3,130 research outputs found
Unity in Multiplicity: Shared Cultural Understandings on Marital Life in a Damascus Catholic and Muslim Court
__Abstract__
Family relations in Syria are governed by a plurality of personal
status laws and courts. This plurality manifests itself on
a variety of levels, including statutory, communal and individual.
In this article, the author argues that, albeit this plurality,
Syrian personal status law is also characterised by the
prevalence of shared, gendered norms and views on marital
life. Based on fieldwork conducted in a Catholic and a
sharâiyya personal status courts in Damascus in 2009, the
author examines the shared cultural understandings on marital
relationships that were found in these courts, and as laid
down â most importantly â in the respective Catholic and
Muslim family laws. The article maintains that the patriarchal
family model is preserved and reinforced by the various
personal status laws and by the various actors which operated
in the field of personal status law. Finally, two Catholic
case studies are presented and analysed to demonstrate the
importance and attachment to patriarchal gender norms in
the Catholic first instance court of Damascus
Counting loop diagrams: computational complexity of higher-order amplitude evaluation
We discuss the computational complexity of the perturbative evaluation of
scattering amplitudes, both by the Caravaglios-Moretti algorithm and by direct
evaluation of the individual diagrams. For a self-interacting scalar theory, we
determine the complexity as a function of the number of external legs. We
describe a method for obtaining the number of topologically inequivalent
Feynman graphs containing closed loops, and apply this to one- and two-loop
amplitudes. We also compute the number of graphs weighted by their symmetry
factors, thus arriving at exact and asymptotic estimates for the average
symmetry factor of diagrams. We present results for the asymptotic number of
diagrams up to 10 loops, and prove that the average symmetry factor approaches
unity as the number of external legs becomes large.Comment: 27 pages, 17 table
Coproduceren in een complex belangenspeelveld: dilemmaâs voor de gemeentelijke overheidsprofessional
The politics and administration of institutional chang
Neutron resonance capture applied to some prehistoric bronze axes
The elemental analysis of materials and objects on the basis of neutron resonance capture by nuclei as a function of neutron energy is briefly explained. The feasibility of neutron resonance capture analysis (NRCA) is demonstrated with five prehistoric âbronzeâ axes of different kinds and complex elemental compositions. Attention is paid to the occurrence of indium as a trace element in these artefacts
Color-Octet Fragmentation and the psi' Surplus at the Tevatron
The production rate of prompt 's at large transverse momentum at the
Tevatron is larger than theoretical expectations by about a factor of 30. As a
solution to this puzzle, we suggest that the dominant production
mechanism is the fragmentation of a gluon into a pair in a pointlike
color-octet S-wave state, which subsequently evolves nonperturbatively into a
plus light hadrons. The contribution to the fragmentation function from
this process is enhanced by a short-distance factor of relative
to the conventional color-singlet contribution. This may compensate for the
suppression by , where is the relative momentum of the charm quark in
the . If this is indeed the dominant production mechanism at large
, then the prompt 's that are observed at the Tevatron should
almost always be associated with a jet of light hadrons.Comment: 9 pages, LaTe
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