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Winner of the 2021 New Voices Book Award by the Society for
Linguistic Anthropology Exploring the ways in which the development
of linguistic practices helped expand national politics in remote,
rural areas of Venezuela, Language and Revolutionary Magic in the
Orinoco Delta situates language as a mediating force in the
creation of the 'magical state'. Focusing on the Waraos speakers of
the Orinoco Delta, this book explores center–periphery dynamics
in Venezuela through an innovative linguistic anthropological lens.
Using a semiotic framework informed by concepts of 'transduction'
and 'translation', this book combines ethnographic and historical
evidence to analyze the ideological mediation and linguistic
practices involved in managing a multi-ethnic citizenry in
Venezuela. Juan Luis Rodriguez shows how indigenous populations
participate in the formation and contestation of state power
through daily practices and the use of different speech genres,
emphasising the performative and semiotic work required to produce
revolutionary subjects. Establishing the centrality of language and
semiosis in the constitution of authority and political power, this
book moves away from seeing revolution in solely economic or
ideological terms. Through the collision between Warao and Spanish,
it highlights how language ideologies can exclude or integrate
indigenous populations in the public sphere and how they were
transformed by Hugo Chavez' revolutionary government to promote
loyalty to the regime.
The primary audience for this book are advanced undergraduate
students and graduate students. Computer architecture, as it
happened in other fields such as electronics, evolved from the
small to the large, that is, it left the realm of low-level
hardware constructs, and gained new dimensions, as distributed
systems became the keyword for system implementation. As such, the
system architect, today, assembles pieces of hardware that are at
least as large as a computer or a network router or a LAN hub, and
assigns pieces of software that are self-contained, such as client
or server programs, Java applets or pro tocol modules, to those
hardware components. The freedom she/he now has, is tremendously
challenging. The problems alas, have increased too. What was before
mastered and tested carefully before a fully-fledged mainframe or a
closely-coupled computer cluster came out on the market, is today
left to the responsibility of computer engineers and scientists
invested in the role of system architects, who fulfil this role on
behalf of software vendors and in tegrators, add-value system
developers, R&D institutes, and final users. As system
complexity, size and diversity grow, so increases the probability
of in consistency, unreliability, non responsiveness and
insecurity, not to mention the management overhead. What System
Architects Need to Know The insight such an architect must have
includes but goes well beyond, the functional properties of
distributed systems."
The biomass based energy sector, especially the one based on
lignocellulosic sources such as switchgrass Miscanthus, forest
residues and short rotation coppice, will play an important role in
our drive towards renewable energy. The biomass feedstock
production (BFP) subsystem provides the necessary material inputs
to the conversion processes for energy production. This subsystem
includes the agronomic production of energy crops and the physical
handling and delivery of biomass, as well as other enabling
logistics. Achieving a sustainable BFP system is therefore
paramount for the success of the emerging bioenergy sector.
However, low bulk and energy densities, seasonal and weather
sensitive availability, distributed supply and lack of commercial
scale production experience create unique challenges. Moreover,
novel region specific feedstock alternatives continue to emerge.
Engineering will play a critical role in addressing these
challenges and ensuring the techno-economic feasibility of this
sector. It must also integrate with the biological, physical and
chemical sciences and incorporate externalities, such as
social/economic considerations, environmental impact and
policy/regulatory issues, to achieve a truly sustainable system.
Tremendous progress has been made in the past few years while new
challenges have simultaneously emerged that need further
investigation. It is therefore prudent at this time to review the
current status and capture the future challenges through a
comprehensive book. This work will serve as an authoritative
treatise on the topic that can help researchers, educators and
students interested in the field of biomass feedstock production,
with particular interest in the engineering aspects.
From the award-winning author of Always Running comes a brilliant collection of short stories about life in East Los Angeles. Whether hilariously capturing the voice of a philosophizing limo driver whose dream is to make the most of his rap-metal garage band in "My Ride, My Revolution," or the monologue-styled rant of a tes-ti-fy-ing! tent revivalist named Ysela in "Oiga," Rodriguez squeezes humor from the lives of people who are not ready to sacrifice their dreams due to circumstance. In these stories, Luis J. Rodriguez gives eloquent voice to the neighborhood where he spent many years as a resident, a father, an organizer, and, finally, a writer: a neighborhood that offers more to the world than its appearance allows.
This book presents recent advances in the field of computational
coupling and contact mechanics with particular emphasis on
numerical formulations and methodologies necessary to solve
advanced engineering applications.Featuring contributions from
leading experts and active researchers in these fields who provide
a detailed overview of different modern numerical schemes that can
be considered by main numerical methodologies to simulate
interaction problems in continuum mechanics.A number of topics are
addressed, including formulations based on the finite element
method (FEM) and their variants (e.g. isogeometric analysis or
standard and generalized high-order FEM: hp-FEM and GFEM,
respectively), the boundary element method (BEM), the material
point method (MPM) or the recently proposed finite block method
(FBM), among many more.Written with PhD students in mind, Advances
in Computational Coupling and Contact Mechanics also includes the
most recent numerical techniques which could be served as reference
material for researchers and practicing engineers. All chapters are
self-contained and can be read independently, with numerical
formulations accompanied by practical engineering
applications.Related Link(s)
Small hydro power installations have the potential to provide a
renewable supply of energy to people in remote, hilly communities,
far from the national gird. This book is based on the authors'
considerable experience of installing hydroelectric schemes that
produce up to 500kW for powering small communities. The book
describes not only the electro-mechanical equipment and how it is
installed, but also the correct setting of the installation and how
to design and build the channels leading up to the turbine so as to
optimize performance. These civil works can be carried out by local
manpower, using materials that are usually available locally.
Chapters cover the main components of small hydroelectric plants
from the intake and the headrace channel, via the conveyance
channel, to the forebay tank, penstock, turbine, and generator.
This practical manual is a major new addition to the resources
available for micro-hydro power project and programme managers
worldwide and represents excellent value for such a detailed
technical reference handbook.
The emerging field of nanotechnology has envisioned a great impact
in basic and applied research in different areas, leading to the
production of materials with novel properties and devices with new
or improved performance. Findings in this field have opened new
opportunities for active research in different areas such as
biomedicine, catalysis, electronics, and cosmetics, among others.
With the continuous aim of providing a forum where the latest
developments in nanoscience and nanotechnology can be presented and
discussed, the XXI International Materials Research Congress held
in Cancun, Mexico in August 2012, hosted the Nanostructured
Materials and Nanotechnology Symposium. Topics covered include the
synthesis of nanostructures and nanocomposites; optical, electrical
and structural characterization techniques; modeling of structures
and theoretical analysis of properties; carbon based nanostructures
and different applications of nanomaterials as in catalysis,
biomedicine and sensors development."
Although there have been many other important contributions to the
field of child and adolescent analysis, the major differences in
theory and approach still bear the hallmarks of three of the most
significant figures in the field: Anna Freud, Melanie Klein and
Donald Winnicott. As well as providing an insight into these
differences, this volume
In modern computing a program is usually distributed among several
processes. The fundamental challenge when developing reliable and
secure distributed programs is to support the cooperation of
processes required to execute a common task, even when some of
these processes fail. Failures may range from crashes to
adversarial attacks by malicious processes. Cachin, Guerraoui, and
Rodrigues present an introductory description of fundamental
distributed programming abstractions together with algorithms to
implement them in distributed systems, where processes are subject
to crashes and malicious attacks. The authors follow an incremental
approach by first introducing basic abstractions in simple
distributed environments, before moving to more sophisticated
abstractions and more challenging environments. Each core chapter
is devoted to one topic, covering reliable broadcast, shared
memory, consensus, and extensions of consensus. For every topic,
many exercises and their solutions enhance the understanding This
book represents the second edition of "Introduction to Reliable
Distributed Programming". Its scope has been extended to include
security against malicious actions by non-cooperating processes.
This important domain has become widely known under the name
"Byzantine fault-tolerance".
Middleware is a critical foundation needed to leverage the
development of a wide range of mobile and ubiquitous applications.
Intrinsic challenges when building such middleware require the
combination of expertise from areas like distributed systems,
networking, software engineering, and application development.
This textbook provides a comprehensive introduction to the main
fundamental problems, technologies, paradigms, and solutions of
concern to developers of middleware for mobile environments. The
contributions are grouped into four parts, on networking and
programming issues, communication models, middleware issues, and
application issues. Each chapter is structured as a self-contained
tutorial, presenting an overview of a specific topic and the
state-of-the-art solutions for the related problems. In addition,
the book also includes an authoritative reference list. The
material has been successfully used in several thematic training
schools organized by the ESF MiNEMA (Middleware for Network
Eccentric and Mobile Applications) program, and the book's
organization and presentation is ideal for an advanced course on
middleware.
Indigenous Peoples, Postcolonialism, and International Law: The ILO
Regime (1919-1989) explores the historical process leading to the
emergence of indigenous peoples as distinct objects of modern
international law, through the activity of the International Labour
Organization (ILO). The ILO is the institutional site for the two
current legally binding international instruments dealing with
indigenous peoples, Convention No. 107 (1957), and Convention No.
169 (1989). Based on careful research on official documentation and
unpublished archival evidence, the book enquires into the origins
of the ILO's historical interest in the living and working
conditions of indigenous peoples, and traces this back to the
organization's early concern on the conditions of life of 'native
workers' in colonial territories in the inter-war period. The book
connects this early concern with the organization's regional policy
in the Americas, where the 'Indian problem' became a priority on
the organisation's agenda. These historical processes set the
ground for the adoption, a few years later, of Convention No. 107
and Recommendation No. 104, instruments that translate the main
assumptions of state development policies towards indigenous groups
into international law. After an examination of the origins and
content of Convention No. 107, the book sheds light on the process
that lead the I.L.O. to reshape its old policies into the form of
Convention No. 169, the most up to date and important international
treaty dealing with the rights of indigenous peoples today.
The primary audience for this book are advanced undergraduate
students and graduate students. Computer architecture, as it
happened in other fields such as electronics, evolved from the
small to the large, that is, it left the realm of low-level
hardware constructs, and gained new dimensions, as distributed
systems became the keyword for system implementation. As such, the
system architect, today, assembles pieces of hardware that are at
least as large as a computer or a network router or a LAN hub, and
assigns pieces of software that are self-contained, such as client
or server programs, Java applets or pro tocol modules, to those
hardware components. The freedom she/he now has, is tremendously
challenging. The problems alas, have increased too. What was before
mastered and tested carefully before a fully-fledged mainframe or a
closely-coupled computer cluster came out on the market, is today
left to the responsibility of computer engineers and scientists
invested in the role of system architects, who fulfil this role on
behalf of software vendors and in tegrators, add-value system
developers, R&D institutes, and final users. As system
complexity, size and diversity grow, so increases the probability
of in consistency, unreliability, non responsiveness and
insecurity, not to mention the management overhead. What System
Architects Need to Know The insight such an architect must have
includes but goes well beyond, the functional properties of
distributed systems.
Middleware is a critical foundation needed to leverage the
development of a wide range of mobile and ubiquitous applications.
Intrinsic challenges when building such middleware require the
combination of expertise from areas like distributed systems,
networking, software engineering, and application development. This
textbook provides a comprehensive introduction to the main
fundamental problems, technologies, paradigms, and solutions of
concern to developers of middleware for mobile environments. The
contributions are grouped into four parts, on networking and
programming issues, communication models, middleware issues, and
application issues. Each chapter is structured as a self-contained
tutorial, presenting an overview of a specific topic and the
state-of-the-art solutions for the related problems. In addition,
the book also includes an authoritative reference list. The
material has been successfully used in several thematic training
schools organized by the ESF MiNEMA (Middleware for Network
Eccentric and Mobile Applications) program, and the book's
organization and presentation is ideal for an advanced course on
middleware.
Luis Rodriguez's life was once in the grip of gang brotherhood and
rivalries, but unlike many who enter that world, he was able to
turn himself around. This text suggests concrete approaches to the
violence facing youth today.
Wear is one of the main reasons mechanical components and materials
become inoperable, rendering enormous costs to society over time.
Estimating wear allows engineers to predict the useful life of
modern mechanical elements, reduce the costs of inoperability, or
obtain optimal designs (i.e. selecting proper materials, shapes,
and surface finishing according to mechanical conditions and
durability) to reduce the impact of wear.Wear in Advanced
Engineering Applications and Materials presents recent
computational and practical research studying damage and wear in
advanced engineering applications and materials. As such, this book
covers numerical formulations based on the finite element method
(FEM) - and the boundary element method (BEM) - as well as
theoretical and experimental research to predict the wear response
or life-limiting failure of engineering applications.
This book focuses on the fields of nature-inspired algorithms,
optimization problems and fuzzy logic. In this book, a new
metaheuristic based on String Theory from Physics is proposed. It
is important to mention that we have proposed the new algorithm to
generate new potential solutions in optimization problems in order
to find new ways that could improve the results in solving these
problems. We are presenting the results for the proposed method in
different cases of study. The first case, is optimization of
traditional benchmark mathematical functions. The second case, is
the optimization of benchmark functions of the CEC 2015 Competition
and we are also presenting results of the CEC 2017 Competition on
Constrained Real-Parameter Optimization that are problems that
contain the presence of constraints that alter the shape of the
search space making them more difficult to solve. Finally, in the
third case, we are presenting the optimization of a fuzzy inference
system, specifically for finding the optimal design of a fuzzy
controller for an autonomous mobile robot. It is important to
mention that in all study cases we are presenting statistical tests
in or-der to validate the performance of proposed method. In
summary, we believe that this book will be of great interest to a
wide audience, ranging from engineering and science graduate
students, to researchers and professors in computational
intelligence, metaheuristics, optimization, robotics and control.
In modern computing a program is usually distributed among several
processes. The fundamental challenge when developing reliable and
secure distributed programs is to support the cooperation of
processes required to execute a common task, even when some of
these processes fail. Failures may range from crashes to
adversarial attacks by malicious processes. Cachin, Guerraoui, and
Rodrigues present an introductory description of fundamental
distributed programming abstractions together with algorithms to
implement them in distributed systems, where processes are subject
to crashes and malicious attacks. The authors follow an incremental
approach by first introducing basic abstractions in simple
distributed environments, before moving to more sophisticated
abstractions and more challenging environments. Each core chapter
is devoted to one topic, covering reliable broadcast, shared
memory, consensus, and extensions of consensus. For every topic,
many exercises and their solutions enhance the understanding This
book represents the second edition of "Introduction to Reliable
Distributed Programming". Its scope has been extended to include
security against malicious actions by non-cooperating processes.
This important domain has become widely known under the name
"Byzantine fault-tolerance".
Winner of the 2021 New Voices Book Award by the Society for
Linguistic Anthropology Exploring the ways in which the development
of linguistic practices helped expand national politics in remote,
rural areas of Venezuela, Language and Revolutionary Magic in the
Orinoco Delta situates language as a mediating force in the
creation of the 'magical state'. Focusing on the Waraos speakers of
the Orinoco Delta, this book explores center-periphery dynamics in
Venezuela through an innovative linguistic anthropological lens.
Using a semiotic framework informed by concepts of 'transduction'
and 'translation', this book combines ethnographic and historical
evidence to analyze the ideological mediation and linguistic
practices involved in managing a multi-ethnic citizenry in
Venezuela. Juan Luis Rodriguez shows how indigenous populations
participate in the formation and contestation of state power
through daily practices and the use of different speech genres,
emphasising the performative and semiotic work required to produce
revolutionary subjects. Establishing the centrality of language and
semiosis in the constitution of authority and political power, this
book moves away from seeing revolution in solely economic or
ideological terms. Through the collision between Warao and Spanish,
it highlights how language ideologies can exclude or integrate
indigenous populations in the public sphere and how they were
transformed by Hugo Chavez' revolutionary government to promote
loyalty to the regime.
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