1,012 research outputs found

    Mahalli ademimerkeziyet prensipi ve imar işleri

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    Taha Toros Arşivi, Dosya No: 27-Sıddık Sami Onar. Not: Gazetenin “Hukuki ve İçtimai Meseleler” köşesinde yayımlanmıştır.Unutma İstanbul projesi İstanbul Kalkınma Ajansı'nın 2016 yılı "Yenilikçi ve Yaratıcı İstanbul Mali Destek Programı" kapsamında desteklenmiştir. Proje No: TR10/16/YNY/010

    Demokrasi ve ademi merkeziyet

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    Taha Toros Arşivi, Dosya No: 27-Sıddık Sami Onar. Not: Gazetenin “Hukuk Devleti” köşesinde yayımlanmıştır.Unutma İstanbul projesi İstanbul Kalkınma Ajansı'nın 2016 yılı "Yenilikçi ve Yaratıcı İstanbul Mali Destek Programı" kapsamında desteklenmiştir. Proje No: TR10/16/YNY/010

    Making Sense of Multipolarity: Emerging Powers and Comparative Area Studies

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    As the West retrenches and new powers emerge, students of international relations are well positioned to address an outstanding question: How to thrive in a multipolar world? The question—and the answers which we bring to bear—resonate beyond geopolitics. This is because the task of living together in diversity is arguably the greatest analytical as well as normative challenge facing world politics more broadly (Fisher-Onar, Pearce, and Keyman 2018)

    Üniversite Kütüphanesi

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    Taha Toros Arşivi, Dosya No: 111-Kütüphaneler. Not: Gazetenin "Düşünenlerin Düşünceleri" köşesinde yayımlanmıştır.İstanbul Kalkınma Ajansı (TR10/14/YEN/0033) İstanbul Development Agency (TR10/14/YEN/0033

    İcra ve iflas kanununun tadili münasebetile

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    Taha Toros Arşivi, Dosya No: 27-Sıddık Sami Onar. Not: Gazetenin “Hukuk Bahisleri” köşesinde yayımlanmıştır.Unutma İstanbul projesi İstanbul Kalkınma Ajansı'nın 2016 yılı "Yenilikçi ve Yaratıcı İstanbul Mali Destek Programı" kapsamında desteklenmiştir. Proje No: TR10/16/YNY/010

    An analysis of supply chain related graduate programmes in Europe

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    This is the post-print version of the Article. The official published version of the Article can be accessed from the links below. Copyright @ 2013 Emerald Group Publishing Limited.Purpose – Motivated by a lack of studies in graduate level supply chain education, this research aims to explore trends in supply chain-related graduate programmes in Europe and to propose a framework for designing such programmes. Design/methodology/approach – The authors determine “knowledge” and “skills” areas applicable to supply chain management (SCM) education and analyse supply chain-related graduate programmes published by the European Logistics Association in 2004. They revisit the same programmes in 2011 to determine the recent situation and the trends. The authors use cluster analysis to reveal the similarities and differences among these programmes. Findings – The authors find two distinct clusters: focused and diversified. Focused programmes offer modules in knowledge and skills areas apart from SCM at a negligible level and place more emphasis on SCM in 2011 when compared to 2004. Diversified programmes show a similar increase in the emphasis on SCM with more variety in the knowledge and skills areas. Research limitations/implications – The authors' findings are based on SCM programmes delivered in Europe and over two discrete time periods. Future research should seek to extend this analysis to other continents with larger samples and incorporate the industry perspective to determine the potential gap between what programmes offer and what industry requires. Practical implications – SCM-related graduate programmes continue to redefine themselves. Clustering predominantly serves the universities in re-assessing and re-engineering their programmes, helps prospective graduates in their selection process and assists managers in their recruitment practices. Originality/value – This paper establishes a baseline for assessing SCM-related graduate programmes with respect to the knowledge and skills they offer and introduces a framework that may serve as a starting point for the design and positioning of such programmes

    Sol-Gel Applications in Textile Finishing Processes

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    In the chapter, sol‐gel applications in textile finishing process such as flame retardancy, water, oil repellency, ultraviolet (UV) protection, self‐cleaning, and antibacterial and antiwrinkle processes are reviewed. Sol‐gel technology is well known in materials, metallurgy, ceramic, and glass industry since 1960 and has been researched in textile industry in the last decade. Sol‐gel technology has some advantages when compared to conventional textile finishing process. Sol‐gel technology, which is a method applied to the inorganic metal alkoxide or metal salts to organic textile materials, could impart the high, durable activity and multifunctional properties to different textile materials in the same bath at one step using low concentration of precursors. In addition, sol‐gel technology presents alternatively economical, ecological, and environmental friendly process due to one‐step application, using low concentration of chemicals, nonhalogenated chemicals, and nonformaldehyde release when compared to conventional processes

    Our Virgin Birth or the Reinventions of Europe

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    Introduction: In this chapter, we start with the assumption that while the discussion as to whether or to what extent the EU ought to be characterised as ‘empire’ is a fruitful and productive one, we can take some of the axioms developed in this book as given (see also inter alia Zielonka, 2006). We argue first that Europe as embodied in today’s EU is best characterised by its post-imperial condition, that is, the tension between its aspiration to transcend or overcome its imperial legacies on one hand, and its propensity to reproduce and project these legacies on the other; and second that in doing so, scholars need to make more explicit the relationship between internal and external imperial patterns. On both these counts, our ambition is to propose a way of framing the question that occupies the editors and contributors to this volume rather than offer a satisfactory treatment thereof. We ask how the EU has dealt with its post-imperial condition over time, and what normative guidelines could help it do so better. Revisiting our recent argument on the analogy between the 19th-century standard of civilization and the EU’s relations with the rest of the world, we suggest that the EU’s narratives and modes of actions today have only partially succeeded in dealing with its hegemonic hangover (Nicolaidis 2014).4 We do not know whether internal or external imperial patterns reinforce or mitigate each other. Thus, the definitive reconfiguration of international order away from Europe paradoxically may lead to the reassertion of imperial tendencies internally, as the great powers within Europe retrench and regroup. By the same 4 token, its ability in a number of arenas to transcend imperial habits internally can have ramifications for the EU’s engagement of its neighbours and the broader world. We first defend the idea that the EU has long embarked on a post-imperial project that is indeed grounded on a commitment to non-domination internally as well as externally. Second, we show that this project has in part failed both within and without, because old habits die hard, and because of evolving internal and external conjectural factors. Finally, we ask how the EU may best deal with its post-imperial condition – namely pursue a “decentering agenda” – by focusing on the cases of Turkey and Ukraine

    From Trans-Atlantic order to Afro-Eur-Asian worlds? : reimagining international relations as interlocking regional worlds

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    The apparent transition underway from a trans-Atlantic, liberal world order to one of multiple, overlapping orders has caused much policy, scholarly, and public anxiety. In tandem with this structural development, in the field of international relations (IR), heated contests are underway between alternative visions of how to read this transformation. In this introduction to the special forum, we outline an approach for grappling with these dynamics. Our overarching question is: How to make sense of emergent regional imaginaries, the ways that they interlock, and the implications for IR theory and practice? To begin answering, we first challenge the increasingly widespread view that the return of great power politics-or what we call the "great game" vision of multipolarity-is the only or best register with which to read emerging patterns. Instead, we propose the idea of "interlocking regional worlds," a notion inspired by "Afro-Eur-Asia" as a site that evokes multiple meanings. A historically sensitive and sociologically nuanced analytical modality, we argue for theory as "itinerant translation" across regional worlds. This relational framework, we contend, can help to better understand and explain, observe and encounter one another, the problems that collectively embroil us, and the transformative processes to which we are bearing witness. The exercises in itinerant translation across the interlocking regional worlds of Afro-Eur-Asia on offer in this special forum likewise reveal the globe as a pluriversal space where multiple realities can and do coexist (and always have).On assisterait actuellement à une transition d'un ordre mondial libéral, transatlantique, vers un chevauchement de multiples ordres. Cette transition a engendré beaucoup d'anxiété tant dans le domaine politique, académique que public. Conjointement à cette évolution structurelle, dans le domaine des relations internationales (RI), on observe actuellement des débats animés entre des visions de lecture alternatives de cette transformation. Dans cette introduction du Special Forum, nous présentons une approche pour comprendre ces dynamiques. Notre question centrale est la suivante : comment donner un sens aux imaginaires régionaux qui apparaissent, aux liens qui s’établissent entre eux et aux implications pour la théorie et la pratique des RI ? Pour ébaucher notre réponse, nous commençons par remettre en question l'opinion de plus en plus partagée selon laquelle le retour de la politique des grandes puissances, vision de la multipolarité aussi appelée « Grand Jeu », serait le meilleur, et le seul, moyen de comprendre ces schémas émergents. Nous proposons plutôt l'idée de « mondes régionaux imbriqués », notion inspirée par « l'Afro-Euro-Asie » comme site évoquant de multiples significations. Modalité analytique sensible historiquement et nuancée sociologiquement, nous soutenons la théorie de la « traduction itinérante » des mondes régionaux. Ce cadre relationnel, selon nous, peut aider à mieux comprendre et expliquer, observer et rencontrer les autres, les problèmes dans lesquels nous sommes tous impliqués et les processus transformateurs dont nous sommes les témoins. Les exercices sur la traduction itinérante dans les mondes régionaux imbriqués de l'Afro-Euro-Asie proposés dans ce forum spécial présentent également le globe tel un espace pluriversel, où de multiples réalités peuvent coexister et coexistent (et l'ont toujours fait)
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