69 research outputs found

    Towards Better Local Governance in Alaska\u27s Unorganized Borough

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    Alaska\u27s unorganized borough is the only unincorporated county-equivalent area in the entire United States, but the Alaska Constitution never envisioned that would be the case. The framers of the Alaska Constitution drafted a revolutionary article on local government that prioritized localism—participation in local government—to further democratic engagement in the state. Recognizing that much of rural Alaska lacked the population and infrastructure to support incorporated and localized self-governance in the 1950s, the framers opted not to automatically incorporate the entire state under various borough governments. Even so, the framers made clear that the state was to play an active role in encouraging (and even compelling) the incorporation of rural sections of the state as time progressed. Today, many sections of the Alaska\u27s unorganized borough eligible for incorporation remain unincorporated, resulting in a number of adverse governance outcomes for rural and urban communities alike. This Note argues that Alaska maintains a positive obligation to incorporate eligible sections of the unorganized borough and that its failure to do so is unconstitutional under the state Constitution. Acknowledging the potential dangers of imposing local government on non-consenting citizens, this Note also articulates why borough governance may further the Alaska Constitution\u27s localism mandate by developing the regional political communities envisioned by the framers

    Reigniting the Flame: Nation-Building Through Medal Winning at the 1964 Tokyo Olympics

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    Modern scholars agree that the 1964 Tokyo Olympic Games marked a dramatic turning point for the Japanese nation after the Second World War. In Japan, the 18th Olympiad remains so much more than an international sporting event – it represents the nation’s transition away from the pain of postwar destruction towards the economic prosperity of the later Shōwa Era years (1960-1989). Scholars have discussed the Olympic spectacle and its symbolic significance at length, but the scholarship presently lacks in a discussion of the role of athletes in helping to resolve the uncertainty of the immediate postwar years. Athletes maintained a vital political role of confirming the nation’s progress after World War II to the Japanese people through their Olympic medals. They became beacons for nationalism, restoring confidence to a fragmented and insecure nation, but also, importantly, transformed themselves into valuable political tools. This thesis follows three separate case studies of Japanese athletes across three separate sporting events in hopes of conveying that the 1964 Tokyo Olympics held value to various institutions as a means of reigniting national confidence in the country. Each case tackles nationalism, gold medal desires, and the developing postwar Japanese cultural identity from a unique angle, highlighting the importance of the Tokyo Olympiad as a nation-building event in postwar Japanese history.Bachelor of Art

    Corporate Security Responsibility: Towards a Conceptual Framework for a Comparative Research Agenda

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    The political debate about the role of business in armed conflicts has increasingly raised expectations as to governance contributions by private corporations in the fields of conflict prevention, peace-keeping and postconflict peace-building. This political agenda seems far ahead of the research agenda, in which the negative image of business in conflicts, seen as fuelling, prolonging and taking commercial advantage of violent conflicts,still prevails. So far the scientific community has been reluctant to extend the scope of research on ‘corporate social responsibility’ to the area of security in general and to intra-state armed conflicts in particular. As a consequence, there is no basis from which systematic knowledge can be generated about the conditions and the extent to which private corporations can fulfil the role expected of them in the political discourse. The research on positive contributions of private corporations to security amounts to unconnected in-depth case studies of specific corporations in specific conflict settings. Given this state of research, we develop a framework for a comparative research agenda to address the question: Under which circumstances and to what extent can private corporations be expected to contribute to public security

    Multi-Platform Next-Generation Sequencing of the Domestic Turkey (Meleagris gallopavo): Genome Assembly and Analysis

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    The combined application of next-generation sequencing platforms has provided an economical approach to unlocking the potential of the turkey genome

    Integrated Genomic Analysis of the Ubiquitin Pathway across Cancer Types

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    Protein ubiquitination is a dynamic and reversibleprocess of adding single ubiquitin molecules orvarious ubiquitin chains to target proteins. Here,using multidimensional omic data of 9,125 tumorsamples across 33 cancer types from The CancerGenome Atlas, we perform comprehensive molecu-lar characterization of 929 ubiquitin-related genesand 95 deubiquitinase genes. Among them, we sys-tematically identify top somatic driver candidates,including mutatedFBXW7with cancer-type-specificpatterns and amplifiedMDM2showing a mutuallyexclusive pattern withBRAFmutations. Ubiquitinpathway genes tend to be upregulated in cancermediated by diverse mechanisms. By integratingpan-cancer multiomic data, we identify a group oftumor samples that exhibit worse prognosis. Thesesamples are consistently associated with the upre-gulation of cell-cycle and DNA repair pathways, char-acterized by mutatedTP53,MYC/TERTamplifica-tion, andAPC/PTENdeletion. Our analysishighlights the importance of the ubiquitin pathwayin cancer development and lays a foundation fordeveloping relevant therapeutic strategies

    Towards Better Local Governance in Alaska\u27s Unorganized Borough

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    Alaska\u27s unorganized borough is the only unincorporated county-equivalent area in the entire United States, but the Alaska Constitution never envisioned that would be the case. The framers of the Alaska Constitution drafted a revolutionary article on local government that prioritized localism—participation in local government—to further democratic engagement in the state. Recognizing that much of rural Alaska lacked the population and infrastructure to support incorporated and localized self-governance in the 1950s, the framers opted not to automatically incorporate the entire state under various borough governments. Even so, the framers made clear that the state was to play an active role in encouraging (and even compelling) the incorporation of rural sections of the state as time progressed. Today, many sections of the Alaska\u27s unorganized borough eligible for incorporation remain unincorporated, resulting in a number of adverse governance outcomes for rural and urban communities alike. This Note argues that Alaska maintains a positive obligation to incorporate eligible sections of the unorganized borough and that its failure to do so is unconstitutional under the state Constitution. Acknowledging the potential dangers of imposing local government on non-consenting citizens, this Note also articulates why borough governance may further the Alaska Constitution\u27s localism mandate by developing the regional political communities envisioned by the framers

    Partnerships for Afterschool Education

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    The American New Left and Its New Media

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    Between 1963 and 1975, young Americans harnessed the power of communication systems to subvert the society about them. Using a theoretical framework that draws on the insights of Wiener, Innes, Youngblood, and McLuhan, I argue that confronted by a host of social ills, countercultural media production in combination with shifting perceptions of technologies pedagogical applications helped to foment the countercultural revolution in the US. First, through an analysis of the Los Angeles Free Press, Fifth Estate, Liberation News Service, and KSAN-FM, this thesis seeks to understand the genesis of the alternative revolutionary communications complex in the U.S.A during the long 1960s. Next, it connects the radical pedagogical movements of the epoch, with a focus on the S.D.S “New School,” with the radical filmmaking practices of the Newsreel filmmaking collective and Emile De Antonio.Arts and Sciences, Irving K. Barber School of (Okanagan)History and Sociology, Department of (Okanagan)UnreviewedUndergraduat
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