9,461 research outputs found
Kids aren’t the problem. Understanding police officer – school staff relationships within Safer School Partnerships.
Engagement with children and young people (C&YP) in schools within the context of policing is looked upon as a good idea. Yet, there are complexities in the relationships that allow and support police engagement within Safer School Partnerships (SSPs). However, despite SSPs being in existence in London since 2002, understanding the relationships within the partnerships is under researched. The aim of this study is to explore the working relationship between school staff and police officers working together within SSPs in London, to determine an effective SSP model. This study uses qualitative semi-structured interviews to explore the experiences of police officers involved in SSPs, Head Teachers and members of schools’ senior leadership team.
The study concludes there are several common factors that impact the complex relationship within an SSP. There is a lack of clarity within SSP policy and guidance causing a myriad of working practices and a lack of understanding of SSPs. Establishing positive relationships within an SSP is vital in building trust but it can take between six months and one year to build trust and is made more complex due to pre-conceived impressions of the police. While it appears that ethnicity and/or gender play a part in how relationships within SSPs develop, they are only small parts to a larger group of attributes that contribute to a long-lasting SSP. However, SSOs are required to have good attributes commonly associated with ‘soft policing’. Moreover, issues affecting relationships within SSPs are not dealt with in any formal evaluation. The thesis concludes by making several recommendations to assist in improving relationships and creating more effective relationships within SSPs
Dual-frequency GPS survey for validation of a regional DTM and for the generation of local DTM data for sea-level rise modelling in an estuarine salt marsh
Global average temperatures have risen by an average of 0.07°C per decade over the last
100 years, with a warming trend of 0.13°C per decade over the last 50 years.
Temperatures are predicted to rise by 2°C - 4.4°C by 2100 leading to global average sealevel
rise (SLR) of 2 – 6mm per year (20 – 60cms in total) up to 2100 (IPCC 2007) with
impacts for protected coastal habitats in Ireland.
Estuaries are predominantly sedimentary environments, and are characterised by shallow
coastal slope gradients, making them sensitive to even modest changes in sea-level. The
Shannon estuary is the largest river estuary in Ireland and is designated as a Special Area
of Conservation (SAC) under the EU Habitats Directive (EU 1992) providing protection
for listed habitats within it, including estuarine salt marsh.
Trends in Shannon estuary tidal data from 1877 – 2004 suggest an average upward SLR
trend of 4 - 5mm/yr over this period. A simple linear extension of this historical trend
would imply that local SLR will be in the region of 40 - 45cm by 2100. However, this
may underestimate actual SLR for the estuary by 2100, since it takes no account of
predicted climate-driven global SLR acceleration (IPCC 2007) up to 2100
Implementable Wireless Access for B3G Networks - III: Complexity Reducing Transceiver Structures
This article presents a comprehensive overview of some of the research conducted within Mobile VCE’s Core Wireless Access Research Programme,1 a key focus of which has naturally been on MIMO transceivers. The series of articles offers a coherent view of how the work was structured and comprises a compilation of material that has been presented in detail elsewhere (see references within the article). In this article MIMO channel measurements, analysis, and modeling, which were presented previously in the first article in this series of four, are utilized to develop compact and distributed antenna arrays. Parallel activities led to research into low-complexity MIMO single-user spacetime coding techniques, as well as SISO and MIMO multi-user CDMA-based transceivers for B3G systems. As well as feeding into the industry’s in-house research program, significant extensions of this work are now in hand, within Mobile VCE’s own core activity, aiming toward securing major improvements in delivery efficiency in future wireless systems through crosslayer operation
Nabokov\u27s Amphiphorical Gestures
In addition to using two primary kinds of metaphors (those that clarify descriptions, and those that develop into leitmotifs), Nabokov\u27s fiction demonstrates a third kind that is characterized by extended analogies, baroque, seemingly uncontrolled imagery and rhetoric, and, most importantly, fundamental ambiguity. Although this inherent ambiguity is developed throughout the comparison, it is never resolved. Because of this distinguishing characteristic, I have named such metaphors amphiphors, after one of Nabokov\u27s own neologisms. Nabokov\u27s comments in Nikolai Gogol and Lectures on Russian Literature, as well as direct allusions to Gogol embedded in a few amphiphors, suggest that this device evolved directly from Gogol\u27s absurd, overgrown images and Protean minor characterizations. Yet, whereas Gogol\u27s spontaneous generation is careless, uncontrolled, and comical, Nabokov uses his amphiphors deliberately for ironic effect. More precisely, he exploits the gap between the initial and final points of the comparison to create a sustained and irreconcilable ambiguity—what William Empson called the seventh type, at once an indecision and a structure. Moreover, close textual analysis of the mechanics of several amphiphors, from Speak, Memory and Bend Sinister, shows marked similarities in content and authorial intention. In each instance, Nabokov uses the amphiphor\u27s inherent stylistic ambiguity to delineate a similar phenomenological one: his own ambivalence towards death (whether his own, his father\u27s, or his hero\u27s) and the insolubility of its monstrous riddle
Economics and operation of alternating-current and direct-current systems; a comparative study
This item was digitized by the Internet Archive. Thesis (M.B.A.)--Boston Universityhttps://archive.org/details/economicsoperati00lun
Studies in predictor display technique Final report
Predictor display technique for manual altitude control, and automatic pitch axis performanc
Gamma rays of 0.3 to 30 MeV from PSR 0531+21
Pulsed gamma rays from the Crab Pulsar PSR 0531+21 are reported for energies of 0.3 to 30 MeV. The observations were carried out with the UCR gamma ray double Compton scatter telescope launched on a balloon from Palestine, Texas at 4.5 GV, at 2200 LT, September 29, 1978. Two 8 hr observations of the pulsar were made, the first starting at 0700 UT (0200 LT) September 30 just after reaching float altitude of 4.5 g/sq cm. Analysis of the total gamma ray flux from the Crab Nebula plus pulsar using telescope vertical cell pairs was published previously. The results presented supersede the preliminary ones. The double scatter mode of the UCR telescope measures the energy of each incident gamma ray from 1 to 30 MeV and its incident angle to a ring on the sky. The time of arrival is measured to 0.05 ms. The direction of the source is obtained from overlapping rings on the sky. The count rate of the first scatter above a threshold of 0.3 MeV is recorded every 5.12 ms. The Crab Pulsar parameters were determined from six topocentric arrival times of optical pulses
Mismatched Identities: Experiencing White Womanhood and White Motherhood as an Exotic Dancer
In this paper I examine the work of exotic dancers in the Rocky Mountain West, focusing on their identities, identity conflict, identity threat, and overcompensation. In over twelve hours of recorded interviews, I asked ten exotic dancers working in Montana about their work, families, and communities as well as their perceptions of themselves and their work. I found that this marginalized group that resides in places that have rural characteristics, often face identity threat because their identities are known within their communities. The identity threat arises as a result of expectations and stereotypes of dancers, and in order to deal with this threat, the informants relied on overcompensation. The informants overcompensated in a myriad of ways that included costuming, exhibiting anger, creating a tough outer exterior, and drug and alcohol use
Intra-assessor consistency in question answering
In this paper we investigate the consistency of answer assessment in a complex question answering task examining features of assessor consistency, types of answers and question type
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