1,100 research outputs found

    Cyber Law and Espionage Law as Communicating Vessels

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    Professor Lubin\u27s contribution is Cyber Law and Espionage Law as Communicating Vessels, pp. 203-225. Existing legal literature would have us assume that espionage operations and “below-the-threshold” cyber operations are doctrinally distinct. Whereas one is subject to the scant, amorphous, and under-developed legal framework of espionage law, the other is subject to an emerging, ever-evolving body of legal rules, known cumulatively as cyber law. This dichotomy, however, is erroneous and misleading. In practice, espionage and cyber law function as communicating vessels, and so are better conceived as two elements of a complex system, Information Warfare (IW). This paper therefore first draws attention to the similarities between the practices – the fact that the actors, technologies, and targets are interchangeable, as are the knee-jerk legal reactions of the international community. In light of the convergence between peacetime Low-Intensity Cyber Operations (LICOs) and peacetime Espionage Operations (EOs) the two should be subjected to a single regulatory framework, one which recognizes the role intelligence plays in our public world order and which adopts a contextual and consequential method of inquiry. The paper proceeds in the following order: Part 2 provides a descriptive account of the unique symbiotic relationship between espionage and cyber law, and further explains the reasons for this dynamic. Part 3 places the discussion surrounding this relationship within the broader discourse on IW, making the claim that the convergence between EOs and LICOs, as described in Part 2, could further be explained by an even larger convergence across all the various elements of the informational environment. Parts 2 and 3 then serve as the backdrop for Part 4, which details the attempt of the drafters of the Tallinn Manual 2.0 to compartmentalize espionage law and cyber law, and the deficits of their approach. The paper concludes by proposing an alternative holistic understanding of espionage law, grounded in general principles of law, which is more practically transferable to the cyber realmhttps://www.repository.law.indiana.edu/facbooks/1220/thumbnail.jp

    Place Attractiveness and Image. A research agenda.

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    The main objective of the book is to provide the readers with compelling paths for further Research in place branding, emphasizing the importance of emerging trends, stakeholder and interorganizational dynamics, and strategies (with a focus on activities and target groups). It is divided into three parts. The first part relates to a global phenomenon to which cities cannot escape: the general path towards sustainable transition in many places around the world. Numerous cities are participating in the development of a more sustainable planet. Sustainability is typically seen as a “catch-all” term, that covers many dimensions. Here, the two chapters dedicated to new trends in place branding, that accompany this transition to more sustainable places, focus on two main aspects: being “green” and “inclusive”. The second part focuses on the main actors behind place-branding and -marketing processes. Since organizations and individuals in charge of promoting a destination are central, it remains essential to better understand how they form, structure, and implement place branding. The increasing call for more participatory approaches, and the coordination challenges faced by most places, necessitate a refined understanding of these bodies tasked with improving place image and attractiveness. The third part concerns the design of place-development strategies that target specific groups and activities. While residents’ attraction, and retention especially, is not completely new – cities and regions faced with emigration of people and talents have already thought about this issue for decades – residential attractiveness has often been overshadowed by economic and tourism matters

    Interferomeetriline tehisavaradar kui vahend turbaalade pinna dünaamika jälgimiseks

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    Väitekirja elektrooniline versioon ei sisalda publikatsiooneSood on unikaalsed ökosüsteemid, kus turba ladestumise käigus seotakse pikaajaliselt süsinikku. Üleilmselt on soodes seotud süsiniku kogus, mis võrdub peaaegu poolega hetkel atmosfääris olevast. Tasakaalu süsiniku sidumise ja lendumise vahel mõjutab soodes kõige enam veetase, mistõttu veerežiimi muutudes võivad sood muutuda süsiniku talletajast kasvuhoonegaaside õhku paiskajaks. Tehisavaradar (SAR) on aktiivne mikrolainealas töötav kaugseiresüsteem, mille kasutamine võimaldaks turbaalade ülemaailmset seiret. SAR näeb läbi pilvede, katab korraga suure ala, on hea ruumilise lahutuse ja tiheda ajalise katvusega. Interferomeetriline SAR (InSAR) on uudne meetod, mis võimaldab mõõta maapinna kõrgusmuutusi, tuginedes radarisignaali pool läbitava teekonna pikkusete erinevusele kahest samast kohast, aga eri aegadel tehtud pildi vahel. Tulemuseks on kõrgusmuutuse pilt (interferogramm), kõrvalsaaduseks on koherentsuse pilt, mis kirjeldab võrreldavate piltide ruumimustrite sarnasust. Meetodi kitsaskohaks on suurte kõrgusmuutuste õigesti hindamine. Töö eesmärk oli katsetada InSAR meetodi kasutusvõimaluse piire ja rakendada uusi teadmisi rabade seirel. Uurisin: 1) raba veetaseme mõju koherentsusele; 2) freesturba tootmisega kaasnevat pinna muutuse mõju koherentsusele; 3) InSAR meetodi usaldusväärsust raba pinna kõrguse muutuse hindamisel. Tulemused näitavad, et koherentsustest on kasu soode veerežiimi uurimisel, kuid see ei sobi pinnase niiskuse otseseks mõõtmiseks. Koherentsust saab kasutada turba tootmise seireks, võttes arvesse SAR-ist ja turba tootmise protsessist tulenevaid piiranguid. Töös on visandatud seiremetoodika, mis võimaldab eristada aktiivseid turbatootmisalasid kasutuses välja jäänud aladest ja jälgida turba tootmise intensiivsust, edendamaks tõhusamat ressursikasutust. InSAR meetodil maapinna kõrguse mõõtmised tavapärase 5,6 sentimeetrise lainepikkuse juures ei ole rabas usaldusväärsed. Katsetatud InSAR meetodid ei suutnud kiiresti toimuvaid suuri kõrgusmuutusi õigesti hinnata. Sarnaselt varasematele uuringutele oleks selline viga jäänud avastamata, kui meil poleks võrdluseks olnud maapealseid kõrgusandmeid. Tõenäoliselt võiks soos maapinna kõrguse muutuse hindamiseks paremini sobida lähitulevikku planeeritud pikalainelised (24 cm) radarsatelliidi missioonid.  Peatlands are significant in regard to climate change because peatlands may switch from being a net carbon sink to an emitter of greenhouse gases. The delicate carbon balance in peatlands is controlled by the peatland water table. Peatland soils contain globally nearly as much carbon as a half of what is currently in the atmosphere. Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) is an active microwave remote sensing system which has potential for global peatland monitoring. SAR can penetrate through clouds, covers simultaneously a vast area at high spatial resolution and has a short revisit cycle. Interferometric SAR (InSAR) is an emerging technique to measure surface height changes utilising the difference in the path length that the signal travels between SAR acquisitions of the same target from the same orbital position at different times. The resultant deformation image does not show the absolute change in the path length but the result is ambiguously wrapped in cycles corresponding to half of the signal wavelength, complicating estimation of larger changes. A co-product of InSAR processing is the coherence image, describing the similarity of the spatial patterns in the images. The objective of my dissertation is testing the limits of InSAR and, built on it, improving peatland monitoring. It was studied: 1) coherence response to the water table in raised bogs; 2) coherence response to peat surface alteration caused by the milled peat production; 3) reliability of InSAR deformation estimates in open bogs. Based on the results, coherence could be used as aid to understanding of hydrologic conditions in bogs but it is unsuitable for direct moisture retrieval. Coherence can be used to monitor peat extraction, considering intrinsic limitations posed by the SAR and the peat extraction process. The ambiguity problem makes displacement measurements at the conventional 5.6 cm wavelength unreliable in bogs. A solution could be the planned long wavelength (24 cm) SAR missions.https://www.ester.ee/record=b550580

    Urban Ecosystem Services and Tourism

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    Urban tourism depends on the place specific qualities of destinations. In many cities, climate change poses a threat to these qualities, through increasing risk of excessive heat, draught and flooding. Cities need to adapt to reduce these risks. One way of doing this is to improve their green infrastructure. Urban forests, parks, rivers and wetlands may help reduce the effects of climate change in cities. At the same time, green infrastructure provide a variety of ecosystem services to the community. In particular, cultural ecosystem services such as recreation, andesthetical values take place in urban green infrastructure; they provide value in the form of improved experiences. These mainly benefit the locals but they may also be important for tourism. Such relations between ecosystem services and tourism have in earlier literature been recognized in rural contexts but very seldom in urban. This paper reports preliminary findings from qualitative case studies in the South of Sweden and Berlin, Germany. They focus on how urban planning projects (primarily aimed at mitigating GHG emissions and adapting to climatechange) can be extended to develop places where experience values for both residents and visitors are created alongside other kinds of ecosystem services. We suggest that the need for climate change adaptation in a city may be used as a means to improve its place specific qualities as a tourist destination. By developing green infrastructure in innovative and environmentally friendly ways, the quality of ecosystem services improves, including those relevant for both visitors and residents. Protecting and building green infrastructure, therebyenhancing a city´s visible qualities and its reputation as a sustainable destination, may also be valuable in marketing the city

    A Review of Text Corpus-Based Tourism Big Data Mining

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    With the massive growth of the Internet, text data has become one of the main formats of tourism big data. As an effective expression means of tourists’ opinions, text mining of such data has big potential to inspire innovations for tourism practitioners. In the past decade, a variety of text mining techniques have been proposed and applied to tourism analysis to develop tourism value analysis models, build tourism recommendation systems, create tourist profiles, and make policies for supervising tourism markets. The successes of these techniques have been further boosted by the progress of natural language processing (NLP), machine learning, and deep learning. With the understanding of the complexity due to this diverse set of techniques and tourism text data sources, this work attempts to provide a detailed and up-to-date review of text mining techniques that have been, or have the potential to be, applied to modern tourism big data analysis. We summarize and discuss different text representation strategies, text-based NLP techniques for topic extraction, text classification, sentiment analysis, and text clustering in the context of tourism text mining, and their applications in tourist profiling, destination image analysis, market demand, etc. Our work also provides guidelines for constructing new tourism big data applications and outlines promising research areas in this field for incoming years

    A Review of Text Corpus-Based Tourism Big Data Mining

    Get PDF
    With the massive growth of the Internet, text data has become one of the main formats of tourism big data. As an effective expression means of tourists’ opinions, text mining of such data has big potential to inspire innovations for tourism practitioners. In the past decade, a variety of text mining techniques have been proposed and applied to tourism analysis to develop tourism value analysis models, build tourism recommendation systems, create tourist profiles, and make policies for supervising tourism markets. The successes of these techniques have been further boosted by the progress of natural language processing (NLP), machine learning, and deep learning. With the understanding of the complexity due to this diverse set of techniques and tourism text data sources, this work attempts to provide a detailed and up-to-date review of text mining techniques that have been, or have the potential to be, applied to modern tourism big data analysis. We summarize and discuss different text representation strategies, text-based NLP techniques for topic extraction, text classification, sentiment analysis, and text clustering in the context of tourism text mining, and their applications in tourist profiling, destination image analysis, market demand, etc. Our work also provides guidelines for constructing new tourism big data applications and outlines promising research areas in this field for incoming years

    Recreation, tourism and nature in a changing world : proceedings of the fifth international conference on monitoring and management of visitor flows in recreational and protected areas : Wageningen, the Netherlands, May 30-June 3, 2010

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    Proceedings of the fifth international conference on monitoring and management of visitor flows in recreational and protected areas : Wageningen, the Netherlands, May 30-June 3, 201

    Place, recreation and local development

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    Proceedings of the 9th International Conference on Monitoring and Management of Visitors in Recreational and Protected Areas (MMV9), Bordeaux, FRA, 29-/08/2018 - 31/08/2018It is our pleasure to welcome you to the 9th international Conference on Monitoring and Management of Visitors in Recreational and Protected Areas (MMV9) with a program including keynote speeches, organized and poster sessions, a half-day field trip, social events and post conference trips. This is the first time that France has hosted an MMV Conference. Our country is ranked as the world's top tourist destination, thanks largely to its culture, art, and gastronomy, as well as popular cities such as Paris and Bordeaux. On the other hand, France's potential as a destination for outdoor recreation and nature-based tourism is not hugely publicized, despite its many unique features in this respect: varied climate and natural assets (shoreline, mountains, lakes, and forests), large expanses of countryside, and a network of protected natural areas, to name but a few. France's protected areas are often free to access for the general public. However, in contrast with other countries, nature conservation in specific areas is much less widespread. Where it does take place, it is often centered on territories that are perceived to be "attractive", and where many conflicting activities are practiced. This may be one of the reasons why contractual tools and regional park systems are quite popular in France. The MMV Conference offers an excellent opportunity to discuss the situation in France in greater depth. The theme proposed for the conference was "recreation, place and local development". This reflects our assumption that recreational areas are not just physical assets designed to receive visitors for the purpose of leisure - which in itself would already be something of great importance - but that they reflect deeper social phenomena, as demonstrated through the range of organized sessions dedicated to discussing questions such as environmental education and economic development, but also emerging themes such as social integration, community resilience, environmental justice, and health. The traditional topics covered by MMV Conference reflect an evolving society: with innovations in monitoring techniques (both on people and nature), focus on new populations (Y generation, ethnic minority) and a larger concern for individual engagement and participative management. The 9th Edition of MMV is co-hosted by Irstea and BSA. This would not have been possible without significant contributions from a large number of additional partners and sponsors as well as our national scientific and organizing committee. We would like to take this opportunity to thank everyone for their help. After two years of planning, we are proud to announce that we have more than 160 presentations from 30 countries, meaning that the conference will host over 200 participants from across the globe. We are honored that the International Steering Committee has given us the opportunity to be part of this great MMV community, which organized its first meeting in 2002. We hope you will enjoy the conference as much as we enjoyed organizing it. If you can't be with us in person, we hope that you will enjoy reading our publications
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