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High speed rail (HSR) is being touted as a strategic investment for
connecting people across regions, while also fostering prosperity
and smart urban growth. However, as its popularity increases, its
implementation has become contentious with various parties
contesting the validity of socioeconomic and environmental
objectives put forward as justification for investment. High Speed
Rail and Sustainability explores the environmental, economic and
social effects of developing a HSR system, presenting new
evaluations of the proposed system in California in the US as well
as lessons from international experience. Drawing upon the
accumulated experience from past HSR system development around the
world, leading experts present a diverse set of perspectives as
well as diverse contexts of implementation. Assessments of the
California case as well as cases from Japan, France, Germany,
Italy, Spain, Taiwan, China, and the UK show how governments and
stakeholders have bridged the gap between the vision and the
realities of connecting metropolitan regions through HSR. This is a
valuable resource for academics, researchers and policy-makers in
the areas of urban planning, civil engineering, transportation and
environmental design.
This special issue of The Translator explores the field with a view
to learning from the individuals and networks who take on such
'non-professional' translation and interpreting activities. It
showcases the work of researchers who look into the phenomenon
within a wide variety of settings: from museums to churches,
crowdsourcing and media sites to Wikipedia, and scientific journals
to the Social Forum. Drawing on a wide range of disciplines and
models, the contributions to this volume enhance the visibility of
non-professionals engaged in translating and interpreting and
challenge a range of widely-held assumptions within the discipline
and the profession.
Transformation to a low carbon economy is a central tenet to any
discussion on the solutions to the complex challenges of climate
change and energy security. Despite advances in policy, carbon
management and continuing development of clean technology,
fundamental business transformation has not occurred because of
multiple political, economic, social and organisational issues.
Carbon Governance, Climate Change and Business Transformation is
based on leading academic and industry input, and three
international workshops focused on low carbon transformation in
leading climate policy jurisdictions (Canada, USA and the UK) under
the international Carbon Governance Project (CGP) banner. The book
pulls insights from this innovative collaborative network to
identify the policy combinations needed to create transformative
change. It explores fundamental questions about how governments and
the private sector conceptualize the problem of climate change, the
conditions under which business transformation can genuinely take
place and key policy and business innovations needed. Broadly, the
book is based on emerging theories of multi-levelled, multi-actor
carbon governance, and applies these ideas to the real world
implications for tackling climate change through business
transformation. Conceptually and empirically, this book stimulates
both academic discussion and practical business models for low
carbon transformation.
This special issue of The Translator explores the field with a view
to learning from the individuals and networks who take on such
'non-professional' translation and interpreting activities. It
showcases the work of researchers who look into the phenomenon
within a wide variety of settings: from museums to churches,
crowdsourcing and media sites to Wikipedia, and scientific journals
to the Social Forum. Drawing on a wide range of disciplines and
models, the contributions to this volume enhance the visibility of
non-professionals engaged in translating and interpreting and
challenge a range of widely-held assumptions within the discipline
and the profession.
The book attempts to provide a wide overview of key ethical matters
in the philosophy of sport: What is fair play? Is strategic fouling
legitimate? What is the role of cheating and gamesmanship in sport?
What can be said about doping and physical enhancement? How can we
approach gender issues that come from the core of the practice of
sport? Does sport share any common characteristics, or even roots,
with racism, violence, or nationalism? Should cyborgathletes
compete in equal conditions with organic athletes? What can we do
with new technologies in sport? In the book there is an analyse of
all possible solutions that the main authors or contemporary sport
philosopher has brought forward on a topic, and after having laid
out the current panorama, the author deal with each of them
directly and personally.
Audiovisual translation is the fastest growing strand within
translation studies. This book addresses the need for more robust
theoretical frameworks to investigate emerging text- types, address
new methodological challenges (including the compilation, analysis
and reproduction of audiovisual data), and understand new discourse
communities bound together by the production and consumption of
audiovisual texts. In this clear, user- friendly book, Luis
Perez-Gonzalez introduces and explores the field, presenting and
critiquing key concepts, research models and methodological
approaches. Features include: * introductory overviews at the
beginning of each chapter, outlining aims and relevant connections
with other chapters * breakout boxes showcasing key concepts,
research case studies or other relevant links to the wider field of
translation studies * examples of audiovisual texts in a range of
languages with back translation support when required * summaries
reinforcing key issues dealt with in each chapter * follow- up
questions for further study * core references and suggestions for
further reading. * additional online resources on an extensive
companion website This will be an essential text for all students
studying audiovisual or screen translation at postgraduate or
advanced undergraduate level and key reading for all researchers
working in the area.
The book attempts to provide a wide overview of key ethical matters
in the philosophy of sport: What is fair play? Is strategic fouling
legitimate? What is the role of cheating and gamesmanship in sport?
What can be said about doping and physical enhancement? How can we
approach gender issues that come from the core of the practice of
sport? Does sport share any common characteristics, or even roots,
with racism, violence, or nationalism? Should cyborgathletes
compete in equal conditions with organic athletes? What can we do
with new technologies in sport? In the book there is an analyse of
all possible solutions that the main authors or contemporary sport
philosopher has brought forward on a topic, and after having laid
out the current panorama, the author deal with each of them
directly and personally.
Market-based solutions to environmental problems offer great
promise, but require complex public policies that take into account
the many institutional factors necessary for the market to work and
that guard against the social forces that can derail good public
policies. Using insights about markets from the new institutional
economics, this book sheds light on the institutional history of
the emissions trading concept as it has evolved across different
contexts. It makes accessible the policy design and practical
implementation aspects of a key tool for fighting climate change:
emissions trading systems (ETS) for environmental control. Blas
Luis Perez Henriquez analyzes past market-based environmental
programs to extract lessons for the future of ETS. He follows the
development of the emissions trading concept as it evolved in the
United States and was later applied in the multinational European
Emissions Trading System and in sub-national programs in the United
States such as the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI) and
California's ETS. This ex-post evaluation of an ETS as it evolves
in real time in the real world provides a valuable supplement to
what is already known from theoretical arguments and simulation
studies about the advantages and disadvantages of the market
strategy. Political cycles and political debate over the use of
markets for environmental control make any form of climate policy
extremely contentious. Perez Henriquez argues that, despite
ideological disagreements, the ETS approach, or, more popularly,
'cap-and-trade' policy design, remains the best hope for a
cost-effective policy to reduce GHG emissions around the world.
This book is a comprehensive overview of the main current concepts
in brain cognitive activities at the global, collective (or
network) level, with a focus on transitions between normal
neurophysiology and brain pathological states. It provides a unique
approach of linking molecular and cellular aspects of normal and
pathological brain functioning with their corresponding network,
collective and dynamical manifestations that are subsequently
extended to behavioral manifestations of healthy and diseased
brains. This book introduces a high-level perspective, searching
for simplification amongst the structural and functional complexity
of nervous systems by consideration of the distributed interactions
that underlie the collective behavior of the system. The authors
hope that this approach could promote a global comprehensive
understanding of high-level laws behind the elementary biological
processes in the neuroscientific community, while, perhaps,
introducing elements of biological complexities to the
mathematical/computational readership. The title of the book refers
to the main point of the monograph: that there is a smooth
continuum between distinct brain activities resulting in different
behaviors, and that, due to the plastic nature of the brain, the
behavior can also alter the brain function, thus rendering
artificial the boundaries between the brain and its behavior.
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Boulton Moderno: 1928 - 1944 (Hardcover)
Alfredo Boulton; Text written by Juan Bonet, Luis Perez Oramas, Sofia Maduro
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R1,724
R1,403
Discovery Miles 14 030
Save R321 (19%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Alfredo Boulton (1908-95), art critic, historian and photographer,
was one of 20th-century Venezuela's most prominent intellectuals.
His large body of photographic work--focusing mostly on the people,
landscapes, art and history of Venezuela--is little known, and yet
no intellectual before Boulton had ever expressed Venezuela
visually. This hardcover volume focuses specifically on Boulton the
modernist artist through his photographic work from 1928 to 1944,
which he collected in albums that he designed as tools for
selecting and presenting images. With 50 full pages of albums and a
selection of individual reproductions, Boulton Moderno offers a
modern photographic vision of Venezuela. Texts by art critic Juan
Manuel Bonet, curator Luis Perez-Oramas and curator Sofia Vollmer
Maduro illuminate the context of Boulton's life and his prolific
output.
Increasing interest in the study of coordinated activity of
brain cell ensembles reflects the current conceptualization of
brain information processing and cognition. It is thought that
cognitive processes involve not only serial stages of sensory
signal processing, but also massive parallel information processing
circuitries, and therefore it is the coordinated activity of
neuronal networks of brains that give rise to cognition and
consciousness in general. While the concepts and techniques to
measure synchronization are relatively well characterized and
developed in the mathematics and physics community, the measurement
of coordinated activity derived from brain signals is not a trivial
task, and is currently a subject of debate. Coordinated Activity in
the Brain: Measurements and Relevance to Brain Function and
Behavior addresses conceptual and methodological limitations, as
well as advantages, in the assessment of cellular coordinated
activity from neurophysiological recordings. The book offers a
broad overview of the field for investigators working in a variety
of disciplines (neuroscience, biophysics, mathematics, physics,
neurology, neurosurgery, psychology, biomedical engineering,
computer science/computational biology), and introduces future
trends for understanding brain activity and its relation to
cognition and pathologies. This work will be valuable to
professional investigators and clinicians, graduate and
post-graduate students in related fields of neuroscience and
biophysics, and to anyone interested in signal analysis techniques
for studying brain function.
About the Editors:
J. L. Perez Velazquez was born in Zaragoza, Spain, and received
the degree of 'Licenciado' in Chemistry (Biochemistry, universities
of Zaragoza and Complutense of Madrid), and a PhD degree in 1992
from the Department of Molecular Physiology and Biophysics at
Baylor College of Medicine (Houston), homologated to Doctorate in
Chemistry by the Spanish Ministry of Culture in 1997. He is an
Associate Scientist in the Neuroscience and Mental Health Programme
and the Brain and Behaviour Centre at the Hospital For Sick
Children in Toronto, and an Associate Professor at the University
of Toronto.
Richard Wennberg was born in Vancouver, Canada. He obtained his
medical degree from the University of British Columbia in 1990 and
completed a neurology residency at McGill University in 1994,
followed by a fellowship in electroencephalography at the Montreal
Neurological Institute. He is Director of the clinical
neurophysiology laboratory at the University Health Network,
Toronto Western Hospital; Associate professor of Medicine at the
University of Toronto; Chair of the Royal College of Physicians and
Surgeons of Canada examination board in neurology, and President of
the Canadian League Against Epilepsy.
Despite four decades of development planning, at least one third of
the urban population of Africa, Asia and Latin America remains
poor. Over 600 million live in 'life and health threatening' homes
and neighbourhoods because of poor housing and inadequate or no
piped water, sanitation and health care. But even as the
shortcomings of government and development programmes become more
apparent, so do the untapped abilities of low-income groups and
their community organizations to develop their own solutions. This
book analyses the conditions necessary for successful community
initiatives and includes case studies of 18 intermediary
institutions (most of them Third World NGOs) who provide technical,
legal and financial services to low-income households for
constructing or improving housing. Many also work with community
organizations in improving water, sanitation, drainage, health care
and other community services. Through the analysis of innovative
financial systems for income generation, house construction and
service provision, Funding Community Initiatives considers the
feasibility of loans for addressing current urban housing problems.
It also considers how to increase greatly the scale and
effectiveness of support going to low-income households and
community organizations. This book will be of interest to students
and professionals concerned with urban development in Africa, Asia
and Latin America, especially those concerned with low income
shelter and community finance.
Despite four decades of development planning, at least one third of
the urban population of Africa, Asia and Latin America remains
poor. Over 600 million live in 'life and health threatening' homes
and neighbourhoods because of poor housing and inadequate or no
piped water, sanitation and health care. But even as the
shortcomings of government and development programmes become more
apparent, so do the untapped abilities of low-income groups and
their community organizations to develop their own solutions. This
book analyses the conditions necessary for successful community
initiatives and includes case studies of 18 intermediary
institutions (most of them Third World NGOs) who provide technical,
legal and financial services to low-income households for
constructing or improving housing. Many also work with community
organizations in improving water, sanitation, drainage, health care
and other community services. Through the analysis of innovative
financial systems for income generation, house construction and
service provision, Funding Community Initiatives considers the
feasibility of loans for addressing current urban housing problems.
It also considers how to increase greatly the scale and
effectiveness of support going to low-income households and
community organizations. This book will be of interest to students
and professionals concerned with urban development in Africa, Asia
and Latin America, especially those concerned with low income
shelter and community finance.
"Perez Velazquez has written a little gem that I advise reading to
anyone persuing a scientific career, as well as for the general
public interested in the sociological aspects of science. It alerts
the reader about the rise of a new type of scientist, buried in
bureaucracy and financial issues. In contrast to past generations,
this "new scientist" is sadly left with minimal time to dedicate to
creative work. It studies the consequences of this state of
affairs, the problems associated with peer reviewing, the dilemma
of funding innovative research, the nature of corporate academic
culture and the trivialization of scientific achievement by grant
agencies and universities. It also provides possible solutions for
these problems. All this is magnificently exemplified and
documented, including personal experiences from the author and a
touch of humor illustrated in the accompanying cartoons. Despite
the humor, it is a serious piece of work that would also be useful
for the conscientious academic worried about the difficulties of
the current research scene." Marina Frantseva, MD, PhD Jose Luis
Perez Velazquez is a Spanish biochemist/biophysicist. He has a
degree in Biochemistry and a PhD in Molecular Physiology &
Biophysics. His research activities are mainly in the fields of the
brain-behaviour relation at a high level of description, seeking
principles of biological organisation. He worked as a senior
scientist at the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto and was
Professor at the University of Toronto, where he taught a graduate
course on consciousness and self-awareness, which derived in part
from his book The Brain-Behaviour Continuum (World Scientific). He
also edited the book Coordinated Activity in the Brain (Springer),
and edited special issues for The Journal of Biological Physics,
Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience and Frontiers in
Computational Neuroscience. Currently he is a Research Scholar at
the Ronin Institute, where he continues to investigate a possible
global principle, a scheme that combines theoretical studies and
experimental observations, aimed at conceptualizing how
consciousness arises from the organization of matter.
The Routledge Handbook of Audiovisual Translation provides an
accessible, authoritative and comprehensive overview of the key
modalities of audiovisual translation and the main theoretical
frameworks, research methods and themes that are driving research
in this rapidly developing field. Divided in four parts, this
reference work consists of 32 state-of-the-art chapters from
leading international scholars. The first part focuses on
established and emerging audiovisual translation modalities,
explores the changing contexts in which they have been and continue
to be used, and examines how cultural and technological changes are
directing their future trajectories. The second part delves into
the interface between audiovisual translation and a range of
theoretical models that have proved particularly productive in
steering research in audiovisual translation studies. The third
part surveys a selection of methodological approaches supporting
traditional and innovative ways of interrogating audiovisual
translation data. The final part addresses an array of themes
pertaining to the place of audiovisual translation in society. This
Handbook gives audiovisual translation studies the platform it
needs to raise its profile within the Humanities research landscape
and is key reading for all those engaged in the study and research
of Audiovisual Translation within Translation studies.
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