: Conselho Nacional de Combate ao HIV/SIDA, 2009.

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23

Conselho Nacional de Combate ao HIV/SIDA (Mozambique). Relatório do projecto de triangulação de Moçambique: Síntese dos dados sobre as tendências das epidemias nacionais e locais e a cobertura e intensidade dos esforços de prevenção : processo, principais constatações. [Maputo]: Conselho Nacional de Combate ao HIV/SIDA, 2009.

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24

Clay Mathematics Institute Workshop on Moduli Spaces of Vector Bundles, with a View toward Coherent Sheaves (2006 Cambridge, Mass.). Grassmannians, moduli spaces, and vector bundles: Clay Mathematics Institute Workshop on Moduli Spaces of Vector Bundles, with a View towards Coherent Sheaves, October 6-11, 2006, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Edited by Ellwood D. (David) 1966- and Previato Emma. Providence, RI: American Mathematical Society, 2011.

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25

Bobaljik, Jonathan David, and Heidi Harley. Suppletion is local. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198778264.003.0007.

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Bobaljik (2012) proposes that the insertion of suppletive vocabulary items can be sensitive to features within the same maximal projection, but not across a maximal projection boundary. Among heads (X0 nodes), this condition restricts suppletion to synthetic formations and excludes suppletion in analogous analytic formations. In Hiaki, however, the number of a subject DP can trigger verbal suppletion in certain intransitive verbs. The verbs in question, however, can be shown by language-internal diagnostics to be unaccusative. Suppletion, then, is in fact triggered by an element within the maximal projection of the suppleting verb. The analysis supports the position that internal arguments are base-generated as sisters to their selecting verb (Kratzer 1996; Marantz 1997; Harley 2014). Further, we see that the locality condition does not distinguish between word-internal and word-external triggers of suppletion, but is rather a condition of structural locality, showing that morphological structure is, in a fundamental way, syntactic.
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26

Smith, Stanley K., Jeff Tayman, and David A. Swanson. State and Local Population Projections: Methodology and Analysis. Springer London, Limited, 2006.

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27

Smith, Stanley K., Jeff Tayman, and David A. Swanson. Practitioner's Guide to State and Local Population Projections. Springer London, Limited, 2013.

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28

A Practitioners Guide to State and Local Population Projections. Springer, 2013.

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29

Tayman, Jeff, David A. Swanson, and Stanley K. K. Smith. A Practitioner's Guide to State and Local Population Projections. Springer, 2016.

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30

Projections of dwelling commencements, households and populations for statistical local areas in metropolitan Melbourne.: Statistical local area projections by age and sex. Victoria, [Australia]: Dept. of the Treasury, 1990.

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31

Kupper, Stefanie. Two-sided Projective Resolutions, Periodicity and Local Algebras. Logos Verlag Berlin, 2010.

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32

Subnational population projections: 1996 based subnational population projections for local and health authorities in England, by age and gender; 1996-2021. Office for National Statistics, 1999.

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33

Jacobs, Jennifer, Linda Mearns, Katharine Hayhoe, Don Wuebbles, and Rao Kotamarthi. Downscaling Techniques for High-Resolution Climate Projections: From Global Change to Local Impacts. Cambridge University Press, 2020.

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34

Jacobs, Jennifer, Katharine Hayhoe, Don Wuebbles, Rao Kotamarthi, and Jennifer Jurado. Downscaling Techniques for High-Resolution Climate Projections: From Global Change to Local Impacts. University of Cambridge ESOL Examinations, 2020.

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35

JESUS, Pedro CARVALHO DE. NarraÇÃo e PrÁxis MuseolÓgica: O Projecto Memorial Do Local ARTUR NUNES VIDAL. Independently Published, 2017.

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36

Preliminary 1986 budget projections: A discussion paper for service board review and comment. Chicago, Ill: Regional Transportation Authority, 1985.

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37

State and Local Population Projections: Methodology and Analysis (The Springer Series on Demographic Methods and Population Analysis). Springer, 2001.

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38

Healey, John H., and David McKeown. Orthopaedic surgery in the palliation of cancer. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199656097.003.0125.

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Metastatic spread of cancer to bone is frequent and causes pain, disability, and functional limitation. New understanding of the homing method of cancer cells to bone and the mechanism of cancer production of pain raise possible new treatment strategies. Non-surgical treatments such as chemotherapy and hormone therapy are effective in early disease. Bisphosphonates and inhibition of osteoprotegerin prevent progression of bone lesions and avoid pain, radiation, and surgery. Radiotherapy arrests disease and relieves pain in many cases. Surgery is needed when the bone is weak or fractured. It effectively relieves pain and preserves function. It usually requires replacing or bypassing the deficient bone with site-specific reconstructive surgery. Surgery should be selected based on projections of patient survival. New tools to make these projections have been validated and are now available. New targeted drug therapies appear to be changing metastatic bone disease into a more chronic condition. This will alter the management of local disease in many histological subtypes of metastatic cancers.
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39

Gamberini, Andrea. Rural Communes and the Culture of Practices. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198824312.003.0012.

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The projection of city-state political culture on to the surrounding countryside did not only generate forms of resistance from and misunderstanding with local society. This chapter shows how certain social and political actors active in rural areas managed to exploit urban political and legal culture, bending it to their own interests. In other words, the advent of city domination created new possibilities, especially those linked to the activity of the communal courts, which could transform the claims of certain countryside figures into concrete rights. The chapter offers an analysis of several of these situations, in order to provide a clearer understanding of the relationship between city and countryside.
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40

Western Australia tomorrow: Population projections for the statistical divisions, planning regions and local government areas of Western Australia. Perth, W.A: Western Australian Planning Commission, 2000.

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41

Sarris, Peter. 2. Constantinople the ruling city. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/actrade/9780199236114.003.0002.

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Constantinople had become the sole imperial capital in the east by the reign of Theodosius I (378–95). ‘Constantinople, “the ruling city”’ describes the transformation of the small provincial town into the supreme stage for the projection of imperial power. The richly endowed city was a mix of architectural and artistic styles and overcame significant locational disadvantages: lying on a seismic fault line, lacking a local fresh water supply, and being open to attack on the European side. The medieval city of Constantinople was essentially as it was left by the 6th-century Emperor Justinian. It remained commercially vibrant and culturally cosmopolitan with a significant Jewish population and colonies of Muslim Arab and Italian merchants.
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42

Geurts, Bart. Presupposition and Givenness. Edited by Yan Huang. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199697960.013.21.

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Presuppositions are items of information triggered by certain words and constructions that exhibit ‘projection behaviour’, which is to say that, except in special cases, they will escape from any level of embedding. Presupposed information is given, or at least presented as such, and there are two main theories of what it means for presuppositions to be given. On one account, a presupposition must be entailed in the local context in which it is triggered; on the other, presuppositions require that certain discourse entities be available in the context. On the latter account, but not on the former, anaphora is a special case of presupposition. It might be that both accounts are correct, though for different types of presupposition.
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43

Ormaechea, Santiago Acosta, and Leonardo Martinez. Guide and Tool for Projecting Public Debt and Fiscal Adjustment Paths with Local- and Foreign-Currency Debt. International Monetary Fund, 2021.

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44

Ormaechea, Santiago Acosta, and Leonardo Martinez. Guide and Tool for Projecting Public Debt and Fiscal Adjustment Paths with Local- and Foreign-Currency Debt. International Monetary Fund, 2021.

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45

Ormaechea, Santiago Acosta, and Leonardo Martinez. Guide and Tool for Projecting Public Debt and Fiscal Adjustment Paths with Local- and Foreign-Currency Debt. International Monetary Fund, 2021.

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46

Baba, Kenshi, Masahiro Matsuura, Taiko Kudo, Shigeru Watanabe, Shun Kawakubo, Akiko Chujo, Hiroharu Tanaka, and Mitsuru Tanaka. Climate Change Adaptation Strategies of Local Governments in Japan. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190228620.013.597.

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The latest climate change adaptation strategies adopted by local governments in Japan are discussed. A nationwide survey demonstrates several significant findings. While some prefectures and major cities have already begun to prepare adaptation strategies, most municipalities have yet to consider such strategies. This gap must be considered when studying the climate adaptation strategies of local governments in Japan, as municipal governments are crucial to the implementation of climate adaptation strategies due to high diversity in climate impacts and geographical conditions among municipalities within each prefecture in Japan. Key challenges for local governments in preparing adaptation strategies are the lack of expert knowledge and experience in the field of climate change adaptation, and compartmentalization of government bureaus. To address these issues, an interview study of six model prefectures in the SI-CAT (Social Implementation Program on Climate Change Adaptation Technology) project by the MEXT (Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology) was conducted in order to understand the details of challenges raised by adaptation among local governments in Japan. The survey results reveal that local government officials lack information regarding impact projections and tools for evaluating policy options, even though some of them recognize some of the impacts of climate change on rice crop, vegetable, and fruit production. In addition, different bureaus, such as agriculture, public health, and disaster prevention, focus on different outcomes of climate change due to their different missions. As this is the inherent nature of bureaucratic organizations, a new approach for encouraging collaboration among them is needed. The fact that most of the local governments in Japan have not yet assessed the local impacts of climate change, an effort that would lay the groundwork for preparing adaptation strategies, suggests the importance of cyclical co-design that facilitates the relationship between climatic technology such as climate models and impact assessment and local governments’ needs so that the technology developments clarify the needs of local government, while those needs in turn nurture the seeds of technology.
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47

Anderson, James A. Cerebral Cortex. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199357789.003.0011.

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There is important local processing in cortex as well as the more dramatic massive projections back and forth between cortical regions. Using short, slow, local connections eliminates many long, expensive, fast interregional connections. Cortical pyramidal cells connect to neighbors over several millimeters in the form of patchy connections. Connections are often reciprocal between patches. Groups of cells called cortical columns are ubiquitous in cortex and seem to be fundamental architectural units. A functional column is perhaps .3 mm in diameter containing perhaps 10,000 cells. Intrinsic imaging studies of columns in inferotemporal cortex show they respond selectively to complex aspects of images. A small number of columns respond to a complex object. In inferotemporal cortex, these responses might be “words” in a language of vision. There is evidence for scaling of computation from single units to cortical regions. Understanding the function of such ensembles is the future.
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48

Mulligan, Martin. On the Need for a Nuanced Understanding of “Community” in Heritage Policy and Practice. Edited by Angela M. Labrador and Neil Asher Silberman. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190676315.013.14.

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The alleged benefits of community participation in cultural resource management has been an article of faith in the international heritage community since the early 1990s, yet the ambiguous and multi-layered concept of community is commonly deployed uncritically. This chapter argues that “community” should be seen as an open-ended, never complete process rather than end-product. It suggests that heritage practitioners inevitably contribute to the creation of a sense of community at scales ranging from the local to the national. The projection of community identities can enhance or undermine social cohesion at and across geographic scales and the chapter argues that heritage practitioners need to work with a nuanced understanding of their role in the creation of community identities. The link between heritage values and community formation remains powerful but the power needs to be unleashed with due diligence.
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49

Back, Kerry E. Continuous-Time Markets. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780190241148.003.0013.

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A continuous‐time model of a securities market is introduced. The intertemporal budget constraint is defined. SDF processes and prices of risks are defined and characterized. Many properties of SDF process are analogous to those in a single‐period model, including the relation to the risk‐free rate, orthogonal projections, the Hansen‐Jagannathan bound, and factor pricing. To value future cash flows using an SDF process, we need to assume a local martingale is a martingale. Sufficient conditions including Novikov’s condition are discussed. Use of the martingale representation theorem in a complete market to derive a portfolio that replicates a payoff is explained. A Markovian model is introduced, in which the investment opportunity set depends on state variables that form a Markov process.
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50

Cattani, Eduardo. Introduction to Variations of Hodge Structure. Edited by Eduardo Cattani, Fouad El Zein, Phillip A. Griffiths, and Lê Dũng Tráng. Princeton University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691161341.003.0007.

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This chapter emphasizes the theory of abstract variations of Hodge structure (VHS) and, in particular, their asymptotic behavior. It first studies the basic correspondence between local systems, representations of the fundamental group, and bundles with a flat connection. The chapter then turns to analytic families of smooth projective varieties, the Kodaira–Spencer map, Griffiths' period map, and a discussion of its main properties: holomorphicity and horizontality. These properties motivate the notion of an abstract VHS. Next, the chapter defines the classifying spaces for polarized Hodge structures and studies some of their basic properties. Finally, the chapter deals with the asymptotics of a period mapping with particular attention to Schmid's orbit theorems.
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