Articles de revues sur le sujet « Militia of the City of Dublin »

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1

Shvedova, Valeria V. « Establishment of the Workers’ Militia in Vyborgsky District and the City Militia in the Spassky District (Petrograd, February — March 1917) ». Университетский научный журнал, no 75 (25 août 2023) : 87–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.25807/22225064_2023_75_87.

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The tsarist police were defeated during the February Revolution, after which the Petrograd city militia was created to maintain order and protect citizens. The article deals with the process of building the workers’ militia in the Vyborgsky district and the city militia in the Spassky district.
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Maureen McCoy. « Fair City : Dublin, 1979 ». Antioch Review 71, no 4 (2013) : 698. http://dx.doi.org/10.7723/antiochreview.71.4.0698.

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Honan, Kevin. « Producing Dublin : the city in writing ». City 2, no 7 (mai 1997) : 57–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13604819708900055.

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4

Bartlett, Darius. « Reviews of Maps and Mapping ». Irish Geography 28, no 1 (14 janvier 2015) : 81–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.55650/igj.1995.415.

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CORK CITY: STREET MAP AND INDEX. Scale 1:15,000. Dublin: Ordnance Survey of Ireland, Sixth Edition, 1994. IR£4.00; CORK CITY/CORCAIGH, Scale 1:12,000, with 1:8000 city centre inset. Dublin: The ICON Group Ltd. 1994. IR£3.50. Reviewed by Darius Bartlett
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B Guerin, Michael, Matthew Mullarkey et Jamie Cudden. « City Telecoms Potential : 5G Challenges for a Smart City ». Muma Case Review 6 (2021) : 001–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.28945/4860.

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Feldner, Maximilian. « Reading the City : Cultural Memory and the Representation of Colonial Dublin in James Joyce’s Ulysses ». James Joyce Quarterly 60, no 4 (juin 2023) : 507–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/jjq.2023.a914619.

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Abstract: James Joyce once claimed that his Ulysses (1922) could serve as a basis for a future rebuilding of Dublin. The irony in this regard is that Dublin did indeed irrevocably change during the period he was writing the book. Besides the natural changes a city undergoes in two decades, the Irish struggle for independence during which large parts of the city center were shelled to rubble contributed to the fact that the Dublin Joyce knew had largely disappeared by 1922. With this in mind, I read Ulysses as a site of memory and investigate the role cultural memory plays in the way Dublin is depicted in the novel. There are three ways in which memory is significant in this context. First, rendering his characters’ stream of consciousnesses as they make their ways through Dublin, Joyce’s psychological realism offers, among other things, a literary representation of individual memory. Second, this literary Dublin is a remembered city, based on the recollections and imagination of both Joyce, who had left it years before writing his novel, and the readers who are required to fill numerous gaps and blanks in the vague and unspecific depiction of the cityscape. Third, the novel serves as a mnemonic device that shapes the collective memory of turn-of-the-century Dublin. Regarding the shape and meaning of this remembered Dublin, I will focus on its representation as a colonial city and the ways the political situation is inscribed in the text.
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Ferguson, Paul. « Reviews of Maps and Mapping ». Irish Geography 26, no 1 (23 janvier 2015) : 95–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.55650/igj.1993.461.

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ORDNANCE SURVEY OF IRELAND 1:20,000 MAP OF GREATER DUBLIN, 15th Popular edition. Dublin: Ordnance Survey of Ireland, 1992. IR£3.40; DUBLIN CITY MAP, Scale 1:5,000 and 1,20,000. Dublin and Tokyo: ERA-Maptec Ltd. and Shobunsha Publications, 1992. IR£4.80. Reviewed by Paul Ferguson
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8

Graham, Edward. « The Urban Heat Island of Dublin City During the Summer Months Urban Heat Island of Dublin City ». Irish Geography 26, no 1 (23 janvier 2015) : 45–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.55650/igj.1993.456.

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The summer temperature regime of Dublin city shows a marked diurnal variation due to numerous interlinked causes. At night, urban heat island intensities of up to 8°C can be anticipated in calm, clear conditions. With less than 4 okta cloud, and windspeeds below 5m/s. cold islands develop in the city's parks. Katabatic cold flows and large scale inversions develop when regional windspeeds are less than 3m/s. During the day, although the urban heat island phenomenon is generally absent, temperature contrasts of over 6°C can be expected for topographical reasons. Even with limited sunshine, sea-breezes will develop and affect coastal regions, and areas directly in the lee of hills will commonly experience compressional warming. Heating in sheltered valleys or in the city centre will cause high adiabatic lapse rates to develop. Due to the combination of coastal configuration, topography, and building density, the surface layer temperature profile of Dublin city can be said to be complex, unique, multifaceted. but eminently predictable.
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Kelly, Noel. « Dublin : "Offside" and "Offsite Live" at Dublin City Gallery the Hugh Lane ». Circa, no 113 (2005) : 77. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/25564347.

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Gassmann, Jürg. « A Well Regulated Militia Political and Military Organisation in Pre-Napoleonic Switzerland (1550-1799) ». Acta Periodica Duellatorum 4, no 1 (1 avril 2016) : 23–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/apd-2016-0002.

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Abstract The period sees the transition of the ordinary fighter from feudal levy, yeoman or city burgher militia, to subject in an absolute polity, to today’s concept of the free citizen in a democratic state. In the period, the Swiss Confederacy was the only major polity that was not monarchical, but republican, and at the same time eschewed a standing army in favour of continued reliance on militia throughout. A commonwealth’s military organisation is clearly one of fundamental importance to its own understanding of the nature of rule - its “constitution”. The article traces the transition and relates it to the concept of government under the different theories of the period.
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11

Berger, Silvi K., Franco Mariuzzo et Peter L. Ormosi. « Residential Exodus from Dublin Circa 1900 : Municipal Annexation and Preferences for Local Government ». Journal of Economic History 82, no 4 (décembre 2022) : 1109–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022050722000390.

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Dublin experienced a marked stagnation in population growth in the second half of the nineteenth century, accompanied by decaying infrastructure and poor public health. Historians have emphasized that this crisis was coupled with poor governance of the city of Dublin—manifested by eroding public services together with increasing tax burdens to counteract growing debt. This paper studies the municipal boundary expansion of Dublin in 1901, which occurred as a way to alleviate the city’s financial distress. It saw multiple relatively wealthy townships annexed by the city via royal order to increase Dublin’s tax base. Using a sample of census records matched to city streets, we show that wealthy residents and Protestant residents were more likely to leave annexed areas compared to areas that remained independent. Moreover, we offer anecdotal evidence that at least some of the wealthy Protestant households departing annexed townships sorted into jurisdictions that remained independent. Our findings offer support to arguments that the municipal annexation by the city of Dublin may have accelerated the decline of annexed areas in the early twentieth century and contributed to municipal fragmentation in metropolitan Dublin.
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12

McDonald, Sarah Catherine. « "Freshest advices" ? : the currency of London news in Dublin City newspapers, 1790 - 1801 ». Library and Information Research 34, no 108 (16 janvier 2011) : 3–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.29173/lirg251.

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This paper summarises a MLIS dissertation which studied the currency of news, sourced from London newspapers and re-printed in Dublin City newspapers, during the final decade of the eighteenth century. London was a vital communications network hub for the dissemination of information, consisting of British and Foreign Intelligence, to Irish port cities such as Dublin. Using the resources of recently digitised London and Dublin newspaper series, it was possible to build a model which accurately represents the transmission time for London 'News' into Dublin editorial offices. The model provides a frequency distribution from which the minimum, maximum and average transmission times are established. It is argued that the same method can reliably be applied to determine the transmission time for news from the main European cities to London and Dublin.
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Finnegan, Clare, Hugh Finlay, Margaret O'Mahony et Donal O'Sullivan. « Urban Freight in Dublin City Center, Ireland ». Transportation Research Record : Journal of the Transportation Research Board 1906, no 1 (janvier 2005) : 33–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0361198105190600104.

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Findings are presented from a study evaluating sustainable freight distribution in the city center of Dublin, Ireland, particularly focusing on urban distribution centers (UDCs) and managing the last mile of deliveries. A survey of city center organizations is described, and relevant delivery patterns (origin, destination, type of goods delivered) are compared with those from a previous feasibility analysis to determine UDC opportunities in Dublin. A real-life commercial example of a UDC is also described. Ireland's largest grocery distributor operates this UDC. The operational efficiencies and the wider benefits of the UDC are discussed. In addition, a commercial example of managing the last mile of deliveries through a city center delivery platform is detailed. The delivery platform is managed by a leading logistics service provider.
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14

Tormey, Thomas. « Dublin City Council and the 1916 Rising ». Irish Studies Review 27, no 3 (27 mai 2019) : 448–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09670882.2019.1624358.

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15

Sweeney, John. « The Urban Heat Island of Dublin City ». Irish Geography 20, no 1 (janvier 1987) : 1–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00750778709478819.

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Sweeney, John. « The Urban Heat Island of Dublin City ». Irish Geography 20, no 1 (20 décembre 2016) : 1–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.55650/igj.1987.687.

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Automobile traverses revealed an intense urban heat island in Dublin city during winter nights with light winds and clear skies. Urban rural contrasts of over 6.5°C may be anticipated, and a close correspondence between building density and temperature exists. The city's location close to warm sea and cold uplands appears to be responsible for the generation of active mesoscale air movement during such nights. These circulations bring both cold mountain air into the southern suburbs and warmer oceanic air into the eastern fringes and are responsible for creating substantial variations in temperature within the urban area itself. Cold air drainage along surprisingly gentle slopes occurs, channelled along the valleys of small streams particularly in the south of the city. Considerable intra-urban differences in aggregate energy demand may be anticipated as a consequence.
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17

Horner, Arnold. « Geographers and planning : some reflections ». Irish Geography 47, no 2 (4 octobre 2015) : 13–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.55650/igj.2014.503.

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In this ‘decade of anniversaries’, where 2014 was dominated by the drama of commemorating the centenary of the outbreak of a calamitous war, geographers and others may all too easily under-value other significant dates. For example, 2014 also marked the 50th anniversary of the coming into force of the 1963 Local Government (Planning and Development) Act, and was also the centenary of the Dublin Civic Exhibition whose associated planning competition resulted in the visionary Dublin of the Future. Spearheaded by the English architect-planner, Patrick Abercrombie, the latter was an ambitious unofficial agenda laying out principles and possibilities for the grandiose renewal of an ailing city (Bannon 1985). Notwithstanding its utopian dimensions, this seminal work (finally published in 1922) and the companion Dublin Civic Survey (1925) were profoundly significant influences, being repeatedly re-visited, as the suburban girdle developed and as the central city morphed during the middle decades of the last century (McManus 2002). Deservedly, if belatedly and perhaps all too briefly, the exhibition, the competition and Abercrombie were recognised in ‘City Assembled: A Moving Panorama inspired by the Dublin Civic Exhibition’, which was on display at the City Assembly Rooms in Dublin during early 2015 (McDonald 2015). More permanently, the University College Dublin Library, in association with the Irish Architectural Archive, has added to its digital library a unique collection of the three surviving competition entries, among them being the winning Abercrombie submission (UCD 2014).
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Coletta, Claudio, Liam Heaphy et Rob Kitchin. « From the accidental to articulated smart city : The creation and work of ‘Smart Dublin’ ». European Urban and Regional Studies 26, no 4 (13 juillet 2018) : 349–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0969776418785214.

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While there is a relatively extensive literature concerning the nature of smart cities in general, the roles of corporate actors in their production and the development and deployment of specific smart city technologies, to date there have been relatively few studies that have examined the situated practices by which the smart city unfolds in specific places. In this paper, we draw on three sets of interviews ( n = 114) and ethnographic fieldwork to chart the smart city ecosystem in Dublin, Ireland. We examine how the four city authorities have actively collaborated to frame a disparate and uncoordinated set of information and communication technology-led initiatives, what Dourish terms the ‘accidental smart city’, into an articulated vision of Dublin as a smart city. In particular, we focus on the work of ‘Smart Dublin’, a shared unit established to coordinate, manage and promote Dublin’s smart city initiatives and to drive new economic development opportunities centred on corporate interventions into urban management and living. Our analysis highlights the value of undertaking a holistic mapping of a smart city in formation, and the role of political and administrative geographies and specialist smart city units in shaping that formation.
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Clout, Hugh, Michael J. Bannon et Kevin Hourihan. « Reviews of books ». Irish Geography 36, no 2 (26 juillet 2014) : 194–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.55650/igj.2003.222.

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IRELAND, THE GREAT WAR AND THE GEOGRAPHY OF REMEMBRANCE, by Nuala C. Johnson. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003. ix + 192pp. ISBN 0 521 82616 0 hbk. £45.00stg.REINVENTING MODERN DUBLIN: STREETSCAPE, ICONOGRAPHY AND THE POLITICS OF IDENTITY, by Yvonne Whelan. Dublin: University College Dublin Press, 2003. xvii+ 318pp. ISBN 1–900621–85‐lhbk.DUBLIN 1910–1940: SHAPING THE CITY & SUBURBS, by Ruth McManus. Dublin: Four Courts Press. 2002. 512pp. ISBN l‐85182–615–7hbk; 1–85182–712–9 pbk.
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Brady, Joe, Tadhg O'keefe et Arnold Horner. « Reviews of maps and mapping ». Irish Geography 36, no 1 (26 juillet 2014) : 93–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.55650/igj.2003.229.

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Irish Historic Towns Atlas, no. 12, Belfast, part I to 1840 by Raymond Gillespie and Stephen A. Royle. Published by the Royal Irish Academy in association with Belfast City Council 30 euro / £20. ISBN 0–9543855–0–0.DUBLIN c.840 TO c.1540: THE MEDIEVAL TOWN IN THE MODERN CITY, by H.B. Clarke. Dublin: Royal Irish Academy, Irish Historic Towns Atlas. 15pp. booklet + 1 map (on a base of OJS. 1:2500 Dublin Sheet 18.XI (1939). 2nd edition, 2002. [euro]10.00. ISBN 1 874045 99 2.DONEGAL COUNTY ATLAS/ATLAS CONDAE 2001, produced by Donegal County Development Board. Donegal County Council, 2001. 91 maps. No price.
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Long, Declan. « Tacita Dean, Declan Long, Dublin City Gallery the Hugh Lane, Dublin, March - June 2007 ». Circa, no 120 (2007) : 92. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/25564819.

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Ismail, Hisham Muhamad. « Dubliners : The Story of A City in Paralysis ». International Journal of Linguistics, Literature and Translation 7, no 1 (10 janvier 2024) : 75–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.32996/ijllt.2024.7.1.7.

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The city's image acquired special prominence in many literary works related to modernist literature. In these works, the writers used the city details simultaneously to serve as symbols and references to the themes and issues that can appear in the works. This fact is especially actual in the case of James Joyce's Dublin - the permanent setting of most works by this great Irish modernist. It is worth noting that Joyce took the steps forward to discuss his city with the bright and dark sides. Dubliners, the collection of short stories, belonged to this type of modernist literature focused on the city. James Joyce wrote this collection in the early period of his writing career, and its title highlighted the significance of Dublin – as a city and its people. In each story of the collection, the capital of Ireland was not a mere setting but a unifying factor to portray a complete and comprehensive image of the collection. In every story, Joyce presented a single issue or a merged collection of obstacles found in Dublin and affected the people. In general, Joyce represented the capital city as the center of paralysis, affecting its citizens despite their age. This paper examined the prominence and symbolic meaning of the city in the text. Joyce demonstrated detailed descriptions while mapping his city. For instance, the writer presented the characters while meandering around Dublin's different types of streets. These incidents offered symbolic importance that the people of Dublin moved in circular routs in vain attempts to break the different layers of circles imposed over them at that time. Implicitly, this reference demonstrated the inability of the people of Dublin (the Dubliners) to escape the physical, cultural, political, and religious paralysis. Joyce's portrayal of paralysis in his collection mirrored the entire country of Ireland's broader social and political context during that time. Ireland was undergoing significant changes, yet it seemed imprisoned in inertia and stagnation. The characters and their stories served as microcosms to reflect the broader and extensive social condition, highlighting the challenges faced by the Irish people in breaking free from the paralysis that held them back without tangible outcomes.
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Allen, Kathy, Mircea Mandache et Greg Nielsen. « Soul City : Dublin and the Irish Abortion Question ». Canadian Journal of Irish Studies 30, no 2 (2004) : 48. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/25515533.

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Naji, Jeneen, et Michał Rzeszewski. « Digital Poetry as a Dublin City Data Interface ». Studi irlandesi. A Journal of Irish Studies 12 (30 juin 2022) : 73–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.36253/sijis-2239-3978-13739.

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This paper explores placemaking as an interdisciplinary concept between the field of digital humanities and human geography. Literary placemaking techniques are used in a critical analysis to unpack methods of meaning making and uncover paths for future development of literary interfaces.
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25

Trench, Brian. « Masters (MSc) in Science Communication. Dublin City University ». Journal of Science Communication 08, no 01 (20 mars 2009) : C05. http://dx.doi.org/10.22323/2.08010305.

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The Masters (MSc) in Science Communication at Dublin City University (Ireland) draws on expertise from several disciplines in human and physical sciences. The programme takes a broad view of communication that includes the various kinds of interaction between institutions of science and of society, as well as the diverse means of exchanging information and ideas. Nearly 200 students from a wide variety of backgrounds have completed the programme since its start in 1996, and they work in many different types of employment, from information and outreach services, to science centres, to publishing and journalism. Through the programme, and in the dissertation in particular, students are encouraged to reflect critically on the place and performance of science in society, and on relations between the cultures of natural sciences and of humanities and social sciences.
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Delaney, Kathleen. « Celebrating Difference, City Arts Centre, Dublin, September 1993 ». Circa, no 66 (1993) : 55. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/25557868.

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Tipton, Gemma. « Dublin : "City" and "Elsewhere from Here" at Workroom ». Circa, no 107 (2004) : 82. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/25564107.

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Stevens Curl, James. « Georgian Dublin : The Forces that Shaped the City ». Cultural and Social History 14, no 3 (10 mai 2017) : 416–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14780038.2017.1317433.

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Roantree, Mark, et Alan F. Smeaton. « Research in information managment at Dublin City University ». ACM SIGMOD Record 31, no 4 (décembre 2002) : 121–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/637411.637435.

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Fahy, Samantha. « Dublin City University – toward a sustainable campus : water ». E3S Web of Conferences 48 (2018) : 05005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/20184805005.

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Dublin City University, originally established in 1989, is located approximately 5km to the north of Dublin City Centre and is the most significant and comprehensive provider of university education on the rapidly growing and economically important Irish Eastern corridor. DCU is committed to embedding an ethos of sustainability across the entire institution. Sustainable operations are a core element of the DCU Sustainability Plan. Baseline ecological footprint metrics have been agreed and ambitious targets are set on an annual basis to reduce these with the eventual target of delivering a carbon neutral campus. Such baselines have been agreed for all campuses for water consumption. Several projects have been undertaken both on an operational and research footing to address consumption levels. Such projects include full water surveys of all campuses leading to significant savings due to fixing of leaks. In addition to operational projects, DCU focuses on educating and information its internal and external communities raising awareness of the importance of this essential resource and seeking behavioural change to reduce consumption and increase the implementation of water efficient principles and practices.
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Lawson, Anneka R., Vikram Pakrashi, Bidisha Ghosh et W. Y. Szeto. « Perception of safety of cyclists in Dublin City ». Accident Analysis & ; Prevention 50 (janvier 2013) : 499–511. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.aap.2012.05.029.

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Ningal, Tine, Gerald Mills et Pamela Smithwick. « An inventory of trees in Dublin city centre ». Irish Geography 43, no 2 (juillet 2010) : 161–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00750778.2010.500525.

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Ningal, Tine, Gerald Mills et Pamela Smithwick. « An inventory of trees in Dublin city centre ». Irish Geography 43, no 2 (13 avril 2014) : 161–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.55650/igj.2010.64.

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While urban areas are often considered to be comprised chiefly of artificial surfaces, they can contain a substantial portion of green space and a great diversity of natural habitats. These spaces include public parks, private gardens and street trees, all of which can provide valuable environmental services, such as improved air quality. Trees play a particular role in cities as they are often placed along roadsides and in the median strip of busy streets. As such they regulate access to sunshine, restrict airflow, provide shelter, scavenge air pollutants and manage noise at the street level. A tree planting policy can be an important part of a broader environmental strategy aimed at improving the quality of life in urban areas but this requires up-to-date knowledge of the current tree stock, which does not exist for Dublin. This article presents an inventory of trees in Dublin’s city centre, defined as the area between the Grand and Royal canals. The results show that there are over 10,000 trees in the study area representing a density of 684 trees km-2 or one tree to approximately every 50 residents of the city centre. The tree canopy extent when in full foliage was nearly 1km2 in extent or 6% of the study area. A more detailed analysis of those trees planted along streets shows little species variation but clear distinction in the sizes of trees, which is indicative of the age of planting. These data are used to estimate the carbon stored in Dublin’s trees.
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Grechenko, V. A. « Legal and Organizational Principles of Militia Activities of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic in 1956 ». Bulletin of Kharkiv National University of Internal Affairs 94, no 3 (29 septembre 2021) : 15–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.32631/v.2021.3.01.

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The year 1956 was significant both in the history of Ukraine and the USSR, but also for world history. The death of I.V. Stalin in 1953 marked the beginning of the partial liberalization of the political regime in the Soviet Union; the strongest impetus for the continuation and intensification of this process was in 1956, the year of the XX Congress of the CPSU and the CPSU Central Committee Resolution “On overcoming the Stalin’s cult of personality and its consequences”, where a lot of terrible truth about the Soviet past was told for the first time. This significantly changed the political and socio-economic situation in the country, in fact prevented further mass repression of the population and significantly changed the role of law enforcement agencies, which really began to acquire the characteristics of law enforcement. There was a change of the heads of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the USSR and the Ukrainian SSR, which was another step in clearing the state leadership of the most odious Stalinist personnel and meant strengthening the control of the communist party agencies over the militia. The new leadership of the Ministry of Internal Affairs believed that the main shortcoming in the activities of the militia was the lack of activity in the fight against crime and the significant level of crime among police officers themselves. There were also shortcomings in the operative work on crime prevention and detection. The selection and placement of personnel was badly organized in the Ministry of Internal Affairs. There were many cases, when people without proper training were assigned to important areas of operative and investigative work in the militia. Departments of the Ministry of Internal Affairs and militia divisions in oblasts were reorganized into unified departments of internal affairs of executive committees of oblast Soviets of Workers’ Deputies, and militia departments in cities and districts were transformed into militia divisions of executive committees of city and district councils. That meant the resumption of dual subordination of local law enforcement agencies to executive committees of councils and the Ministry of Internal Affairs. But that reorganization did not have the desired effect.
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Lawton, Philip, et Carla Maria Kayanan. « From Edge City to City Edge ». Built Environment 49, no 1 (1 avril 2023) : 58–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.2148/benv.49.1.58.

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This paper challenges inherited twentieth-century assumptions of suburbia by teasing out existing interrelationships between the city centre and its peripheries. This is done through a content analysis of promotional material and spatial plans guiding the development of 'City Edge', a proposed 700-hectare regeneration scheme over an industrial development in the periphery of Dublin, Ireland. The analysis of new land-use ambitions for City Edge elucidates tensions around the 'highest and best use' of land, the role of non-local speculative approaches, and how the demand for housing in global cities, combined with an ideal of 'mixed-use' is reshaping suburban landscapes. In so doing, we draw upon the concepts of 'blandscape' and 'blendscape' to examine some contradictory forces at work in shaping contemporary suburban space.
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Abdullayev, Zafarbek. « PROBLEMS IN THE ACTIVITIES OF LAW ENFORCEMENT AGENCIES IN THE SYSTEM OF GOVERNANCE IN TURKESTAN (on the example of the Fergana regional police) ». JOURNAL OF LOOK TO THE PAST 4, no 1 (30 janvier 2021) : 41–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.26739/2181-9599-2021-1-7.

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This article discusses the activities of the police and the «Volunteer Police» in Turkestan in 1924, in particular in the Fergana region, the disruptions in their economic and financial supply, the reduction in the number of police, the allocation of funds and food security problems. It also provides information on the activities of the workers ‘and peasants’ militia in the early years of Soviet power, namely that there were two types of militiamen: state, mainly city militiamen, and volunteer militia. It is noted that the provision of police volunteers is the responsibility of the local population, which, in turn, has a certain «response» in the protection of law and order, the protection of state interests among the population.Index Terms: police, workers and peasants police, Soviet government, “Volunteer police”, supply, “Two weeks of aid”, army, Revolutionary Committee, Red Army, printing, illiteracy
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Baradaran Jamili, Leila, et Razie Arshadi. « Semiology of Culture in James Joyce’s A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man ». Advances in Language and Literary Studies 9, no 4 (31 août 2018) : 51. http://dx.doi.org/10.7575/aiac.alls.v.9n.4p.51.

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This study sheds new light on the role of city whether real or fictional in modern novel as one of the signs of man’s cultural fate. For the same reason, city is not a mere physical place, but a spatial concept. Not only has city become inseparable from man’s personal and national destiny but also one’s life continues to unfold on city’s streets. James Joyce’s (1882-1941) A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (A Portrait, 2000) deals with Joyce’s home, Dublin. Joyce aims to universalize and simultaneously eternalize his home through his art. Accordingly, the reader of his text is to decipher the cultural signs of Dublin to get into it. As Michael Ryan (1946-) refers to culture as the total way of life that it has multiple meanings; to understand the culture of a city, to read its meaning, one has to decipher it. Semiology, based on Roland Barthes (1915-1980), is the science of signs whose emphasis is on the interpretation of codes, signs and symbols in a particular culture. Thus, the culture of Dubliners portrayed in A Portrait can be decoded through semiology by the readers. Stephen Dedalus is one who deciphers the cultural signs such as paralysis, religion, prostitution and confession through his walking in Dublin. He considers them as nets of Dublin that he tries to escape from them.
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Stetsyshyn, O. « "JEWISH MILITIA" AS THE THIRD SIDE BETWEEN UKRAINIAN AND POLISH ARMED FORCES DURING THE BATTLE FOR LEMBERG OF NOVEMBER 1-21, 1918 ». Bulletin of Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv. History, no 148 (2021) : 66–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.17721/10.17721/1728-2640.2021.148.11.

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The article is devoted to the activities of the militia created by the Jewish community of Lviv on November 1, 1918 after the proclamation of the independent Ukrainian state in this city. The aim of the militia, initiated by supporters of the Zionist movement, was to protect the Jewish community in Lviv from possible pogroms. Particular attention is paid to the military-political situation in Lviv in November 1918 and in the Eastern European region in general, which had a decisive influence on the establishment of the Jewish militia. Emphasised is also placed on the positive attitude of the Jewish community to the armed conflict between the army of the Western Ukrainian People's Republic and Polish formations who denied the right of Ukrainians to their independent nation-state and who expressed their claims to Western Ukraine. It is emphasized that de jure declaring its neutrality in this conflict, the de facto Jewish militia were forced to take a direct part in this confrontation. This Jewish militia formation controlled a very large part of Lviv's quarters, which was objectively beneficial for both participants in the Ukrainian-Polish conflict. Militioners patrolled the streets, fought crime, and ensured public order. The article describes in detail the three groups that existed at that time in the Lviv Jewish community – Zionists, Orthodox and assimilators, and the main differences in their policies. In particular, in relation to other nations that lived in the western Ukrainian region – Ukrainians and Poles. Special emphasis is placed on the positive attitude of a large part of Lviv Jews to the Ukrainian government and the negative reaction to this commitment of chauvinistic Polish politicians and soldiers, who did not hide their anti-Semitism and demanded from Jews non-alternative loyalty to Poland. It is noted that the more favorable attitude of Lviv Jews to the Ukrainian authorities was the cause of the terrible Jewish pogrom committed by Polish forces after the Ukrainian army left Lviv on November 22, 1918.
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A Hamilton, Julia, et Matthew Mullarkey. « Enabling Cities to Harness the Full Potential of the Internet of Things ». Muma Case Review 6 (2021) : 001–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.28945/4861.

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Jamie Cudden, the Smart City Programme Manager for Dublin City Council (DCC), had just participated in the most recent review of the sensor-enabled smart gully project in Dublin city. Tasked with exploring how technology can help address city challenges to create a ‘smarter’ Dublin, Jamie wondered why more smart sensor applications were not being identified and deployed by DCC departments. He knew that smart sensors existed in the commercial marketplace for everything that could be measured and believed that most city services could be improved with better, real-time measurement. What he could not understand was why more sensor-enabled connected systems were not being deployed by operational service teams across the city. Over the last three years Smart Docklands, a smart city testbed in the Dublin Docklands, had facilitated a broad range of projects with DCC staff utilising Internet of Things (IoT) technology. While these projects demonstrated the value of IoT for specific applications – such as blocked gullies [Exhibit 1] and waste management - there still remained a relatively low utilisation of IoT across DCC’s operational services. Jamie thought, if IoT is really a better way of addressing these issues, why was there not a mass migration towards its use across the Council? Through talking with his colleagues, Jamie realised that a major barrier to IoT deployments was a lack of knowledge of what IoT was and how it would help address the challenges the Council was trying to solve. How would Jamie energise his current and future peers to identify more ways to use technology to connect the city? How would they learn about the power of IoT connected devices? How might each city department generate innovative smart solutions to identify and respond to critical issues with the infrastructure and services of the city? Jamie had recently attended an ‘Introduction to IoT’ workshop for DCC staff at Dogpatch Labs. The workshop highlighted that educating the city’s staff about IoT could encourage a move towards more sensor driven city operations. With this, he was now faced with the challenge of how best to design and deliver an education programme on a larger scale so cities across Ireland could capitalise on the on the benefits of IoT.
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Potemkin, Igor. « The troops of the NKVD of the USSR, the extermination battalions of the NKVD and the militia in the defense of Voronezh in 1942 – January 1943 ». OOO "Zhurnal "Voprosy Istorii" 2023, no 11-2 (1 novembre 2023) : 74–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.31166/voprosyistorii202311statyi38.

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The article examines the activities and role of units of the NKVD troops of the USSR in the defense of Voronezh during the Great Patriotic War. In the defense of the city, units and divisions of the NKVD - internal troops, border troops, convoy troops, railway protection troops, as well as fighter battalions of the NKVD bodies in the Voronezh region and the Voronezh militia played a key role.
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Czernecka, Gabriela. « “Exile from Ireland Left Him a Stranger Everywhere“ : Representation of Dublin in Selected Louis Macneice’s Poetry and Some of the Stories from James Joyce’s Dubliners” ». Studia Celtica Posnaniensia 5, no 1 (1 décembre 2020) : 21–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/scp-2020-0002.

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Abstract This paper discusses the representation of Dublin in the selected poetry of Louis MacNeice and some of the stories from James Joyce’s collection Dubliners. A close investigation of the city as a representative of urban space is interlinked with an examination of its role from the perspective of psychogeography. Both techniques are applied to show why and how two Irish authors portray the multi-dimensional decay of life in the city. In order to paint a whole picture of the relation between ‘space’ and ‘human’, I will also review the biographies of MacNeice and Joyce. For MacNeice, who was tormented by the experiences of domestic Belfast, going to the South was a promising escape. Yet, the change of urban setting did not bring him the expected result. MacNeice quickly became aware of the dirty, paralysed face of Dublin. Similarly, the childhood and day-to-day reality of the lower-middle-class profoundly shaped Joyce’s perspective of Dublin and, eventually, prompted him to go into deliberate exile in Europe. In his writings, however, Dublin constitutes the focal point of the structure, becoming an active participant in the events. Therefore, Dublin for MacNeice and Joyce is a place characterized by blandness, powerlessness in the face of foreign influences, and suffering caused by inertia.
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Collins, Aidan. « James Joyce and a North Dublin asylum ». Irish Journal of Psychological Medicine 19, no 1 (mars 2002) : 27–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0790966700006819.

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It is perhaps surprising that mental illness has such a limited role in the various works of James Joyce. When one considers the volume of material in his books relating to Dublin, topographical and biographical, there appears to be a studious avoidance of psychiatric institutions. The then huge Grangegorman complex (now St Brendan's Hospital) must have had an ominous presence in the city: the size of its population (between 1,500 and 2,000 patients) indicating that few families of whatever class could have escaped contact with it. Indeed, as an institution it probably had economic power comparable to Guinness's brewery or the British Army, which had five barracks in the city, each about the same size as Grange-gorman.
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O'Flynn, John, et Áine Mangaoang. « Sounding Dublin : Mapping Popular Music Experience in the City ». Journal of World Popular Music 6, no 1 (17 mars 2019) : 32–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1558/jwpm.34372.

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O'Neill, Paul. « Corban Walker, City Arts Centre, Dublin, April - May 1994 ». Circa, no 69 (1994) : 56. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/25562703.

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Clancy, Luke. « Mick Wilson, City Arts Centre, Dublin, March - April 1995 ». Circa, no 72 (1995) : 56. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/25562827.

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Morrison, Angeline. « Anna Hill, City Arts Centre, Dublin, August - September 1996 ». Circa, no 78 (1996) : 53. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/25563066.

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Dickson, David. « Review : The Second City : Portrait of Dublin 1700–1760 ». Irish Economic and Social History 15, no 1 (avril 1988) : 137–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/033248938801500122.

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Dickson, David. « Dublin, 1930–1950 : The Emergence of the Modern City ». Journal of Historical Geography 53 (juillet 2016) : 126–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jhg.2016.02.009.

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Connor, Dylan, Gerald Mills et Niamh Moore-Cherry. « The 1911 Census and Dublin city : A spatial analysis ». Irish Geography 44, no 2-3 (juillet 2011) : 245–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00750778.2012.657950.

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Moore, Andrew, et John Newsinger. « Rebel City : Larkin, Connolly and the Dublin Labour Movement ». Labour History, no 88 (2005) : 246. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/27516049.

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