Academic literature on the topic 'Re-connect'

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Journal articles on the topic "Re-connect"

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Elali, Louise, and Ricardo Ramirez. "Foreword: (Re)Connect, (Re)Establish a Bond." Excursions Journal 11, no. 1 (July 1, 2021): i—iv. http://dx.doi.org/10.20919/exs.11.2021.312.

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In this issue, Excursions Journal invited researchers to (re)connect. The articles assembled here speak about this wide variety of possible approaches and perspectives, highlighting the (re)connections that shape our social and individual lives.
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Graham, Garth, and Nagy Hanna. "Re-connect Canada: A Community-based e-development Strategy." Journal of the Knowledge Economy 2, no. 1 (October 5, 2010): 38–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13132-010-0025-4.

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Hernández-Garbanzo, Yenory. "2023 SNEB Conference Theme “Empowering Food Citizens: Together for Nutrition and Food Systems Transformation. Re-connect, Re-nourish, Re-inspire…”." Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior 54, no. 9 (September 2022): 805–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jneb.2022.07.006.

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Al Kanawati, Nadja, and Nishadee Perera. "Can the WEF Re-Connect the WTO to the Global Business Community?" Journal of World Trade 55, Issue 1 (February 1, 2021): 145–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.54648/trad2021006.

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As the World Trade Organization (‘WTO’) faces what may be an existential crisis and considers options for structural reform, a fundamental issue it needs to examine is maintaining its relevance for the business community. Recognizing that businesses are a key stakeholder in the system of global trade, one aspect of ensuring this relevance is continued and improved engagement with the business community. This article explores and recommends one possibility for such engagement: utilization of the World Economic Forum (‘WEF’). The WEF prides itself on thorough stakeholder engagement, and arguably provides a more holistic representation of business community views. Although limitations to this notion are considered in the article, it is ultimately argued that the WTO should consult the WEF more regularly regarding matters of international trade regulation policy. In doing so, the WTO would be taking advantage of the WEF’s expertise, its existing investment into research and collaboration with major corporations, academics and government officials, as well as its unique structure that allows it to consider upcoming issues in an agile and adaptable manner. After considering stakeholder engagement structures in other fora, this article recommends an institutionalized mechanism to ensure repeated, systematic collaboration and accountability between the WTO and the WEF. World Trade Organization, WTO, World Economic Forum, WEF, business community, stakeholder engagement, institutional change, collaboration, reform
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Prastyatama, Budianastas, and Anastasia Maurina. "Material Studies as the Possible Channel to Re-Connect Dwelling and Building." International Journal of Technology 8, no. 6 (December 26, 2017): 1108. http://dx.doi.org/10.14716/ijtech.v8i6.720.

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Harkins, Leigh, Cecilia Pritchard, Donna Haskayne, Andy Watson, and Anthony R. Beech. "Evaluation of Geese Theatre’s Re-Connect Program: Addressing Resettlement Issues in Prison." International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology 55, no. 4 (May 14, 2010): 546–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0306624x10370452.

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Graham, J. "Healthcare (Dis)connect – Letter to the Editor Re: Breton et al. (2018)." Healthcare Policy | Politiques de Santé 14, no. 2 (November 30, 2018): 10–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.12927/hcpol.2018.25691.

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Anderson, Jon. "Retreat or re-connect: how effective can ecosophical communities be in transforming the mainstream?" Geografiska Annaler: Series B, Human Geography 99, no. 2 (April 3, 2017): 192–206. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/04353684.2017.1324653.

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Essabane, Kamel. "Islamitische godsdienstlessen: naar een integratief pedagogisch-didactisch model." Religie & Samenleving 17, no. 3 (November 17, 2022): 269–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.54195/rs.13316.

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In Flanders (Belgium) and in the Netherlands, confessional religious education (RE) as organized in publicly recognized and state-funded schools has often been criticized. The main criticisms are that confessional RE in general, and Islamic RE in particular, has an outdated pedagogy, while its content does not fit in contemporary Western society. In Flanders and in the Netherlands, many teachers of Islamic RE struggle with the question how confessional Islamic RE can, both pedagogically and with regard to content, be faithful towards the Islamic tradition and at the same time connect with contemporary Western society. In this contribution, the author argues that an integrative perspective on Islamic pedagogy, with particular attention for the rich hermeneutical tradition in Islam, could transcend this dichotomy.
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MacGill, Belinda. "Craft, Relational Aesthetics and Ethics of Care." Art/Research International: A Transdisciplinary Journal 4, no. 1 (February 27, 2019): 406–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.18432/ari29413.

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A conceptual framework for looking and listening operates within aesthetic and affective moments when crafting objects. Assembling and modifying Sea Balls into arranged composition is my craft process that I use to access a state of mind play. Each found and modified object represents a key theoretical framework that I connect and re-organize in relation to each other to produce new ways of perceiving. Considerations of Massumi, Fish and Jameson’s (2002) notion of perception and how I experience affect through embodiment in the moment of re-crafting and re-assembling items is central to the practice. Emergent ideas occur through re-crafting found objects in conjunction with broader considerations of relational aesthetics.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Re-connect"

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Catania, Brittany. "(Re)connect: Transforming Vacant Urban Spaces and Historic Buildings." University of Cincinnati / OhioLINK, 2014. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ucin1396453798.

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Kassberg, Anna. "(RE)DEFINE GROWTH : How to Connect Ön and the City while Preserving, Emphasising and Intensifying the Green, Rural and Recreational Qualities." Thesis, Umeå universitet, Arkitekthögskolan vid Umeå universitet, 2017. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-141644.

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Ön is an island in central Ume River. Today Ön is a rural, green place with key habitats and historical values. In 2008 the municipality took the decision to exploit it by building city there. The decision was preceded by the emerging growth target, for Umeå, to become 200,000 inhabitants in 2050.               The research material for this paper consists of legal documents, reports, literature, interviews, and own observations. It can be divided into three main parts. The first part, which is the ‘growth discourse’, is investigated through documents concerning political strategies and influences from within the field in relation to Umeå as a city. The second part consists of research around the ‘image’ of Norrland and the third part focus on questions involving well-being through nature and the concept of Ecosystem Services, in relation to Ön.               In this paper, I advocate for an alternative plan concerning Ön and its unique set of qualities: the rural, historical, and nature dominated atmosphere adjacent to the city of Umeå. I argue that the value of this land is greater in its natural vesture, than it would be with added asphalt and concrete. The values of concern are non-monetary, but might as well become monetary in the more long-term scenario. There is mounting evidence of benefits derived from nature, when it comes to human well-being, and further that ecosystems provide services of major importance to us. Ecosystem Services are the benefits people obtain from ecosystems. Ön possesses many of these services today. It holds potential for further cultivation and capacity to become amplified as a recreation area in central Umeå.               The objective of this master thesis is to define and validate the qualities of Ön; and further, to develop a programme of possible interventions, in order to preserve and intensify the present atmosphere. This is conducted by identifying Ecosystem Services in the current context; and ways to enhance them, in order to propose an alternative plan for Ön.
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Snyder, Elyse. "(Re)Connect: Architecture and the Senses." Thesis, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/10012/7624.

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I live in a society where a state of multi-tasking and over-stimulation is common. I am inundated with excessive information and seemingly addicted to distraction. My love affair with hi speed digital devices devours all sense of time and space. But in the process of making all information available to everyone, all the time, we are losing our connection with the value of direct experience. What I can see, feel, taste, smell, touch and hear is losing significance and with this loss I am becoming isolated from my own nature and perhaps even my own body. In response to this contemporary condition this thesis proposes a place dedicated to rediscovering our innate sense of rhythm and to re-connecting with our place in the cosmos. This is not intended as a rejection of current technologies, but rather a place that examines the potential of architecture to bring us into the present moment. In doing so we are able to attend to the experience of being in our body and moving from moment to moment in the world; we learn to slow down and enjoy the incremental life of our senses. The site for this exploration is an island in the rocky landscape of the Canadian Shield. Known as Twin Island, this place is the site of my family's cabin where I spend each summer. The journey to the island and the place itself are both a physical and spiritual symbol of transformation; of disconnecting then re-connecting. Architecture is used as an instrument to heighten one’s awareness of the primordial power of water, stone, fire and darkness to spark the cosmological imagination. Sinking deeply into her bed she penetrates earth, rock and ancient memory. Here, she finds her place. This is ‘architecture minimum’; we are simply sheltered within the expanse of the universe.
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Wessels, Anton. "visco[C]ity: addressing Spatial and A-spatial Frictions in Cape Town's Port-City Re-Connect." Thesis, 2020. https://hdl.handle.net/10539/30396.

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A dissertation submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Urban Design to the Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg.
What constitutes ‘value’ for cities today? More importantly, how is it used to serve people, and how is it harnessed toward inclusive, sustainable urban development? These questions motivate an investigation of today’s social, spatial and economic divisions, perpetuated by post-industrial responses for market-driven urban development(f). This research report examines major-infrastructure engineering projects, with a focus on transit and planning principles of land use segregation, motivated through the rise of the private automobile industry(f). The study focuses on the Foreshore of the City of Cape Town, its under-utilisation, its role in severing the connection between the city and port, and a potential programme for its future. The normative position of the report, underpinned by an investigation into the city’s changing value systems(f), calls for a shift toward a radically social approach to address spatial inequity while reconnecting the inner city to its port. Topography, ecological protection and the ocean, geospatially defines the inner city’s edges(f). This limitation on inner city expansion increases urban land value and motivates a careful negotiation of how underdeveloped land is programmed, densified and accessed. At the same time, needs for spatial transformation raise the expectation on how the city, state and private sector will respond in balancing the needs of the greater metropolitan area and equitable urban access for the poor(f). Two economic and politically negotiated programs dominate the Foreshore; inaccessible, parastatal, mono-use docklands and the elevated highway systems which embody a planned purpose of spatial, racial divides and forced removals(f). While these edifices of division remain untouched, global economic inequality is rapidly contributing to further entrenched segregation and extreme, concentrated poverty across the metropolitan area. The normative position orientates a design methodology for equity, inclusivity and opportunity. The essay unpacks social, political and economic influences on public space, and therefore proposes the onus be placed on governance and serious political-will, if transformation is a real goal for the City(f). It highlights the fine balancing of economic and social values in changing Cape Town into a more equitable city(f). Re-addressing the segregating effects of modernist transit-infrastructure and planning unlocks immense developable bulk for the City of Cape Town’s urban core, while spatially re-connecting the city with its harbour. The proposed framework supports the implementation of large scale, public infrastructure as paramount for urban development frameworks and precinct plans to respond to. This primary framework – an enabling framework – values the implementation of elements of public structure that govern city space toward equitable land uses. Furthermore, the report does not aim to merely indicate a massive expanse of developable land for commercial use. Instead, it highlights a potential strategy for tempering commercial growth and considering land uses that could support a more sustainable future for the City. These ideas for a sustainable future for Cape Town is explored by responding to the proposed enabling framework (primary objective of the report) at a precinct scale. It is merely indicative of one potential outcome. Designing at various scales does not intend to dictate a complete vision for the City. Instead, it serves to inform the large-scale, spatial and infrastructure decisions while highlighting the quality of urban spatial structures that could be achieved within the finer grain.
PH2021
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Siegler, John Nolan. "Funny you asked : re-representation and the cognitive processes involved in creating humor /." 2003. http://www.library.wisc.edu/databases/connect/dissertations.html.

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Sweigart-Gallagher, Angela. "Performing the promise of democracy : the Federal Theatre Project's (re)imaginings of American national community /." 2008. http://www.library.wisc.edu/databases/connect/dissertations.html.

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Leitch, Daniel E. "The road to dignity : a qualitative investigation of a Latvian re-entry program for incarcerated youth /." 2006. http://www.library.wisc.edu/databases/connect/dissertations.html.

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Capdevielle, Matthew D. "Reading the "writing wars" : narrative, history, and conflict in the re-formation of post-secondary writing curricula /." 2009. http://www.library.wisc.edu/databases/connect/dissertations.html.

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Haines, Charles Samuel. "Re-routing/rooting the nation-state : the Karakoram Highway and the making of the Northern Areas, Pakistan /." 2000. http://www.library.wisc.edu/databases/connect/dissertations.html.

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Flessner, Ryan. "Living in multiple worlds : utilizing third space theory to re-envision pedagogy in the field of teacher education /." 2008. http://www.library.wisc.edu/databases/connect/dissertations.html.

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Books on the topic "Re-connect"

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Ng, Jenna. The Post-Screen Through Virtual Reality, Holograms and Light Projections. NL Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789463723541.

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Screens are ubiquitous today. They display information; present image worlds; are portable; connect to mobile networks; mesmerize. However, contemporary screen media also seek to eliminate the presence of the screen and the visibilities of its boundaries. As what is image becomes increasingly indistinguishable against the viewer’s actual surroundings, this unsettling prompts re-examination about not only what is the screen, but also how the screen demarcates and what it stands for in relation to our understanding of our realities in, outside and against images. Through case studies drawn from three media technologies – Virtual Reality; holograms; and light projections – this book develops new theories of the surfaces on and spaces in which images are displayed today, interrogating critical lines between art and life; virtuality and actuality; truth and lies. What we have today is not just the contestation of the real against illusion or the unreal, but the disappearance itself of difference and a gluttony of the unreal which both connect up to current politics of distorted truth values and corrupted terms of information. The Post-Screen Through Virtual Reality, Holograms and Light Projections: Where Screen Boundaries Lie is thus about not only where the image’s borders and demarcations are established, but also the screen boundary as the instrumentation of today’s intense virtualizations that do not tell the truth. In all this, a new imagination for images emerges, with a new space for cultures of presence and absence, definitions of object and representation, and understandings of dis- and re-placement – the post-screen.
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Strean, Billy. Alive with Joy!: 5 Elements to Re-Charge, Re-Connect & Re-Discover. Independently Published, 2018.

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Herbert, David, and Laura Helen. 3 Steps to Family: Re-align, Re-connect, Grow together. Createspace Independent Publishing Platform, 2016.

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Strean, Billy. Alive with Joy!: 5 Elements to Re-Charge, Re-Connect, and Re-Discover. Independently Published, 2018.

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Smith, Yolanda. 21 Gratitude Journal for Women: Inspiring Women to Re-Connect, Re-Imagine and Re-define Life. Smith, Yolanda Wilson, 2022.

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Mates-Youngman, Katheen. Couples Therapy Workbook: 30 Guided Conversations to Re-Connect Realtionships. PESI, 2014.

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Mates-Youngman, Kathleen. Couples Therapy Workbook: 30 Guided Conversations to Re-Connect Relationships. CreateSpace Classics, 2014.

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Mates-Youngman, Kathleen. Couples Therapy Workbook: 30 Guided Conversations to Re-Connect Relationships. PESI, 2014.

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Re-Culturing: Rethink Your Culture to Connect Core Behaviors to Your. McGraw-Hill Education, 2022.

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Diana Toledo Diana Toledo Mendez. Couples Relationship Journal and Workbook: 30+ Guided Conversations to Re-Connect Relationships. Independently Published, 2021.

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Book chapters on the topic "Re-connect"

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Hilbeck, Angelika. "Re-Connect." In Transdiscourse 1, 89–103. Vienna: Springer Vienna, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-7091-0288-6_7.

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Jakubowicz, Andrew. "Remembering and Recovering Shanghai: Seven Jewish Families [Re]-connect in Cyberspace." In Save As … Digital Memories, 96–114. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230239418_6.

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Diamantopoulos, Athanasios, and Romman Nourzaei. "Modified SAFARI Technique: Using a Re-entry Device and a Target Balloon to Connect Antegrade and Retrograde Subintimal Lumina." In Extreme IR, 66–69. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-24251-9_19.

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Wan, C. K. Bruce, Cees J. P. M. de Bont, Paul Hekkert, and Kenny K. N. Chow. "Finding Meaning Through Travel Journaling: A Strength-Based Approach." In Information and Communication Technologies in Tourism 2021, 137–49. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-65785-7_12.

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AbstractThis study explores how technology-mediated journaling can support memorable and meaningful tourism experiences (MMEs). The digital photo is the most common medium for travelers to keep a record of memorable and meaningful moments and share them via social media. We explore the potential of using these footprints for travelers to connect the implicit dimensions of their well-being. In particular, we draw reference from positive psychology, which emphasizes that human well-being is rooted in people’s implicit personal factors and psychological needs such as character strengths, motives, and values. Making the implicit explicit may help people to make a wiser choice that matches their own aspirations. To support people in (re)creating meaningful narratives, we created a proof-of-concept prototype by incorporating character strengths into the design of a digital journaling platform. This study involved ten participants and each of them created at least five MME narratives from their past journeys. In this article, we discuss the design concerns for such a platform and examine the effectiveness of the platform in producing meaningful narrative by collecting participant feedback, and looking into the character strengths that the participants draw upon in their MMEs. The result suggests that not only the platform supports the reminiscing of MMEs, but the narration also deepened their self-awareness and allowed the participants to connect their behaviors with their personality traits and implicit values. Some participants were able to identify meanings that were hitherto obscured to them. Implications for quantified travelers and smart tourism are discussed.
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Alkan, Deniz Palalar. "Re-Shaping Business Strategy in the Era of Digitization." In Handbook of Research on Strategic Fit and Design in Business Ecosystems, 76–97. IGI Global, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-7998-1125-1.ch004.

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In the era of digitization terms such artificial intelligence (AI), internet of things (IoT) and related concepts are frequently used to describe a phenomenon that will eventually connect all things to digital networks that will lead to digital transformation of existing business and how they formulate strategies. One of the reasons behind such a paradigm shift is due to the demands of hyper-competition companies face in the global marketplace. Changing nature of the competitive landscape forces companies to re-think their strategy and align existing structures to achieve agility, flexibility, and a sustainable competitive advantage. Thus, companies need to re-think and conceptualize their overall strategies including the means to achieve sustainable competitive advantage. The trends that are shaping the Industry 4.0 will shape the way companies formulate strategies, create collaboration, and convergence of all the actors in the ecosystem to achieve agility, flexibility, and maximize efficiency.
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Whitmore, Aleysia K. "Cuban Music Is African Music." In World Music and the Black Atlantic, 85–118. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190083946.003.0004.

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Part II examines how AfroCubism and Orchestra Baobab musicians negotiate geographic, cultural, and linguistic boundaries as they mix musics across the black Atlantic and bring their music into the word music industry. In so doing, this section shows how musicians’ experiences are intertwined with the commodities they create, and that many of us consume (and critique). This chapter explores how musicians creatively combine African and Cuban musics. In bringing these musics together, musicians (re)negotiate and (re)imagine cultural, historical, political, and economic ties between Africans, Cubans, Europeans, and Americans. Their ideas conflict, diverge, and intersect as they strategically combine musics and social meanings, idealistically connect peoples and musics across the Atlantic, and pragmatically address the limits of musical mixing and collaboration.
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McSweeney, Thomas J. "Setting the Stage." In Priests of the Law, 33–68. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198845454.003.0002.

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This chapter provides a synthesis of the literature on the writing of the Bracton treatise and brief biographies of the justices and clerks who wrote it. A number of scholars have written about Bracton and the process by which it was written and re-written over a period of roughly half a century. There is a great deal of scholarly debate about who wrote Bracton and when it was written. This chapter synthesizes that research into a narrative of the various stages of writing the treatise, and then attempts to connect those stages to the careers of the royal justices who we know or suspect worked on it.
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Trif, Victorița. "Culture of Paradigms in Education and in Educational Psychology." In Analyzing Paradigms Used in Education and Educational Psychology, 1–21. IGI Global, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-7998-1427-6.ch001.

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This chapter aims to connect the typical and unconventional implications of educational meanings of educational sciences and educational psychology paradigms and to explore the sophisticate case study from the authentic classroom. There are multiple discontinuities in the literature from the fieldwork generated by globalization, re-globalization and de-globalization, sharing knowledge, and different decision-making processes from educational systems. On the other hand, the network of various discourses of the authors invited in this book illustrates possible epistemological answers to the critical problems from the contemporary life school. To conclude, the introductory chapter discusses the culture of paradigms in terms of dynamic, alternative, complementary, and comparative models of knowledge.
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Fraser, Joanna Karin Grov, Jan Ove Dagestad, and Barry L. Jones. "Baker Hughes IO and BEACON with a Focus on Downsizing Personnel Requirements at Rig-Site." In Advances in Business Strategy and Competitive Advantage, 213–24. IGI Global, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-2002-5.ch013.

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For more than a decade, Baker Hughes has developed a number of IO applications and WellLink technologies building its BEACON (Baker Expert Advisory Centre Operation Network) platform for the digital oilfield. The scope of BEACON is remote access of real-time rig data, drilling data and wireline data, production and pump monitoring, and static file management. These technologies have enabled the company’s collaboration centers around the world primarily to monitor, support, and optimize operations without having to be physically present at rig site. This development has been a foundation for a successful roll-out of remote collaboration and re-manning of operations, where Baker Hughes has reduced the number of personnel needed at rig site by 25-50%. Monitoring and remote supervision of real-time information 24/7 to optimize overall performance and paperwork (logging, petrophysical analyses) are now all done by people in the office using information communications technology to connect to the rig site. Larger-scale re-manning can also be done with services such as reservoir navigation, drilling optimization, pump management, liner hanger down hole technical support, et cetera. On the Norwegian shelf, where re-manning has been done at higher levels than in many other regions, nearly 50% of Baker Hughes’ staff who would traditionally have been offshore can be re-manned during operational peaks – this means they are either in an office onshore, or their responsibilities have been changed. Baker Hughes’ cross-training of personnel facilitates this flexibility, allowing for efficient and HSE-compliant re-manning.
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MacLeod, Katarin Alinta. "A Case Study of Infusing Collaborative STEM Inquiry Learning With Available Technology Into Undergraduate Student Learning." In Optimizing STEM Education With Advanced ICTs and Simulations, 245–66. IGI Global, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-2528-8.ch010.

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This chapter describes the development, launch, and findings of an undergraduate course entitled “Teaching and Learning in the Physical Sciences”. It was a second-year course that introduced students to content commonly taught within a Bachelor of Education program and connected this content to the literature found in the areas of Physics Educational Research and Chemistry Educational Research. It infused inquiry-based STEM learning allowing students to re-examine content and connect to context, while also examining the pedagogical significance and implications. This chapter provides a qualitatively based insight into students' experiences of the course content and students' voices of the transferability of content from this course to others citing lessons learned, implications for physical science students and recommendations for the future offering.
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Conference papers on the topic "Re-connect"

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Al Mahmud, Abdullah, and Jean-Bernard Martens. "Re-connect." In the 28th of the international conference extended abstracts. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1753846.1754009.

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Windels, J., J. Missinne, E. Voet, G. Steenberge, and G. Luyckx. "A Technology to (re-)Connect Optical Fibres Embedded in Composite Structures." In II European Conference On Multifunctional Structures. CIMNE, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.23967/emus.2020.013.

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Qiao, Wei, and Rifat Sipahi. "Responsible-Eigenvalue Control for Creating Autonomy in Coupled Systems With Delays." In ASME 2011 Dynamic Systems and Control Conference and Bath/ASME Symposium on Fluid Power and Motion Control. ASMEDC, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/dscc2011-6054.

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A class of linear time-invariant (LTI) consensus system with multiple agents and identical communication delays among the agents is considered. For this type of system, we recently showed that a responsible eigenvalue (RE) exists determining the amount of delay (delay margin) that the system can withstand without losing stability. In this paper, we use RE to design controllers such that the delay margin of the system increases as the agents make autonomous decisions. This Responsible Eigenvalue-control enables real-time tuning of RE in a way that the system becomes robust against delays. A numerical example demonstrates intriguing results that connect for the first time in the literature the controller design, the features of the associated graph Laplacian, and RE concept.
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Hall, William. "RE/CONNECT Virtual Exchange and Art Exhibition: A Framework for Creative and Meaningful International Exchange During COVID-19 Restrictions." In The Asian Conference on Arts and Humanities 2023. The International Academic Forum(IAFOR), 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.22492/issn.2186-229x.2023.9.

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Porter, Michael E., and Dennis H. Martens. "The Use of FEM in the Revamping of Existing Systems." In ASME 2003 Pressure Vessels and Piping Conference. ASMEDC, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/pvp2003-1935.

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Often the revamping of existing sulfur recovery systems requires replacing some of the equipment. At the same time, economic considerations can dictate re-using as much of the existing system as is possible and practical. This paper examines the process used to connect a new thermal reactor to an existing waste heat exchanger. Included are some of the design considerations necessary to ensure a safe and reliable final arrangement. The complexity of the configuration — including the stresses developed in the existing equipment and the interconnection — required the use of Finite Element (FE) to assess the final design.
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Strickfaden, Megan, Adolfo Ruiz, and Joyce Thomas. "(Re)storying Empathy in Design Thinking." In 14th International Conference on Applied Human Factors and Ergonomics (AHFE 2023). AHFE International, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.54941/ahfe1002971.

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Storytelling can be associated with temporality, memory, emotion, embodied ways of individually experiencing life, and social ways of collectively experiencing the world. Storytelling is also a kind of re-storying of human experience that has the potential to drive design solutions in very significant directions. We believe that storytelling has the potential to be a cornerstone towards breaking down assumptions about others and revealing beliefs and values about the people that designers call their users or audiences; and as such, storytelling can be significant to human-centred design processes and towards building empathy in design thinking. This paper highlights some of the central ideas around storytelling, re-storying and empathy from the fields of design studies, contemporary literature, psychology, and philosophy. This includes explorations into how designers invest time into storytelling and how this can lead towards deepening empathy and understanding of others’ circumstances. Our core assumption is that storytelling and re-storying are key ways to connect one person with another and to bring together groups of people through sharing and exploring details about individual experiences including intimate and emotional qualities of the human condition. Moving from our highlighted core concepts we put these to work through three projects created by authors and presented as case studies to better understand temporality, memory, emotion and embodiment, and to explore how empathy can be enacted. The three case studies are: a self-knowing activity called Embodied Maps; an activity that has been made into a short film called Evolving Lines; and an ethnographic film created to explore low vision and the urban environment called Light in the Borderlands. Each of these case studies are examples of different types of re-storying, woven together to shed light on and facilitate deep reflection and meaningful conversations about oneself and among people who carry distinct cultural knowledge and disparate lived experiences. Storytelling and re-storying in each of these case studies are developed through sustained and respectful dialogue over hours, weeks, and months as part of design inquiries leading to and facilitating meaning-making processes. This paper promises to illuminate how storytelling and re-storying can be used as a means to being a more empathic design thinker and move towards innovative design solutions that are more suitable, functional and, ultimately, valuable to people.
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Baghdadi, Youcef. "A Web Services-Oriented Approach to Unlock Information." In InSITE 2004: Informing Science + IT Education Conference. Informing Science Institute, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.28945/2753.

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This work proposes to use Web services to turn information into actions by leveraging and unlocking the informational assets of an organization. Indeed, Web services allow cost-effective composition and re-engineering of business processes because of their ability to connect applications, systems, and organization partners through the Internet-based standards (XML, SOAP, UDDI). The work consists of developing a process to generate interfaces to the knowledge in terms of information an organization possesses. These interfaces, implemented as Web services, are callable through the Internet. The proposed process is based on a new concept called factual dependency. Factual dependencies allow aggregations of attributes describing business objects and coordination artifacts that are affected by the same business events. Each resulting aggregation leads to a lowest level of granularity Web services. These Web services are then registered in a private or public UDDI to be discovered and (re)used at request to compose or re-engineer any internal or external business process. Unlike the approaches and tools that generate, in a spontaneous way or on a case-by-case basis, Web services from the complex and redundant elements of the information system, the proposed process generates Web services for the business objects and coordination artifacts as identified at the highest abstraction level of a business model. Indeed, the elements of the highest abstraction level that is the universe of discourse are unique and not redundant. The uniqueness and non-redundancy allows a generation, in a top-down-incremental approach with fewer analysts’ intuition, of a comprehensive set of Web services reflecting the actual and the potential activities of the organization.
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Wei, J., G. J. Qi, Z. F. Wang, Y. F. Jin, P. C. Lim, and C. K. Wong. "A Packaging Solution for Pressure Sensor MEMS." In ASME 2003 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition. ASMEDC, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/imece2003-42824.

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In this paper, a wafer-level packaging solution for pressure sensor microelectromechanical system (MEMS) is reported. Sensor and glass cap wafers are anodically bonded at a bonding temperature less than 400°C. Bubble free interfaces are obtained and the bond strength is higher than 20 MPa. Sensor and bottom silicon cap wafers are bonded at a temperature of 400–450°C with the assistance of a gold intermediate layer. The bond strenght is higher than 5 MPa. The via holes, used for feedthroughs leading out the circuit, on bottom silicon cap wafer are anisotropically formed in KOH etching solution. Aluminum layer is sputtered on the bottom silicon wafer for electrical connection, re-routing circuit and the seed layer of under bump metallization (UBM). During sputtering process, the sidewalls of via holes are also sputtered with aluminum film. At the same time, the metal pads on sensor wafer are also built up to connect with metallized via holes. It is found that the cavities are vacuum sealed. Sputtered Cr/Ni/Au layers are used for UBM layers. Finally, solder bumps can printed or plated on the UBM. The whole process leads to promising performance of the devices.
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Jenewein, Oswald. "Post-Oil Environments: Responsive Design Strategies for Coastal City-Landscapes of Oil." In 2020 ACSA Fall Conference. ACSA Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.35483/acsa.aia.fallintercarbon.20.4.

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This paper summarizes parts of an interdisciplinary research and design project on climate adaptation strategies on the scale of architecture and the city within the case-study territory of Corpus Christi Bay in South Texas. In particular, this paper assesses the challenges of the emerging process of re-industrialization along the Texas Coast, highlighting significant impacts of industrial growth on the city landscape of Downtown Corpus Christi, which is located directly adjacent to the industrial oil port. A proposed masterplan is shown in this paper to demonstrate how responsive design strategies may benefit post-oil city-landscapes in the age of anthropogenic climate change. The emphasis is storm-water and flood mitigation, walkability, alternative transportation, and urban place-making in response to community input related to the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and the AIA Framework for Designing for Equitable Communities. Methodologically, this project builds upon a mixed-methods approach. It includes qualitative and quantitative data gathered through Participatory Action Research, a successful tool to connect the research team and students to local communities, stakeholders, and constituents. The paper suggests that this era of re-industrialization needs to be seen as a transformative process that enables the aging city landscape to adapt to both changing ecological conditions and the time after this late oil boom. Urban identity, socio-economic diversity, and healthy conditions for urban ecosystems are essential parameters to inform the development of comprehensive strategies for the built environment. The responsive design strategies shown in this paper pro- pose the implementation of an infrastructural landscape addressing these challenges. The central element of the master plan is a canal that serves multiple purposes, including disaster preparation and response infrastructure, stormwater management, and alternative transportation for inner-city and city-to-city connections, has been developed to adapt Downtown Corpus Christi to the projected ecological changes.
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Al-aswadi, A. A., H. A. Mohammed, and N. H. Shuaib. "Numerical Investigation of Mixed Convective Flow Through a Vertical Duct With a Backward-Facing Step Using Nanofluids." In ASME 2010 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition. ASMEDC, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/imece2010-38152.

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Laminar mixed convective buoyancy assisting flow through a two-dimensional vertical duct with a backward-facing step using nanofluids as a medium is numerically simulated using finite volume technique. Different types of nanoparticles with 5% volume fraction are used. The wall downstream of the step was maintained at a uniform wall temperature, while the straight wall that forms the other side of the duct was maintained at constant temperature equivalent to the inlet fluid temperature. The wall upstream of the step and the backward-facing step were considered as adiabatic surfaces. The duct has a step height of 4.9 mm and an expansion ratio of 1.942, while the total length in the downstream of the step is 0.5 m. The Reynolds number was in the range of 0 ≲ Re ≤ 100. The downstream wall was fixed to be at uniform wall temperature of 20 °C higher than the inlet flow temperature. A recirculation region was developed straight behind the backward facing step which was appeared between the edge of the step and few millimeters before the corner which connect the step and the downstream wall. In the few millimeters gap a U-turn flow was developed opposite to the recirculation flow which mixed with the unrecirculated flow and travels along the channel. It is inferred that diamond nanofluid has the highest velocity in the vicinity to the heated wall.
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