123 research outputs found

    Shift Strategy for Non-overdamped Quadratic Eigen-problems

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    ABSTRACT In this paper we study properties of non-overdamped quadratic eigenproblems. For the non-overdamped Eigen-value problems we cannot apply variational characterization in full. One of the subintervals of the interval in which we can apply variational characterization for Eigen-values of a negative type is known. In this paper we expand this subinterval by giving better right boundry of the variational characterization interval. This is achieved by getting bigger lower boundary for δ +. New strategy is seen in fact that we join suitably selected hyperbolic quadratic pencil to non-overdamped quadratic pencil. From the variational characterization of the hyperbolic eigenproblem we get better lower boundary for δ +

    Health care in Bosnia and Herzegovina before, during, and after 1992–1995 war: a personal testimony

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    Market-based health care reform during democratic transition in Bosnia and Herzegovina was complicated by the 1992–1995 war, that devastated the country and greater part of its health care infrastructure. The course of the transition and consequences of war for the health system and health professionals are presented here from the perspective of the author. The description of real-life situations and their context is used to illustrate the problems physicians, as well as international community, were faced with and how they tried to cope with them during and after the war. Speaking openly about the mistakes that were made in those times is the first step in preventing them from happening again and an invitation for exchange of opinions and open academic discussion

    Orientalism, Balkanism and Europe's Ottoman heritage

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    ‘Orientalism’ has been used as a lens to understand consumption of heritage sites in non-Western contexts. Through the supplementary lens of ‘Balkanism’, we examine a European region with a significant heritage reflecting the c.500 year rule of the Ottoman Empire. Bosnia and Herzegovina, Republic of North Macedonia and Albania are selected for study given their concentration of Ottoman heritage sites. We note first that these countries' heritage tourism sectors anticipate and modify interpretation to accommodate ‘Western’ tourists' affectation of ‘surprise’ and ‘delight’ at a ‘remarkable’ crossroads between ‘West/East’ or ‘Christendom/Islam’. To understand why Ottoman heritage is often understood to be in but not of Europe, our analysis draws on scholarship interrogating ‘Europe's’ longstanding discursive erasure of its Ottoman-Islamic-Oriental ‘self’ and Tourism's role in this
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