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21 matches in All Departments
This book is available as open access through the Bloomsbury Open
Access programme and is available on bloomsburycollections.com. How
much would poor nations need to invest to eliminate poverty, get
all children in school and provide adequate basic health care for
all? Can they afford it? Financing Human Development in Africa,
Asia and the Middle East provides some clear answers to these
questions. The contributors assess feasible financing strategies
underpinning actions to enhance human development in pursuance of
the United Nations' Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). The
contributors analyse these strategies in the context of broader
concerns of economic development in nine countries in Africa, Asia
and the Middle East. The assessments stress the importance of
redesigning macroeconomic policies so as to make these more
supportive of long-term economic growth and employment creation,
while ensuring sufficient investments in human development in order
to end poverty and overcome deep-rooted inequalities.
1. A. HOWELL School ofChemical Engineering, University ofBath,
Claverton Down, Bath, UK, BA2 7AY 1.1 WHAT IS A MEMBRANE PROCESS?
Every day over 20 million litres of brackish water are pumped out
of the ground near Jeddah in Saudi Arabia and passed through thin
sheets of cellulose acetate known as reverse osmosis membranes
before being used as part of the city's water supply. In St Maurice
les Chateauneuf, France three million litres a day of ground water
are ultrafiltered to supply the city and on test sites in Australia
settled sewage is being disinfected by being passed through
microfiltration membranes. Many of the foods we eat and beverages
we drink have used membranes during their processing. Orange juice
can be concentrated by membranes to make a concentrate which
retains more of the flavour than does evaporation. Milk can be
concentrated slightly by means of a membrane before making a cheese
in a process which produces no whey. Gases rising from the ground
in a waste tip can be piped away and the carbon dioxide separated
from the methane by a membrane process allowing the methane then to
be used as a fuel, simultaneously saving energy and reducing the
greenhouse effect since methane is more effective as a greenhouse
gas than carbon dioxide.
1. A. HOWELL School ofChemical Engineering, University ofBath,
Claverton Down, Bath, UK, BA2 7AY 1.1 WHAT IS A MEMBRANE PROCESS?
Every day over 20 million litres of brackish water are pumped out
of the ground near Jeddah in Saudi Arabia and passed through thin
sheets of cellulose acetate known as reverse osmosis membranes
before being used as part of the city's water supply. In St Maurice
les Chateauneuf, France three million litres a day of ground water
are ultrafiltered to supply the city and on test sites in Australia
settled sewage is being disinfected by being passed through
microfiltration membranes. Many of the foods we eat and beverages
we drink have used membranes during their processing. Orange juice
can be concentrated by membranes to make a concentrate which
retains more of the flavour than does evaporation. Milk can be
concentrated slightly by means of a membrane before making a cheese
in a process which produces no whey. Gases rising from the ground
in a waste tip can be piped away and the carbon dioxide separated
from the methane by a membrane process allowing the methane then to
be used as a fuel, simultaneously saving energy and reducing the
greenhouse effect since methane is more effective as a greenhouse
gas than carbon dioxide.
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Engineering Applications of Bio-Inspired Artificial Neural Networks - International Work-Conference on Artificial and Natural Neural Networks, IWANN'99, Alicante, Spain, June 2-4, 1999, Proceedings, Volume II (Paperback, 1999 ed.)
Jose Mira, Juan V Sanchez-Andres
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R3,054
Discovery Miles 30 540
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This book constitutes, together with its compagnion LNCS 1606, the
refereed proceedings of the International Work-Conference on
Artificial and Neural Networks, IWANN'99, held in Alicante, Spain
in June 1999.
The 91 revised papers presented were carefully reviewed and
selected for inclusion in the book. This volume is devoted to
applications of biologically inspired artificial neural networks in
various engineering disciplines. The papers are organized in parts
on artificial neural nets simulation and implementation, image
processing, and engineering applications.
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Foundations and Tools for Neural Modeling - International Work-Conference on Artificial and Natural Neural Networks, IWANN'99, Alicante, Spain, June 2-4, 1999, Proceedings, Volume I (Paperback, 1999 ed.)
Jose Mira, Juan V Sanchez-Andres
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R3,036
Discovery Miles 30 360
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
This book constitutes, together with its compagnion LNCS 1607, the
refereed proceedings of the International Work-Conference on
Artificial and Natural Neural Networks, IWANN'99, held in Alicante,
Spain in June 1999.
The 89 revised papers presented were carefully reviewed and
selected for inclusion in the book. This volume is devoted to
foundational issues of neural computation and tools for neural
modeling. The papers are organized in parts on neural modeling:
biophysical and structural models; plasticity phenomena: maturing,
learning, and memory; and artificial intelligence and cognitive
neuroscience.
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Les Mornes
Roman V Sanchez
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R396
Discovery Miles 3 960
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Hors
Roman V Sanchez
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R396
Discovery Miles 3 960
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Petites choses
Roman V Sanchez
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R388
Discovery Miles 3 880
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This book is available as open access through the Bloomsbury Open
Access programme and is available on bloomsburycollections.com. How
much would poor nations need to invest to eliminate poverty, get
all children in school and provide adequate basic health care for
all? Can they afford it? Financing Human Development in Africa,
Asia and the Middle East provides some clear answers to these
questions. The contributors assess feasible financing strategies
underpinning actions to enhance human development in pursuance of
the United Nations' Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). The
contributors analyse these strategies in the context of broader
concerns of economic development in nine countries in Africa, Asia
and the Middle East. The assessments stress the importance of
redesigning macroeconomic policies so as to make these more
supportive of long-term economic growth and employment creation,
while ensuring sufficient investments in human development in order
to end poverty and overcome deep-rooted inequalities.
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