75,679 research outputs found

    Book review: Environment and Empire

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    This article reviews the book: “Environment and Empire”, by William Beinart and Lotte Hughes, Oxford University Press, 2007

    Thinking strategically about customers: a view from the health and fitness industry

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    Customer retention is considered to be one of the key areas for most service providers in the UK Health and Fitness Industry. Much of the existing research and activity concerning customer retention is considered at a tactical, operational level with little emphasis being placed on the strategic considerations that an organisation needs to consider in order to move toward a customer-centred philosophy. This paper suggests that customer retention levels can be improved by thinking more strategically about the organisational purpose, its resources and customers

    Power-knowledge and critique in Australian legal education : 1987-2003

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    While the word 'critique' appeared frequently in Australian legal education texts between 1987 and 2003, the meaning and the emphasis accorded critique varied widely. Michel Foucault's ideas about the close relationship between knowledge and power provide a theoretical framework within which this inconsistency of meaning and emphasis can be described, analysed and explained. Rather than monolithic, the discipline of legal education was by 2003 a dynamic nexus of distinct and competing discourses: doctrinalism, vocationalism, corporatism, liberalism, pedagogicalism and radicalism. Each of these six discourses was simultaneously a form of knowledge and an expression of disciplinary power within the law school. As a form of knowledge, each discourse accorded critique a different meaning and a different emphasis as a consequence of a range of historical, social and political contingencies. As an expression of power, each discourse was an attempt to achieve a set of objectives including the universalisation of a particular approach to the teaching of law and the enhancement of the status of a particular role within the law school. Critique, in a variety of forms, was a strategy employed by each discourse in order to achieve these objectives and to dominate and displace competing discourses

    Book review: Decentering Empire: Britain, India and the Transcolonial World

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    This article reviews the book: “Decentering Empire: Britain, India and the Transcolonial World”, by Durba Ghosh and Dane Kennedy

    Analysis of quantification methods used for cell viability, cell morphology, and synaptic formation in modeling HIV associated dementia in primary neuronal cultures.

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    Change is inevitable, changes in neuronal function occur in physiologic and pathologic processes. The ability to reliably analyze and quantify those changes in neuronal morphology and function has been an important part of technical developments in Neuroscience. A key innovation in the Neuroscience was the development of primary neuronal cultures. Primary neuronal cultures allow neurons to be dissociated and studied as individual components. The study of specific pathologic processes associated with neurodegeneration have benefited greatly from the development and characterization of dissociated primary neuronal cultures. Human Immunodeficiency Virus can lead to a neurodegenerative process. Establishing a consistent model for studying the effects of HIV infection in the brain has provided a unique challenge. The use of analysis of quantification of neuronal changes in dissociated primary neurons modeling HIV dementia has proven useful. As the study of this disorder continues the characterization of the model system will become increasing important. This review will focus on analysis of specific techniques used to quantify specific changes in neurons in this model system. As this field moves forward it will be important to specifically focus on techniques involved in cell viability, morphologic changes, and synaptic formatio

    A study of semiconductor-based atomic oxygen sensors for ground and satellite applications

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    Available from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:DXN032263 / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreSIGLEGBUnited Kingdo

    Climate change, forest conservation and science: A case study of New Zealand, 1860s-1920

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    To most of its European settlers, New Zealand was a land blessed by Providence. A temperate climate and year-round rainfall, easy availability of land and myriad work opportunities attracted many to the new colony. Climate and health figured prominently in migration considerations and many writers took delight in pointing out, as propagandist John Ward did to intending migrants in 1839, that in New Zealand: A never-failing moisture is dispersed over the country by the clouds which collect on the mountain-tops, without the occurrence of rainy seasons, beyond storms of a few days’ duration. This refreshing moisture, combined with the influence of the sea-breezes, renders the climate very favourable to the health, and development, of the human frame. And vegetation is, from the same cause, highly luxuriant, and the verdure almost perpetual

    Catholic missions and missionaries in Maine, 1611-1724

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    Typewritten sheets in cover. Thesis (M.A.)--Boston University Bibliography: p. 70-76
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