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Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
Foreword by Timothy M. (Tim) Smeeding, Founding Director of the
Luxembourg Income Study and Lee Rainwater Distinguished Professor
of Public Affairs and Economics, University of Wisconsin, US This
insightful book addresses the urgent need for robust evidence on
recent trends and factors contributing to poverty and inequality in
East Asia. Using data from international projects, including the
Luxembourg Income Study (LIS), as well as national data, expert
contributors monitor trends in poverty and inequality within and
between countries, while also identifying the factors that are
driving them, both nationally and regionally. Chapters explore
labour market and demographic developments, changes in family and
household structures and roles, and changes in policy settings.
Investigating how these factors act both independently and
interactively to generate nationally and regionally unique features
of poverty and inequality, the book highlights how inequality has
been rising on a global scale and suggests how welfare states
should respond. Poverty and Inequality in East Asia will be a
valuable resource for researchers and students studying Asian
development and social policy, comparative social policy, labour
policy and family policy. Drawing on state of the art data to
compare experiences in selected Western economies against those in
East Asia, the book will also be a useful resource for policy
makers.
This book provides authentic accounts of the effects of the
revolutionary political reform experienced in the past half century
on education in Europe's considerable rural hinterland. These
reforms include the liberation of the Baltic and Eastern European
states from Soviet communist domination, the 'eurozone' economic
crises, and the current and future migration of people fleeing war
and poverty from the Middle East and Africa. Overshadowing these
events are so-called global forces which champion economies of
scale and pressurize academic performance as keys to economic
success. Trapped in this distal whirlwind of change are 1000s of
small and/or rural elementary schools and the life chances of more
1000s of young children. The research presented here unveils the
unseen and under-reported consequences of top-down, urban-oriented
educational policies on children's and communities' experience of
place and space. Exposure of these conditions in rural Europe is
long overdue, but obscured for decades by political extremes of
left and right. Yet, the lived reality of peremptory and swathing
school closure programmes, and poverty inflicted on rural
populations in parts of Eastern Europe is relatively unreported in
the western educational literature - a situation exacerbated by the
virtual invisibility of rural educational research generally. The
chapters in this book reveal the insights of social science
scholars from 11 European countries including those from low GDP,
formerly soviet bloc countries, recently enabled to present their
research at western European conferences such as the European
Educational Research Association. Their research will inform and
alert education academics, researchers and professionals to these
rural European educational contexts. The research methodologies
reported are diverse and innovative. The national context chapters
are complemented by overview chapters which survey and synthesise
(i)definitions and conceptualisations of rural, (ii) pan-European
appraisal of educational, structural and geospatial statistics on
small and rural schools, and (iii) identify key messages for better
understanding of the rural situation in European research, policy
and practice. Crucially, despite the gloom, the authors report
positive strategies for rural school survival at governmental
and/or school andcommunity levels, that include community
involvement, rural educational tourism, and deliberative
inter-community school network planning.
This classic text provides an excellent introduction to a new and
rapidly developing field of research. Now well established as a
textbook in this rapidly developing field of research, the new
edition is much enlarged and covers a host of new results.
The book is devoted to intelligent design of structures as a novel
kind of designing based on computational intelligence. The proposed
methodology based on computational intelligence has some heuristic
and learning attributes typical for natural intelligence. Computer
models of the structures are built on the base of the finite
element method (FEM), the boundary element method (BEM) or coupling
of FEM and BEM. The short description of possible discrete models
of structures using these methods is included in the Chapter 2.
Various kinds of intelligent approaches using sequential, parallel,
distributed, fuzzy and hybrid evolutionary, immune and particle
swarm algorithms and neural computing are presented in Chapter 3.
Different kinds of optimization such as shape, topology, size and
material optimization for structures under static and dynamical
mechanical and thermo-mechanical loadings, structures with cracks
and composite structures are considered in Chapter 4.
Multi-objective optimization for coupled problems is also taken
into account. Several numerical examples illustrating these kinds
of optimization are presented for 2-D (plane-stress or
plane-strain, plates, shells) as well as 3-D structures. Chapter 5
is devoted to special problems related to solving inverse problems
in which boundary conditions, defects such as voids or cracks and
material characteristics, are unknown. Closing comments summarizing
the book are presented in Chapter 6.
This volume is a comparative study of the practice of impagination
across different ages and civilizations. By impagination we mean
the act of placing and arranging spatially textual and other
information onto a material bearer that could be made of a variety
of materials (papyrus, bamboo slips, palm leaf, parchment, paper,
and the computer screen). This volume investigates three levels of
impagination: what is the page or other unit of the material
bearer, what is written or printed on it, and how is writing or
print placed on it. It also examines the interrelations of two or
all three of these levels. Collectively it examines the material
and materiality of the page, the variety of imprints, cultural and
historical conventions for impagination, interlinguistic
encounters, the control of editors, scribes, publishers and readers
over the page, inheritance, borrowing and innovation, economics,
aesthetics and socialities of imprints and impagination, and the
relationship of impagination to philology. This volume supplements
studies on mise en page and layout - an important subject of
codicology - first by including non-codex writings, second by
taking a closer look at the page or other unit than at the codex
(or book), and third by its aspiration to adopt a globally
comparative approach. This volume brings together for comparison
vast geographical realms of learning, including Europe, China,
Tibet, Korea, Japan and the Near Eastern and European communities
in which the Hebrew Bible was transmitted. This comparison is
significant, for Europe, China, and India all developed great
traditions of learning which came into intensive contact. The
contributions to this volume are firmly rooted in local cultures
and together address global, comparative themes that are
significant for multiple disciplines, such as intellectual and
cultural history of knowledge (both humanistic and scientific),
global history, literary and media studies, aesthetics, and studies
of material culture, among other fields.
This work revolves around the hydrogen economy and energy-storage
electrochemical systems. More specifically, it investigates the
possibility of using magnetron sputtering for deposition of
efficient thin-film anode catalysts with low noble metal content
for proton exchange membrane water electrolyzers (PEM-WEs) and
unitized regenerative fuel cells (PEM-URFCs). The motivation for
this research derives from the urgent need to minimize the price of
such electrochemical devices should they enter the mass production.
Numerous experiments were carried out, correlating the actual
in-cell performance with the varying position of thin-film catalyst
within the membrane electrode assembly, with the composition of
high-surface support sublayer and with the chemical structure of
the catalyst itself. The wide arsenal of analytical methods ranging
from electrochemical impedance spectroscopy through electrochemical
atomic force microscopy to photoelectron spectroscopy allowed the
description of the complex phenomena behind different obtained
efficiencies. Systematic optimizations led to the design of a novel
PEM-WE anode thin-film iridium catalyst which performs similarly to
the standard counterparts despite using just a fraction of their
noble metal content. Moreover, the layer-by-layer approach resulted
in the design of a Ir/TiC/Pt bi-functional anode for PEM-URFC which
is able to operate in both the fuel cell and electrolyzer regime
and thus helps to cut the cost of the whole conversion system even
further.
This book explores the development of state welfare in Taiwan,
focusing on the interconnection between capitalist development and
state welfare from 1895 to 1990, using an integrated Marxist
perspective to which the capitalist world system, state structure,
ideology, and social structure are considered simultaneously. It
argues that neither citizenship nor welfare needs were the concern
of Taiwanese social policies. A decline in legitimacy and risen
social movements forced the state to expand welfare, namely the
National Health Insurance, in the 1980s.
This book argues that teachers of multiple languages (TMLs) form a
distinct group of language teachers and that the study of this
largely overlooked demographic group can reveal new insights into
how we perceive and research language teachers. The book highlights
the narratives of three TMLs from diverse global contexts,
examining their journeys in navigating their careers as well as
traversing multiple worlds and developing additional ways of being
through new identities, beliefs and emotions. The author offers
new, globally-relevant insights for language teaching research at
individual, pedagogical and institutional level and demonstrates
that teaching multiple languages is an emerging transnational
phenomenon that cuts across age, languages, countries, institutions
and career stages. By furthering our understanding of why and how
some multilingual language teachers have expanded and changed their
careers through teaching additional languages, the book offers a
new perspective on how language teaching careers are changing in an
increasingly globalized, multilingual world.
In 1997, a Mexican national named Jose Ernesto Medellin was
sentenced to death for raping and murdering two teenage girls in
Texas. In 2004, the International Court of Justice ruled that he
was entitled to appellate review of his sentence, since the
arresting officers had not informed him of his right to seek
assistance from the Mexican consulate prior to trial, as prescribed
by a treaty ratified by Congress in 1963. In 2008, amid fierce
controversy, the U.S. Supreme Court declared that the international
ruling had no weight. Medellin subsequently was executed.
As Julian Ku and John Yoo show in Taming Globalization, the
Medellin case only hints at the legal complications that will
embroil American courts in the twenty-first century. Like Medellin,
tens of millions of foreign citizens live in the United States; and
like the International Court of Justice, dozens of international
institutions cast a legal net across the globe, from border
commissions to the World Trade Organization. Ku and Yoo argue that
all this presents an unavoidable challenge to American
constitutional law, particularly the separation of powers between
the branches of federal government and between Washington and the
states. To reconcile the demands of globalization with a
traditional, formal constitutional structure, they write, we must
re-conceptualize the Constitution, as Americans did in the early
twentieth century, when faced with nationalization. They identify
three "mediating devices" we must embrace: non-self-execution of
treaties, recognition of the President's power to terminate
international agreements and interpret international law, and a
reliance on state implementation of international law and
agreements. These devices will help us avoid constitutional
difficulties while still gaining the benefits of international
cooperation.
Written by a leading advocate of executive power and a fellow
Constitutional scholar, Taming Globalization promises to spark
widespread debate.
This monograph is motivated by a significant number of vision based
algorithms for Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV) that were developed
during research and development projects. Vision information is
utilized in various applications like visual surveillance, aim
systems, recognition systems, collision-avoidance systems and
navigation. This book presents practical applications, examples and
recent challenges in these mentioned application fields. The aim of
the book is to create a valuable source of information for
researchers and constructors of solutions utilizing vision from
UAV. Scientists, researchers and graduate students involved in
computer vision, image processing, data fusion, control algorithms,
mechanics, data mining, navigation and IC can find many valuable,
useful and practical suggestions and solutions. The latest
challenges for vision based systems are also presented.
The proposed volume provides both fundamental and detailed
information about the computational and computational-experimental
studies which improve our knowledge of how leaving matter
functions, the different properties of drugs (including the
calculation and the design of new ones), and the creation of
completely new ways of treating numerical diseases. Whenever it is
possible, the interplay between theory and experiment is provided.
The book features computational techniques such as quantum-chemical
and molecular dynamic approaches and quantitative
structure-activity relationships. The initial chapters describe the
state-of-the art research on the computational investigations in
molecular biology, molecular pharmacy, and molecular medicine
performed with the use of pure quantum-chemical techniques. The
central part of the book illustrates the status of computational
techniques that utilize hybrid, so called QM/MM approximations as
well as the results of the QSAR studies which now are the most
popular in predicting drugs' efficiency. The last chapters describe
combined computational and experimental investigations.
This collection presents a varied picture of the state of democracy
in Asia, revealing unique findings from a project entitled the
'Asia Democracy Initiative' which explored the role of ordinary
people in democratization through the rise of expressive social
values in Indonesia, South Korea, the Philippines and Thailand.
This book contains two contributions: "Combinatorial and Asymptotic
Methods in Algebra" by V.A. Ufnarovskij is a survey of various
combinatorial methods in infinite-dimensional algebras, widely
interpreted to contain homological algebra and vigorously
developing computer algebra, and narrowly interpreted as the study
of algebraic objects defined by generators and their relations. The
author shows how objects like words, graphs and automata provide
valuable information in asymptotic studies. The main methods emply
the notions of Grobner bases, generating functions, growth and
those of homological algebra. Treated are also problems of
relationships between different series, such as Hilbert, Poincare
and Poincare-Betti series. Hyperbolic and quantum groups are also
discussed. The reader does not need much of background material for
he can find definitions and simple properties of the defined
notions introduced along the way. "Non-Associative Structures" by
E.N.Kuz'min and I.P.Shestakov surveys the modern state of the
theory of non-associative structures that are nearly associative.
Jordan, alternative, Malcev, and quasigroup algebras are discussed
as well as applications of these structures in various areas of
mathematics and primarily their relationship with the associative
algebras. Quasigroups and loops are treated too. The survey is
self-contained and complete with references to proofs in the
literature. The book will be of great interest to graduate students
and researchers in mathematics, computer science and theoretical
physics."
A masterly survey of the last 13 years of Very Long Baseline
Interferometry, reviewed in light of the most advanced astronomical
observations. Topics covered include: Nonthermal emission from
extragalactic radio sources; Principles of synchrotron emission in
relation to astrophysics; Theory of relativistic jets; Young,
powerful radio sources and their evolution; Scintillation in
extragalactic radio sources; Radio and optical interferometry;
Radio polarimetry; Unified schemes; Deep fields; Tropospheric and
ionospheric phase calibration; Supernovae; VLBI for geodesy and
geodynamics.
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