|
Showing 1 - 8 of
8 matches in All Departments
Different aspects of harmonic analysis, complex analysis, sampling
theory, approximation theory and related topics are covered in this
volume. The topics included are Fourier analysis, Pade
approximation, dynamical systems and difference operators, splines,
Christoffel functions, best approximation, discrepancy theory and
Jackson-type theorems of approximation. The articles of this
collection were originated from the International Conference in
Approximation Theory, held in Savannah, GA in 2017, and organized
by the editors of this volume.
Doctoral Thesis / Dissertation from the year 2001 in the subject
Sociology - Individual, Groups, Society, grade: -, - (Memorial
University of Newfoundland), course: Sociology PhD thesis,
language: English, abstract: Much scholarly work has centered
around community in Newfoundland and Labrador. However,
comparatively little work has focused on meanings of community.
This thesis compares meanings of community in everyday life for
people living in a Southern Shore community on Newfoundland's
Avalon Peninsula, with the meanings found in scholarly literature
and in government documents produced in association with The
Atlantic Groundfish Strategy (TAGS). TAGS was a federal adjustment
program responding to the moratoria on groundfish fishing in
Atlantic Canada in the 1990s. I draw on Dorothy Smith's feminist
theory, which starts from "lived experience" as well as the
socioeconomic context of that lived experience as an entry point to
illuminating the ideological nature of documents and their links to
ruling relations. Smith's discussion of ideology and ruling
relations are central to my gender-informed and mediated framework.
I explore the contrast between meanings of community in TAGS
documents and expert texts looking for lines of fault between these
texts and meanings of community in everyday life in a fishing
community in Newfoundland. I use as well Smith's notions of
resilience and emergent consciousness to demonstrate that the
historical oppressive practices of the ruling group are
re-mobilized in TAGS, reflecting society's patriarchal and
capitalist ideology generally, and government ideology more
specifically. I show the insight of ordinary social actors into the
conditions of their existence. My argument is that these concepts
are integrally related to community research and policy
development. The research shows that the meanings of community in
one community is partly organized by history, geography and gender,
and by religious, economic and political regim
|
|