151,838 research outputs found
The Commonwealth Games as an Example of Bringing States Closer Through Sport
The aim of the article is to investigate the issue of positive sports diplomacy directed
at bringing countries closer and deepening cooperation between them. Generally,
sports diplomacy is a broader term and may include various ways of utilizing sport,
both negative and positive, even for the sake of nation-branding. Positive sports
diplomacy most commonly refers to bringing hostile states closer together, but it may
also be used to deepen political alliances or foster friendship and cooperation
between states that are not mutually hostile. The research focuses on the latter form
of positive sports diplomacy. The investigation is a case study concerning the
Commonwealth Games, a sports event that is held once every four years and gathers
countries and territories that used to belong to the former British Empire. The
research therefore aims to determine whether this event, the second largest multisport
event in the world, is significant from political and diplomatic perspectives. A
second research question concerns whether the Commonwealth Games should be
seen as an attempt by Great Britain to maintain influence in its former colonies. The
research attempts to test the hypothesis that the Commonwealth Games are an
important contributor to sustaining ties between states of the former British Empire.The research has been financed by the National Science Centre of Poland, project number
2015/19/D/HS5/00513
Tracking The Trends: Edmonton's Increasing Diversity
Tracking The Trends: Edmonton's Increasing Diversity provides a comprehensive picture of many aspects of Edmonton's social well-being. This 11th edition of Tracking the Trends presents a number of new social and economic data variables in addition to updates on the trends featured in the 10th edition released in 2009.This edition of Tracking the Trends features a special section on Edmonton's increasing diversity. Edmonton is becoming a more diverse city in terms of religion, race and ethnic origin. These trends have important implications for Edmonton's future, offering both opportunities and challenges.This edition also includes an updated Social Health Index. The intent of this index is to provide a rough measure of the overall social health of Edmonton, and how it has changed over time.Presented together, these trends give us a clearer picture of the social changes taking place in Edmonton. They also offer a broad understanding of the segments of the population which are disadvantaged or marginalized
Community Use of the Sacred Heart School
In October 2005, the Edmonton Social Planning Council (ESPC) released a report entitled The Sacred Heart Collective: An Effective Use of a Closed School? which evaluated the unique initiative implemented by the Sacred Heart Collective (the Collective), a group of seven non-profits located in the former Sacred Heart School. In agreement with Edmonton Catholic Schools, the Collective sought to provide free access to meeting and recreational space located in the school to other non-profits and local community groups.The following is a follow-up to the October 2005 report, and details usage of the Sacred Heart facilities for a six month period, from August 2005 to end of January 2006
A Portrait of Raymond Brutinel as a Young Man (Part II): The Future Canadian Corps Machine Gun Commander as a Business Entrepreneur in the Canadian West, 1908–1914
The following carries on from an article on Brutinel’s prewar life in Edmonton, Alberta that appeared in the previous issue of Canadian Military History. That account dealt with his arrival in Edmonton from France, the reasons for his immigration, and his adaptation to life in the newly-created Alberta capital. This included an initial involvement with the Edmonton French community, his editorship of the French language Le Courrier de l’Ouest, and his eventual breaking away from these pursuits into a career of business entrepreneurship. The following is specifically concerned with this latter phase of his career, in which, at the height of the ‘Laurier boom,’ he enjoyed great success. Included are his role as an agent for a syndicate of wealthy Montreal capitalists, his work as an explorer for coal deposits, and his promotion of numerous community development schemes, intended both to assist with community improvement and to earn money for his Montreal backers. These are recounted to clarify for the first time the kinds of activities that preoccupied Brutinel before the war and to help to illustrate his experiences and the capacities he developed and subsequently brought to his service as an officer with the Canadian Corps on the Western Front
Getting Districtwide Results
How a district's central office can actively support and nurture excellence in instructional leadership, teaching and learning at the school level. Based on experiences of Edmonton Public Schools
Tracking the Trends 2013: 12th Edition
This report contains current and historical demographic and socio-economic data from the Edmonton region. Areas of focus in this report include statistics on education and employment, the cost of living and housing, wages and incomes, poverty, government income supports, social wellbeing, and the demographics of Edmonton
A Portrait of Raymond Brutinel as a Young Man (Part I): The Future Machine Gun Commander in Edmonton, Alberta, 1905-1914
Raymond Brutinel remains one of the Canadian Corps’ most intriguing and little understood senior officers. A fair amount has been written about his service with the Canadian Corps, which generally portrays him as a significant commander and military innovator. But his life before he joined the Canadian military largely remains a mystery, which Brutinel himself did little to clear up. He had emigrated from France to Edmonton, Alberta in 1905 and lived there until the outbreak of war. Yet little is known in detail about this formative period of his life. Based largely upon Edmonton-based sources, the following aims to bring greater clarity to these crucial formative years than has been available before now. There is, in fact, little here of a specific military nature, which may itself be significant. But for the first time we have significant detail about what this background was. This in turn helps us to understand exactly the kind of experience, the personality, and the intellectual qualities that Brutinel brought to the job of Canadian Corps machine gun commander
Tommy Douglas: the road to Jerusalem
Reviewed Book: McLeod, Ian. Tommy Douglas: the road to Jerusalem. Edmonton, Alta: Hurtig Pub, 1987
Integral pentagon relations for 3d superconformal indices
The superconformal index of a three-dimensional supersymmetric field theory
can be expressed in terms of basic hypergeometric integrals. By comparing the
indices of dual theories, one can find new integral identities for basic
hypergeometric integrals. Some of these integral identities have the form of
the pentagon identity which can be interpreted as the 2-3 Pachner move for
triangulated 3-manifolds.Comment: 9 pages. Based on arXiv:1309.2195 with new results and comments.
Presented at String-Math conference, Edmonton, Canada, June 9-13, 2014; v2:
minor corrections and comments adde
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