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This book argues that US theatre in the 20th century embraced the
theories and practices of internationalism as a way to realize a
better world and as part of the strategic reform of the theatre
into a national expression. Live performance, theatre
internationalists argued, could represent and reflect the nation
like no other endeavour.
This book argues that US theatre in the 20th century embraced the
theories and practices of internationalism as a way to realize a
better world and as part of the strategic reform of the theatre
into a national expression. Live performance, theatre
internationalists argued, could represent and reflect the nation
like no other endeavour.
In studying the dynamics of populations, whether of animals, plants
or cells, it is crucial to allow for intrinsic delays, due to such
things as gestation, maturation or transport. This book is
concerned with one of the fundamental questions in the analysis of
the effect of delays, namely determining whether they effect the
stability of steady states. The analysis is presented for one or
two such delays treated both as discrete, where an event which
occurred at a precise time in the past has an effect now, and
distributed, where the delay is averaged over the population's
history. Both of these types occur in biological contexts. The
method used to tackle these questions is linear stability analysis
which leads to an understanding of the local stability. By avoiding
global questions, the author has kept the mathematical
prerequisites to a minimum, essentially advanced calculus and
ordinary differential equations.
In studying the dynamics of populations, whether of animals, plants
or cells, it is crucial to allow for intrinsic delays, due to such
things as gestation, maturation or transport. This book is
concerned with one of the fundamental questions in the analysis of
the effect of delays, namely determining whether they effect the
stability of steady states. The analysis is presented for one or
two such delays treated both as discrete, where an event which
occurred at a precise time in the past has an effect now, and
distributed, where the delay is averaged over the population's
history. Both of these types occur in biological contexts. The
method used to tackle these questions is linear stability analysis
which leads to an understanding of the local stability. By avoiding
global questions, the author has kept the mathematical
prerequisites to a minimum, essentially advanced calculus and
ordinary differential equations.
Although the long-term processes of evolution are selection and
mutation, the infrastructure of a population is a no less important
force in determining the distributions of genetic characteristics
observable within populations. In small populations, and in
particular in human populations, complex patterns of genealogical
relationship between individuals can be an important factor in the
maintenance of genetic variability. The aim of this book is to
develop the quantitative theory of the interrelationship between
the genealogical and the genetic structures of a population.
Aspects of other structural features, such as migration patterns,
are also discussed, but are not central to the development. There
are three major aspects; each comprises two chapters of the text.
First, genealogical relationships are characterized in a way which
can illuminate their genetic consequences. Second, the evolutionary
aspects of genealogical structure are developed. Finally, the last
two chapters present methods of characterizing the complete
structure of a genealogy, and of computing relevant parameters of
genealogical structure; these topics are of relevance to genetic
epidemiology as well as to population genetics.
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