1,108 research outputs found
A review of fiscal measures to benefit heritage conservation
This research paper reports an international review of the use of fiscal incentives (such as property tax incentives, income tax deductions and VAT) for heritage conservation. The research examines countries across Europe and North America. The paper has been presented at RICS headquarters
Real estate tax credits and other incentives for investing in historic property in the United States
This article reviews different incentives provided in the USA and makes comparisons to incentives offered in Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Ireland, The Netherlands and the United Kingdom. Together with outputs 1& 2, this article was cited in House of Commons: ODPM: Housing, Planning, Local Government and the Regions Committee, Eleventh Report of Session 2003-4 (Volume I) into “The Role of Historic buildings in Urban Regeneration” (HC 47-I, EV29 published on 29 July 2004)
Black and Green: The future of Indigenous-environmental relations in Australia
Indigenous–environmental relations in Australia have a difficult history. Two examples from fieldwork in northern Australia – the Wild Rivers campaign in Queensland and contestations over Walmadan (James Price Point) in Western Australia – facilitate exploration of the contrast between the sustained, multiple and detailed efforts that environmental groups have put into black–green relations, and the public perception that environmentalists do not care about Indigenous people. The multiple competing political narratives of different Indigenous activists and environmental organisations around notions of environment and economy are identified. This detailed analysis suggests that environmentalists need to advocate for a peopled-landscape and all activists must engage in a more nuanced discussion and understanding of diverse forms of economy
PHANTOM: Curating GitHub for engineered software projects using time-series clustering
Context: Within the field of Mining Software Repositories, there are numerous
methods employed to filter datasets in order to avoid analysing low-quality
projects. Unfortunately, the existing filtering methods have not kept up with
the growth of existing data sources, such as GitHub, and researchers often rely
on quick and dirty techniques to curate datasets.
Objective: The objective of this study is to develop a method capable of
filtering large quantities of software projects in a resource-efficient way.
Method: This study follows the Design Science Research (DSR) methodology. The
proposed method, PHANTOM, extracts five measures from Git logs. Each measure is
transformed into a time-series, which is represented as a feature vector for
clustering using the k-means algorithm.
Results: Using the ground truth from a previous study, PHANTOM was shown to
be able to rediscover the ground truth on the training dataset, and was able to
identify "engineered" projects with up to 0.87 Precision and 0.94 Recall on the
validation dataset. PHANTOM downloaded and processed the metadata of 1,786,601
GitHub repositories in 21.5 days using a single personal computer, which is
over 33% faster than the previous study which used a computer cluster of 200
nodes. The possibility of applying the method outside of the open-source
community was investigated by curating 100 repositories owned by two companies.
Conclusions: It is possible to use an unsupervised approach to identify
engineered projects. PHANTOM was shown to be competitive compared to the
existing supervised approaches while reducing the hardware requirements by two
orders of magnitude.Comment: Authors' Pre-Print submitted for consideration to Empirical Software
Engineering Journal on 08-03-201
Beyond electoralism: reflections on anarchy, populism, and the crisis of electoral politics
This paper is comprised of a series of short, conversational or polemical
interventions reflecting on the political ‘moment’ that has emerged in the wake of
the rise of right-populist politics, particularly in the Global North. We position the
UK’s ‘Brexit’ vote and the election of Donald Trump as US President as
emblematic of this shift, which has a longer genesis and a wider scale than these
events alone. In particular, we draw on anarchist principles and approaches to
consider opportunities for re-energising and re-orienting our academic and activist
priorities in the wake of these turbulent times. Following a short introductory
section, in which we collectively discuss key questions, challenges and tensions,
each contributor individually draws from their own research or perspective to
explore the possibilities of a politics beyond electoralism
Engagement in a Public Forum: Knowledge, Action, and Cosmopolitanism
Facing challenges to the civic purpose of higher education, some scholars and administrators turn to the rhetoric of engagement. Simultaneously, the political philosophy of cosmopolitanism has gained intellectual favor, advocating openness to the lived experiences of distant others. We articulate linkages between these two discourses in an extended case study, finding that a cosmopolitan ethos of engagement in a rural context can improve (1) understanding among people ordinarily separated by spatialized social-ecological differences, (2) prospects for longer term environmental sustainability, and (3) the visionary potential of collaborative inquiry. Despite globalization of food systems and neoliberal shifts in fishery management, an annual fisheries forum facilitates coalitions that overcome dichotomies between technocratic and local knowledge, extending benefits to fishing communities, academia, and public policy. Iterative and loosely structured capacity building expands informally through affective processes of recognition and care, as decentralized leadership supports collective mobilization toward alternate futures
Bodies, building and bricks: Women architects and builders in eight eco-communities in Argentina, Britain, Spain, Thailand and USA
Eco-building is a male domain where men are presumed to be better builders and designers, more men than women build and women find their design ideas and contributions to eco-building are belittled. This article suggests that a focus on bodies, embodiment and the ‘doing’ of building is a potentially productive way to move beyond current gender discrimination. This article makes three key interventions using empirical material from eight case studies of eco-communities in Britain, Thailand, Spain, the USA and Argentina. First, it uses a focus on eco-communities to illustrate the enduring persistence of gender divisions in architecture and building. Second, by using multi-site examples of eco-communities from diverse countries this article finds more commonalities than differences in gender discrimination across cultures and nationalities. Third, it outlines three spaces of opportunity through which more gender-neutral approaches are being developed in eco-building: (1) in challenging the need for ‘strong’ bodies, (2) by practising more embodied ways of building and (3) by making visible women's bodies in building. The ‘doing’ and manual aspect of eco-building is unfamiliar for many (not just women) and interviewees commented on the need to (re)learn how to be practical and to understand the physical possibilities (and limitations) of their bodies
What are we fighting for? Ideological posturing and anarchist geographies
Recent debates in radical geography seem determined to be oppositional and in so doing simplify what is at stake. We need to celebrate and maintain the openness of geography to multiple perspectives while simultaneously developing more action-oriented, hopeful ways forward. Anarchist perspectives hold plenty of promise for radical geography, but only if we critically interrogate their principles and empirics
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