353,180 research outputs found
Difficult decisions: Migration from Small Island Developing States under climate change
The impacts of climate change on Small Island Developing States (SIDS) are leading to discussions regarding decision-making about the potential need to migrate. Despite the situation being well-documented, with many SIDS aiming to raise the topic to prominence and to take action for them-selves, limited support and interest has been forthcoming from external sources. This paper presents, analyzes, and critiques a decision-making flowchart to support actions for SIDS dealing with climate change-linked migration. The flowchart contributes to identifying the pertinent topics to consider and the potential support needed to implement decision-making.
The flowchart has significant limitations and there are topics which it cannot resolve. On-the ground considerations include who decides, finances, implements, monitors, and enforces each decision. Additionally, views within communities differ, hence mechanisms are needed for dealing with differences, while issues to address include moral and legal blame for any climate change-linked migration, the ultimate goal of the decision-making process, the wider role of migration in SIDS communities and the right to judge decision-making and decisions. The conclusions summarize the paper, emphasizing the importance of considering contexts beyond climate change and multiple SIDS voices
The Flowchart Model of Cluster Policy: The Automobile Industry Cluster in China
This paper proposes a general model of the flowchart approach to industrial cluster policy and applies this model to Guangzhou's automobile industry cluster. The flowchart approach to industrial cluster policy is an action plan for prioritizing policy measures in a time-ordered series. We reached the following two conclusions. First,we clarified the effects of Honda, Nissan, and Toyota on agglomeration in Guangzhou's automobile industry cluster. Second, we established that local governments play a crucial role in successful industrial cluster policy, and that the mayor of the local government should be offered incentives in order to target industrial clustering and implement cluster policy.Prioritization of cluster policy, Linearization of policy measures, Flowchart model, Inductive method, Anchor firm, Capacity, China, Industrial estates, Industrial policy, Automobile industry
12 Confused Men: Using Flowchart Verdict Sheets To Mitigate Inconsistent Civil Verdicts
The finality of jury verdicts reflects an implicit societal acceptance of the soundness of the jury\u27s decision. Regardless, jurors are not infallible, and the questions they are often tasked with deciding are unfortunately neither obvious nor clear. The length of trial, complexity of subject matter, volume of factual background, and opaqueness of law can converge in a perfect storm that may confound even the most capable juror. Although the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provide decision rules to resolve inconsistent verdicts, the current remedies authorized by Rule 49—notably, the resubmission of the verdict to the jury and the ordering of a new trial—impose time and money costs on the jury, litigants, and judicial system. The increasing complexity of civil litigation raises the stakes by increasing the likelihood of juror error and the costs of relitigating the case.
This Note proposes the creation of flowchart verdict sheets as a prophylactic against juror confusion. The flowchart verdict sheet builds upon current legal reform proposals to increase juror understanding while decreasing juror confusion and incorporates principles of effective visual design. By mitigating the confusion that can result in inconsistencies before the verdict is rendered, the flowchart verdict sheet enables the judicial system to avoid the costs associated with remedying inconsistent verdicts
On alternative approach for verifiable secret sharing
Secret sharing allows split/distributed control over the secret (e.g. master
key). Verifiable secret sharing (VSS) is the secret sharing extended by
verification capacity.
Usually verification comes at the price. We propose "free lunch", the
approach that allows to overcome this inconvenience.Comment: This is poster that was presented on ESORICS2002 conference in
Zurich. It consists of 4 color pages, with proposal and flowchart
Shape-Based Plagiarism Detection for Flowchart Figures in Texts
Plagiarism detection is well known phenomenon in the academic arena. Copying
other people is considered as serious offence that needs to be checked. There
are many plagiarism detection systems such as turn-it-in that has been
developed to provide this checks. Most, if not all, discard the figures and
charts before checking for plagiarism. Discarding the figures and charts
results in look holes that people can take advantage. That means people can
plagiarized figures and charts easily without the current plagiarism systems
detecting it. There are very few papers which talks about flowcharts plagiarism
detection. Therefore, there is a need to develop a system that will detect
plagiarism in figures and charts. This paper presents a method for detecting
flow chart figure plagiarism based on shape-based image processing and
multimedia retrieval. The method managed to retrieve flowcharts with ranked
similarity according to different matching sets.Comment: 12 page
-instantons over asymptotically cylindrical manifolds
A concrete model for a 7-dimensional gauge theory under special holonomy is
proposed, within the paradigm outlined by Donaldson and Thomas, over the
asymptotically cylindrical G2-manifolds provided by Kovalev's noncompact
version of the Calabi conjecture. One obtains a solution to the -instanton
equation from the associated Hermitian Yang-Mills problem, to which the methods
of Simpson et al. are applied, subject to a crucial asymptotic stability
assumption over the "boundary at infinity".Comment: Supercedes arXiv:1101.0880v2 [math.DG]. 48 pages, 1 figure, 2
flowchart
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