73 research outputs found

    Blackshirts and White Wigs: Reflections on Public Order Law and the Political Activism of the British Union of Fascists

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    While domestic fascism within the United Kingdom has never critically challenged Parliamentary sovereignty, it has decisively disrupted public order since its roots were established in the inter-war political scene. The violence provoked by Sir Oswald Mosley’s British Union of Fascists (BUF) was one of the stimulating factors behind the enactment of the Public Order Act 1936. This Act significantly strengthened the powers of the police to regulate or proscribe varies forms of political activism. This thesis analyses the legal responses of Parliament, the police and the judiciary to interwar British fascism. In addition, by analysing the legal responses to public disorder from before and after the 1930s, it positions the BUF within their wider historical context which enables this thesis to assess and evaluate consistencies and discrepancies within the application of the law. By enhancing the historical contextualisation of the period with a critical legal lens, the principal forms of fascist propaganda are evaluated, including public processions, public meetings and the wearing of political uniform. It is argued that the application of a historico-legal methodology challenges the perception that the authorities were inherently politically biased. This thesis explores alternative factors which explain why the responses of the legal authorities appeared inconsistent in their approach to the far-Right and the far-Left. In order to critically analyse the police’s decision making process when monitoring political activism, the limitations of public order law and the nature of police discretion itself become fundamental components which offer a more balanced explanation for the appearance of political partiality within the police force

    Aid and Development:The Mozambican Case

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    Aid and Growth:Have We Come Full Circle?

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    SiGeC/Si superlattice microcoolers

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    Monolithically integrated active cooling is an attractive way for thermal management and temperature stabilization of microelectronic and optoelectronic devices. SiGeC can be lattice matched to Si and is a promising material for integrated coolers. SiGeC/Si superlattice structures were grown on Si substrates by molecular beam epitaxy. Thermal conductivity was measured by the 3omega method. SiGeC/Si superlattice microcoolers with dimensions as small as 40×40 µm^2 were fabricated and characterized. Cooling by as much as 2.8 and 6.9 K was measured at 25 °C and 100 °C, respectively, corresponding to maximum spot cooling power densities on the order of 1000 W/cm^2

    The bii4africa dataset of faunal and floral population intactness estimates across Africa’s major land uses

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    Sub-Saharan Africa is under-represented in global biodiversity datasets, particularly regarding the impact of land use on species’ population abundances. Drawing on recent advances in expert elicitation to ensure data consistency, 200 experts were convened using a modified-Delphi process to estimate ‘intactness scores’: the remaining proportion of an ‘intact’ reference population of a species group in a particular land use, on a scale from 0 (no remaining individuals) to 1 (same abundance as the reference) and, in rare cases, to 2 (populations that thrive in human-modified landscapes). The resulting bii4africa dataset contains intactness scores representing terrestrial vertebrates (tetrapods: ±5,400 amphibians, reptiles, birds, mammals) and vascular plants (±45,000 forbs, graminoids, trees, shrubs) in sub-Saharan Africa across the region’s major land uses (urban, cropland, rangeland, plantation, protected, etc.) and intensities (e.g., large-scale vs smallholder cropland). This dataset was co-produced as part of the Biodiversity Intactness Index for Africa Project. Additional uses include assessing ecosystem condition; rectifying geographic/taxonomic biases in global biodiversity indicators and maps; and informing the Red List of Ecosystems

    Poverty and the poor law in Plymouth, 1900-1930: Guardians of the poor or guardians of the ratepayers?

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    This thesis focuses on the local administration of the Poor Law in Plymouth between 1900 and 1930. It evaluates the wider problem of health and poverty and looks at contemporary attitudes and approaches in helping the poor. In times of need the destitute could either turn to charity or the Poor Law Guardians for aid. This thesis looks at the role of the Guardians and debates who they were the guardians of; the poor or the ratepayer? It also describes how the nature of the Board of Guardians developed in this period, which included an increasing number of female and Labour Guardians. This thesis shows that changing attitudes during the Great War, and an evolving political scene in the post war era, helped change the dynamics of the local Poor Law Unions, which never reached its full potential before the abolition of the Boards of Guardians in 1930
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