13,582 research outputs found
The "racialized" other: intolerance and political equality in Brazil and the United Kingdom
The implementation of Affirmative Action (Political Equality) in
various spheres of Brazilian society, including in the university,
and mainly implemented through a system of ‘racial’ quotas,
have confronted cultural myths such as 'Brazilian cordiality' or
'racial democracy'. Affirmative Action is currently the subject of
intense debate in Brazilian society, not only amongst
intellectuals, academics and politicians, but amongst many
sections of the population, including young students interested
in entering the public universities. Conversely, in the United
Kingdom, affirmative action or reverse discrimination, i.e.
choosing someone solely on the grounds of their gender or
racial group and not on their abilities, is illegal under UK antidiscrimination
law. This perspective changes not only the legal
status of such actions, but implies a change in perspectives
towards modes of 'racializing the other'
Rock falls impacting railway tracks. Detection analysis through an artificial intelligence camera prototype
During the last few years, several approaches have been proposed to improve early warning systems for managing geological risk
due to landslides, where important infrastructures (such as railways, highways, pipelines, and aqueducts) are exposed elements.
In this regard, an Artificial intelligence Camera Prototype (AiCP) for real-time monitoring has been integrated in a multisensor
monitoring system devoted to rock fall detection. An abandoned limestone quarry was chosen at Acuto (central Italy) as test-site
for verifying the reliability of the integratedmonitoring system. A portion of jointed rockmass, with dimensions suitable for optical
monitoring, was instrumented by extensometers. One meter of railway track was used as a target for fallen blocks and a weather
station was installed nearby. Main goals of the test were (i) evaluating the reliability of the AiCP and (ii) detecting rock blocks that
reach the railway track by the AiCP. At this aim, several experiments were carried out by throwing rock blocks over the railway
track. During these experiments, the AiCP detected the blocks and automatically transmitted an alarm signal
Why Do Governments Sell Privatised Companies Abroad?
This paper provides an empirical analysis of Governments' decisions to sell privatised companies on both international and domestic markets in a sample of 392 privatisations in 42 countries. Political theories of privatisation find strong support in our analyses: market oriented Governments favour domestic investors in the allocation of shares. Furthermore, the need to penetrate foreign markets and to warrant better legal protection to shareholders also appear as relevant. Significant differences emerge in OECD and non-OECD countries. In wealthy economies stock market liquidity favours cross-listing, while in emerging countries Governments resort to cross-list in order to "import" liquidity and to develop domestic stock markets. Legal institutions also play a different role. In OECD countries, weak shareholder protection induces Governments to cross-list, in order to borrow the reputation and best practices of established exchanges. On the other hand, creditors' protection is more relevant in non-OECD countries, where weak legal protection of creditors reduces the scope of bank finance, forcing Governments to look for external finance abroad.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/39677/3/wp293.pd
Why Do Governments Sell Privatised Companies Abroad?
This paper provides an empirical analysis of Governments' decisions to sell privatised companies on both international and domestic markets in a sample of 392 privatisations in 42 countries. Political theories of privatisation find strong support in our analyses: market oriented Governments favour domestic investors in the allocation of shares. Furthermore, the need to penetrate foreign markets and to warrant better legal protection to shareholders also appear as relevant. Significant differences emerge in OECD and non-OECD countries. In wealthy economies stock market liquidity favours cross-listing, while in emerging countries Governments resort to cross-list in order to "import" liquidity and to develop domestic stock markets. Legal institutions also play a different role. In OECD countries, weak shareholder protection induces Governments to cross-list, in order to borrow the reputation and best practices of established exchanges. On the other hand, creditors' protection is more relevant in non-OECD countries, where weak legal protection of creditors reduces the scope of bank finance, forcing Governments to look for external finance abroad.privitisation, cross-listing, international financial markets, political economy, investor protection
Galois descent of semi-affinoid spaces
We study the Galois descent of semi-affinoid non-archimedean analytic spaces.
These are the non-archimedean analytic spaces which admit an affine special
formal scheme as model over a complete discrete valuation ring, such as for
example open or closed polydiscs or polyannuli. Using Weil restrictions and
Galois fixed loci for semi-affinoid spaces and their formal models, we describe
a formal model of a -analytic space , provided that is
semi-affinoid for some finite tamely ramified extension of . As an
application, we study the forms of analytic annuli that are trivialized by a
wide class of Galois extensions that includes totally tamely ramified
extensions. In order to do so, we first establish a Weierstrass preparation
result for analytic functions on annuli, and use it to linearize finite order
automorphisms of annuli. Finally, we explain how from these results one can
deduce a non-archimedean analytic proof of the existence of resolutions of
singularities of surfaces in characteristic zero.Comment: Exposition improved and minor modifications. 37 pages. To appear in
Math.
Entre duas águas: o fluxo entre o nacional e o universal em Grande sertão: veredas, de Guimarães Rosa
IX Congresso Brasileiro de Hispanistas realizado nos dias 22 a 25 agosto 2016Ángel Rama, diz Antonio Candido, faz parte de uma “geração crítica” de intelectuais
“participantes” e “desmitificadores” que “transformaram a cultura latinoamericana numa fecunda
mediação entre a dimensão nacional e a universal.” Em Transculturación narrativa en América
Latina, 1984, Rama identificará, na “nova narrativa” que desponta em 1920, indícios do “sistema
literário comum” a regiões latinoamericanas, em que a literatura brasileira já estaria integrada.
Assim como seus contemporâneos hispânicos, modernistas brasileiros como Mário de Andrade,
Graciliano Ramos e Guimarães Rosa souberam conciliar técnicas vanguardistas aos repertórios
temáticos de suas regiões. Rama, segundo Candido, percebeu dois extremos conflitantes no
regionalismo continental: de um lado, a adesão ao vanguardismo, representada pela ruptura com o
passado e projeção virtual do futuro; de outro, a penetração na realidade regional tendente ao
realismo e resistente às inovações. Contudo, décadas depois, ocorre a “síntese inesperada” que
produzirá o traço mais original e fecundo das nossas literaturas: “a penetração das técnicas
renovadoras das vanguardas no universo do regionalismo, na obra de Arguedas, Juan Rulfo, García
Marquez, Guimarães Rosa”. Esta “síntese inesperada” entre regional e universal é o objeto central
deste trabalho.UNILA-UNIOEST
Políticas de igualdade e intolerância: testando a democracia racial e a cordialidade brasileiras
Conceitos como “cordialidade brasileira” e “democracia racial” estão sendo postos à prova no momento em que há um reconhecimento inédito, por parte do Estado brasileiro, notadamente depois de 1992, da importância de políticas públicas que tentam reduzir a desigualdade social
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