100,112 research outputs found
Sandwich placements in law: academic tourism or a form of clinical legal education?
Whether or not education at the higher level can be integrated with practical experience has preoccupied educationalists in Europe and North America for a considerable time. There are some disciplines in which the existence of laboratory practice or simulated work experience can be used to assist the process of learning-by-doing quite efficiently. In other areas, learning from experience may be best carried out in the employment environment itself. Historically, in the UK this was the pattern for the traditional professions of law, accountancy, medicine and architecture. More recently in the UK, sandwich courses, predominantly a 'new' university contribution to higher education, have been developed to give students a balance between academic theory and practical professional experience. This article attempts a re-evaluation of the sandwich placement model of legal education in law in the light of the skills debate, and the clinical legal education movement.</p
Transferring employment between the public and private sectors in the United Kingdom: acquired rights and revising TUPE
This paper analyses the reasons for the United Kingdom's long-delayed response to the European Union’s Acquired Rights Directive. It assesses the British government’s overdue updating of the domestic legislation in 2006 in line with the latest version of the Directive, attributing its dilatory response to a combination of technical legal difficulties and conflicting political objectives. The paper concentrates on the ‘privatisation’ of public services, explaining the most recent protection now available to workers whose jobs are out-sourced to the private or voluntary sector. Member States contemplating reform of their own regulatory regimes may find the British experience instructive.</p
The role of extension in the Miocene denudation of the Nevado-Filábride Complex, Betic Cordillera (SE Spain)
The Internal Zone of the Betic Cordillera, SE Spain, consists of a nappe stack of three complexes, the deepest of which is the Nevado-Filábride Complex. The zone is separated from the overlying Alpujárride Complex by a crustal scale shear zone that has variously been interpreted as a thrust or an extensional detachment. A suite of 74 new apatite and zircon fission track results have been obtained from the Nevado-Filábride Complex and these have been used to define regional cooling patterns for the complex. Rapid cooling (105°C–200°C Ma−1) is spatially related to the tectonic contact with the overlying Alpujárride Complex-Cooling to near-surface temperatures occurred first in the east (Sierra de los Filabres) during the mid-Serravallian (12±1 Ma) and was completed by the early Tortonian (9–8 Ma) in the west (Sierra Nevada). There is no correlation between fission track age and sample elevation. These results are consistent with tectonic unroofing of this complex, a finding that favors extension as the mechanism by which the two complexes were brought into contact. Extension spans the middle and earliest upper Miocene (12–8 Ma) in the study area and therefore lasted much longer than previously documented. A hypothesis is advanced which links oblique convergence between the Iberian plate and the Betic Internal Zones, resulting in crustal contraction at depth, with orogen parallel extension in the middle and upper crust
Fractional Branes and the Entropy of 4D Black Holes
We reconsider the four dimensional extremal black hole constructed in type
IIB string theory as the bound state of D1-branes, D5-branes, momentum, and
Kaluza-Klein monopoles. Specifically, we examine the case of an arbitrary
number of monopoles. Consequently, the weak coupling calculation of the
microscopic entropy requires a study of the D1-D5 system on an ALE space. We
find that the complete expression for the Bekenstein-Hawking entropy is
obtained by taking into account the massless open strings stretched between the
fractional D-branes which arise in the orbifold limit of the ALE space. The
black hole sector therefore arises as a mixed Higgs-Coulomb branch of an
effective 1+1 dimensional gauge theory.Comment: 12 pages. 1 figure. v2: References adde
The Yang-Mills Vacuum in Coulomb Gauge in D=2+1 Dimensions
The variational approach to the Hamilton formulation of Yang-Mills theory in
Coulomb gauge developed by the present authors previously is applied to
Yang-Mills theory in 2+1 dimensions and is confronted with the existing lattice
data. We show that the resulting Dyson-Schwinger equations (DSE) yield
consistent solutions in 2+1 dimensions only for infrared divergent ghost form
factor and gluon energy. The obtained numerical solutions of the DSE reproduce
the analytic infrared results and are in satisfactory agreement with the
existing lattice date in the whole momentum range.Comment: 20 pages, 6 figure
Multi-Agent Complex Systems and Many-Body Physics
Multi-agent complex systems comprising populations of decision-making
particles, have many potential applications across the biological,
informational and social sciences. We show that the time-averaged dynamics in
such systems bear a striking resemblance to conventional many-body physics. For
the specific example of the Minority Game, this analogy enables us to obtain
analytic expressions which are in excellent agreement with numerical
simulations.Comment: Accepted for publication in Europhysics Letter
Enthalpy and stagnation temperature determination of a high temperature laminar flow gas stream Patent
Measuring conductive heat flow and thermal conductivity of laminar gas stream in cylindrical plug to simulate atmospheric reentr
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