1,751,747 research outputs found

    Email from Alastair MacLennan

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    Email from Alastair MacLennan outlining the details of his upcoming performance. Collected material for Alastair MacLennan's Black Market International performance Rove Over

    Entrevista a Alastair MacLennan

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    Càmara i producció: Tila Rodríguez-PastFinançat per la Comissió Europea de Cultura 2007-13Entrevista a l'artista britànic, Alastair MacLennan, sobre la seva vida i obra. Alastair MacLennan és entrevistat per Brian Catling, a Oxford, el febrer de 20126292.mp4 6292.mp

    Alastair MacLennan, 'Rove Over'

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    Alastair MacLennan is knowns for long durational performances with concerns of ethic, religious/political bigotry, tolerance, social improvement, death, mutation, and transformation. His performance for LIVE 2003, Rove Over, was part of Black Market International

    Alastair Macdonald

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    Poet Alastair Macdonald reads from his work.Incomplete. Lacks credits. Minor distortion throughout

    Alastair Reynolds: Ikirouta

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    Kirja-arvostelu teoksesta Alastair Reynolds: Ikirouta, suom. Hannu Tervaharju, Like SciFi, 2020nonPeerReviewe

    Alastair Reynolds: Noidankehä (suom. Hannu Tervaharju)

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    Arvio teoksesta Alastair Reynolds: Noidankehä. (Eversion.) Like 2022. Suom. Hannu Tervaharju. 310 s.nonPeerReviewe

    Letter from Alastair Milroy to M. Cherif Bassiouni

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    Letter from Alastair Milroy to M. Cherif Bassiounihttps://scholarlycommons.law.case.edu/documents_780/1365/thumbnail.jp

    Data integrity: an often-ignored aspect of safety systems: executive summary

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    Data is all-pervasive and is found in all aspects of modern computer systems, and yet many engineers seem reluctant to recognise the importance of data integrity. The conventional view of data, as simply an aspect of software, underestimates the role played by data errors in the behaviour of the system and their potential effect on the integrity of the overall system. In many cases hazard analysis is not applied to data in the same way that it is applied to other system components. Without data integrity requirements, data development and data provision may not attract the degree of rigour that would be required of other system components of a similar integrity. This omission also has implications for safety assessment where the data is often ignored or neglected. This position becomes self reenforcing, as without integrity requirements the importance of data integrity remains hidden. This research provides a wide-ranging overview of the use (and abuse) of data within safety systems, and proposes a range of strategies and techniques to improve the safety of such systems. A literature review and a survey of industrial practice confirmed the conventional view of data, and showed that there is little consistency in the methods used for data development. To tackle these problems this work proposes a novel paradigm, in which data is considered as a separate and distinct system component. This approach not only ensures that data is given the importance that it deserves, but also simplifies the task of providing guidance that is specific to data. Having developed this conceptual framework for data, the work then goes on to develop lifecycle models to assist with data development, and to propose a range of techniques appropriate for the various lifecycle phases. An important aspect of the development of any safety-related system is the production of a safety argument, and this research looks in some detail at the treatment of data, and data development, within this justification. The industrial survey reveals that in data-intensive systems data is often developed quite separately from other elements of the system. It also reveals that data is often produced by an extended data supply chain that may involve a number of disparate organisations. These characteristics of data distinguish it from other system components and greatly complicate the achievement and demonstration of safety. This research proposes methods of modelling complex data supply chains and proposes techniques for tackling the difficult task of safety justification for such systems

    Indigenous Customary Law and Australian Family Law. by Alastair Nicholson

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    tag=1 data=Indigenous Customary Law and Australian Family Law. by Alastair Nicholson tag=2 data=Nicholson, Alastair tag=3 data=Australian Institute of Family Studies, tag=5 data=42 tag=6 data=Spring/Summer 1995 tag=7 data=24-29. tag=8 data=LAW%ABORIGINES tag=10 data=In discussion of indigenous customary law the emphasis has been more on land law and criminal law than on the operation of what can be described generically as family law. tag=11 data=1996/2/1 tag=12 data=96/0040 tag=13 data=CABIn discussion of indigenous customary law the emphasis has been more on land law and criminal law than on the operation of what can be described generically as family law

    Marketing and managing city tourism destinations

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    Cities are critical to tourism in all countries of the world. They are often important transportation hubs and contain extensive arrays of daytime and night-time attractions, activities and experiences. The main purpose of this chapter is to situate the tourism marketing, branding and product development of urban areas within the context of destination marketing and management. A descriptive research approach is followed using literature reviewing and expert opinion on the themes. In so doing, the author acknowledges that two streams of urban tourism research have developed, one stream within tourism journals, books, and association professional development activities; the other stream, one sub-stream of which can be called place marketing and branding, appears in similar venues related to urban studies and planning, city management, sustainable development, transportation, and other. Furthermore, it is recognized that there has been a considerable gap between city marketing practice and related academic scholarship, and both have developed rather separately. To say that city tourism marketing is something recent is far from the truth. In fact, 1896 saw the establishment of the first city convention promotion bureau in Detroit, Michigan (Gartrell, 1988, p. 4; Travel Michigan, 2016). However, the marketing of cities has changed quite dramatically in the ensuing approximately 125 years, becoming more professional and broad-reaching, and has transformed with Web 1.0 and 2.0, the greater emphasis on destination/place branding, more concern with sustainability, and the advent of smart cities. This chapter begins with a mini academic literature review on city tourism marketing, branding, and product development. The literature review highlights among other things that city tourism needs to be managed and not just marketed. Second, the chapter provides a short history of destination marketing and management. It demonstrates the transformation from destination marketing to destination management. The third part of the chapter is devoted to best processes and practices in city destination marketing and management. This discourse explains the multiple roles of destination management beyond just marketing and branding. The chapter ends with a short summary drawing together the strands from the previous four parts
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