1,720 research outputs found
Henry Hallam revisited
Although Henry Hallam (1777–1859) is best known for his Constitutional History of England (1827) and as a founder of ‘whig’ history, to situate him primarily as a mere critic of David Hume or as an apprentice to Thomas Babington Macaulay does him a disservice. He wrote four substantial books of which the first, his View of the state of Europe during the middle ages (1818), deserves to be seen as the most important; and his correspondence shows him to have been integrated into the contemporary intelligentsia in ways that imply more than the Whig acolyte customarily portrayed by commentators. This article re-situates Hallam by thinking across both time and space and depicts a significant historian whose filiations reached to Europe and North America. It proposes that Hallam did not originate the whig interpretation of history but rather that he created a sense of the past resting on law and science which would be reasserted in the age of Darwin.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
Bibliometrics : an overview
Research support is an expanding area of activity for libraries in the HE sector. At the University of Hull, the recent reorganisation of Library and Learning Innovation involved a redistribution of expertise to meet the changing needs of the University, its staff and students. As part of this, a new Research Services Team was created to meet the needs of the research community and so contribute to a key strategic aim of increasing the quantity and quality of research outputs
Why a Particle Physicist is Interested in DNA Branch Migration
We describe an explicitly discrete model of the process of DNA branch
migration. The model matches the existing data well, but we find that branch
migration along long strands of DNA (N \simge 40~bp) is also well modeled by
continuum diffusion. The discrete model is still useful for guiding future
experiments.Comment: Talk presented at LATTICE96(theoretical developments); 3 pages,
TeXsis w/ LAT96.txs (available from
ftp://lifshitz.ph.utexas.edu/texsis/styles/LAT96.txs and will be a part of
the next Elsevier.txs) and TXSdcol.te
A primary health care approach to men's health in community health settings: it's just better practice
The goal of the Just Better Practice project is to describe primary health care approaches to developing a
framework for practice in men’s health in community health settings.
The objectives of the project are to: illustrate better practice principles using South Australian examples of men’s health projects in
community health settings based on developing sustained partnerships and building community
capacity; provide practical examples of how better practice for men’s health is applied in various
community health settings; inform education, training and development for community health service providers in relation to
men’s health and wellbeing; contribute to the provision of information and resources on men’s health and wellbeing; and to reflect a focus on primary health care, health promotion and illness prevention in community
health settings
Planetary Praxes and Sustainable Universities
What is sustainability in Higher Education (HE)? How should it be represented? Who gets to decide? This thesis offers a response to a particular technocratic and teleological way of thinking about sustainability in Higher Education, which has a series of high profile advocates in theory and policy. In contrast, my study explores two particular sustainability projects (Energy Management Project and Local Food) at a large Canadian suburban university campus. Using a grounded theory/situational analysis approach, I represent these two projects as dynamically bound praxes (shaped by a series of actors and imaginaries). Results: given the historical exigency and contention surrounding sustainability since the mid-90s, a multiplicity of actors in the Keele campus, both semiotic and material, have moved into positions to transform its demarcated boundaries therein. As I have begun to map these movements, I suggest this work be continued by future researchers in a position to do so
Osborne v. Neblett and the Separation of Powers: Does the Legislative Power to Make Law Include the Power to Declare That Rights under the Law Cannot Be Waived
Workshop - Amundsen Sea Embayment Tectonic and Glacial History - Programme and Abstracts
Overall Objective: Review existing data and identify priorities for future geoscience research (terrestrial, marine and airborne) in the Amundsen Sea embayment (ASE) region required to develop a better understanding of the past, present and future behaviour of this sector of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS).
Background: The ASE is the most rapidly changing sector of the WAIS and contains enough ice to raise global sea level by 1.2 m. Over the past few years considerable efforts have been made to acquire new data to improve knowledge of the geological structure, subglacial topography, continental shelf bathymetry and glacial history of this remote region. In this workshop we aim to review the current state of knowledge on the tectonic and glacial evolution of the Amundsen Sea embayment. Particular emphasis will be placed on work that will improve boundary conditions for ice sheet models (e.g. subglacial topography, shelf bathymetry, palaeotopography, heat flow and substrate types) and provide palaeo-data against which model outputs can be compared. There will also be a focus on plans and targets for future scientific drilling that will reveal the history of this sector of the WAIS and its sensitivity to major climate changes
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