113,151 research outputs found
MEMÓRIAS DA RESISTÊNCIA À DITADURA CIVIL E MILITAR DE 1964 NA AMAZÔNIA BRASILEIRA: OS TESTEMUNHOS DO SENTIR DE LINIANE HAAG BRUM E WANDA MONTEIRO
The study aims to present an analysis of two productions strongly committed to the formats of testimony: Antes do Pastado – o silencio que vem do Araguaia (2012), by Liniane Haag Brum, and Chão de Exílio (2022), by Wanda Monteiro. Both productions are related to the memory of resistance to the Civil and Military Dictatorship of 1964, established in Brazil. In Antes do Passado – the silence that comes from Araguaia, Brum recounts his search for his uncle, Cilon Cunha Brum, a fighter in the Araguaia Guerrilla, from the 1960s until the moment of Cilon's disappearance in the 1970s. Chão de Exílio constitutes if, according to the author, Wanda Monteiro, as a reinvented memory, to reflect on the self-imposed exile, experienced by her father, the writer Benedicto Monteiro, after suffering successive arrests, perpetrated by the same dictatorial government. Both productions have in common the hybrid condition of writing, learning about an affective object, and finally, this is our working hypothesis – the composition of what I call testimony of feeling.O estudo tem como objetivo apresentar uma análise de duas produções fortemente comprometidas com os formatos do testemunho: Antes do Passado – o silêncio que vem do Araguaia (2012), de Liniane Haag Brum, e, Chão de Exílio (2021), de Wanda Monteiro. Ambas as produções estão relacionadas à memória da resistência à Ditadura Civil e Militar de 1964, estabelecida no Brasil. Em Antes do Passado – o silêncio que vem do Araguaia, Brum relata sua busca pelo tio, Cilon Cunha Brum, combatente da Guerrilha do Araguaia, desde os anos 1960 até o momento da desaparição de Cilon, nos anos 1970. Chão de Exílio constitui-se, segundo a autora, Wanda Monteiro, como memória reinventada, para refletir sobre o exílio autoimposto, vivido por seu pai, o escritor Benedicto Monteiro, após sofrer sucessivas prisões, perpetradas pelo mesmo governo ditatorial. Ambas as produções têm em comum a condição híbrida da escrita, a aprendizagem sobre um objeto afetivo, e, por fim – esta é nossa hipótese – a composição de um testemunho do sentir
Recruitment of ethnic minority patients to a cardiac rehabilitation trial: the Birmingham Rehabilitation Uptake Maximisation (BRUM) study [ISRCTN72884263]
This is the final version of the article. Available from the publisher via the DOI in this record.BACKGROUND: Concerns have been raised about low participation rates of people from minority ethnic groups in clinical trials. However, the evidence is unclear as many studies do not report the ethnicity of participants and there is insufficient information about the reasons for ineligibility by ethnic group. Where there are data, there remains the key question as to whether ethnic minorities more likely to be ineligible (e.g. due to language) or decline to participate. We have addressed these questions in relation to the Birmingham Rehabilitation Uptake Maximisation (BRUM) study, a randomized controlled trial (RCT) comparing a home-based with a hospital-based cardiac rehabilitation programme in a multi-ethnic population in the UK. METHODS: Analysis of the ethnicity, age and sex of presenting and recruited subjects for a trial of cardiac rehabilitation in the West-Midlands, UK. PARTICIPANTS: 1997 patients presenting post-myocardial infarction, percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty or coronary artery bypass graft surgery. DATA COLLECTED: Exclusion rates, reasons for exclusion and reasons for declining to participate in the trial by ethnic group. RESULTS: Significantly more patients of South Asian ethnicity were excluded (52% of 'South Asian' v 36% 'White European' and 36% 'Other', p < 0.001). This difference in eligibility was primarily due to exclusion on the basis of language (i.e. the inability to speak English or Punjabi). Of those eligible, similar proportions were recruited from the different ethnic groups (white, South Asian and other). There was a marked difference in eligibility between people of Indian, Pakistani or Bangladeshi origin. CONCLUSION: Once eligible for this trial, people from different ethnic groups were recruited in similar proportions. The reason for ineligibility in the BRUM study was the inability to support the range of minority languages.The BRUM study is funded by the NHS HTA Programme
Brum v Town of Dartmouth and the Public Duty Rule: Navigating an Interpretive Quagmire
In 1993, a group of youths entered the Dartmouth High School and stabbed sixteen-year old Jason Robinson to death in his social studies classroom. In 1999, in BrUM v. Town of Dartmouth, the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts held that the town was immune from suit pursuant to Massachusetts\u27 statutory public duty rule, which insulates public employers from liability where the employer does not originally cause the harm. This Article traces the evolution of public tort liability in Massachusetts, suggests a three-part framework for interpreting Massachusetts\u27 public duty rule and proposes a narrowly-tailored exception to the rule in cases like Brunt
author-bios-SRD-19-0063.R1 – Supplemental material for The Network Structure of Police Misconduct
Supplemental material, author-bios-SRD-19-0063.R1 for The Network Structure of Police Misconduct by George Wood, Daria Roithmayr and Andrew V. Papachristos in Socius</p
Going Beyond Counting First Authors in Author Co-citation Analysis
The present study examines one of the fundamental aspects of author co-citation analysis (ACA) - the way co-citation
counts are defined. Co-citation counting provides the data on which all subsequent statistical analyses and mappings
are based, and we compare ACA results based on two different types of co-citation counting - the traditional type that
only counts the first one among a cited work's authors on the one hand and a non-traditional type that takes into
account the first 5 authors of a cited work on the other hand. Results indicate that the picture produced through this non-traditional author co-citation counting contains more coherent author groups and is therefore considerably clearer. However, this picture represents fewer specialties in the research field being studied than that produced through the traditional first-author co-citation counting when the same number of top-ranked authors is selected and analyzed. Reasons for these effects are discussed
Variations on the Author
“Variations on the Author” discusses two of Eduardo Coutinho’s recent films (Um Dia na Vida, from 2010, and Últimas Conversas, posthumously released in 2015) and their contribution to the general question of documentary authorship. The director’s filmography is characterized by a consistent yet self-effacing form of authorial self-inscription: Coutinho often features as an interviewer that rather than express opinions propels discourses; an interviewer that is good at listening. This mode of self-inscription characterizes him as an author who is not expressive but who is nonetheless markedly present on the screen. In Um Dia na Vida, however, Coutinho is completely absent form the image, while Últimas Conversas, on the contrary, includes a confessional prologue that moves the director from the margins to the center of his films. This article examines the ways in which these works stand out in the filmography of a director who offers new insights into the notion of cinematic authorship
Parapagurapseudopsis carinatus Brum 1973
Parapagurapseudopsis carinatus Brum, 1973 (Figs. 1–4) Brumia carinata Bäcescu, 1981 Parapagurapseudopsis carinata Guţu, 1998. Original description: Brum (1973): 3, fig. 3; 1974: 7–10, figs. 27–37. Material examined: 88 individuals. BRASIL, Bahia: MZUSP 16915, (1 preparatory, 1 immature female), Baía de Todos os Santos, Itaparica Island, V- 2004, St. 0 2, 13° 10.279´S – 38 ° 40.408´W, 27m; MZUSP 16916, (1 preparatory and 1 immature females), St. 0 3, 13° 10.803´S – 38 ° 43.546´W, 18m; MZUSP 16917, (1 preparatory female), St. 0 1, 13° 4.759´S – 38 ° 38.745´W, 16m; MZUSP 16918, (22 males; 5 immature females, 18 preparatory females; 4 females with eggs, 5 with embryos, 6 with empty marsupium; 15 juveniles), Baía de Todos os Santos, Guaibim beach, same date and col., St. 0 4, 13° 12.79´S – 38 ° 48.69´W, 18m; MZUSP 16919, (1 male, 3 immature female, 1 preparatory female, 1 female with empty marsupium,), St. 0 5, 13° 14.033´S – 38 ° 52.5´W, 15m. Female redescription. Body 1.7 mm long, cylindric (Fig. 1 a,b). Cephalothorax longer than broad; dorsal surface finely ornamented with discrete dorsodistal carina. Eye lobes present, without visual elements. Rostrum truncate, short, rounded. Epistome present. Pereon about 2.5 times the cephalothorax length, strong, indurate, with dorsal carina on all pereonites. First and sixth pereonites shortest; second and fifth pereonites a little shorter than the third and fourth ones. Pleon, as long as cephalothorax, with five short pleonites, decreasing in width, distally; pleonites with dorsal carina. Pleotelson (Fig. 1 a–d) longer than wide, almost equal to pleonites 3–5 length, apex finely serrate; two lateral spiniform projections subapically placed. Antenna 1 (Fig. 2 a) article 1 shorter than carapace length, 7 times as long as wide, both inner and outer margins with irregular spinous apophyses, intercalate for simple and plumose setae; distal spine on outer margin followed by a circumplumose setae near joint with article 2. Second peduncle article about 3.5 times shorter than the first, and the third one equal to the second article. Inner flagellum 4 -articulate; outer flagellum 7 -articulate, distal articles with aesthetascs. Antenna 2 (Fig. 2 b) with a very large inner expansion; article 2 with two great spiniform projections on inner and outer margins; outer margin with some acute and small processus; one medial simple seta on inner margin. Squama small, having one simple seta. Third article very short. Folowing two articles thin, each of them longer than the second article. Last three articles (measured together) about as long as fourth or third articles. Mandible (Fig. 2 c) with triarticulate palp; article 1 with serrate margin and three plumose setae; article 2 longer than the first or the third ones (Fig. 2 c 2); articles 2 and 3 with simple setae. Molar robust, without special features. Incisor of both mandibles and lacinia mobilis of the left mandible with four strong spines. Setiferous lobe with five setae, branched terminally. Labrum (Fig. 2 g) with fine hairs on lateral margin. Labium (Fig. 2 d) with broad and setulose area at outer margin, palp with fine lateral setules and two simple setae distally. Maxilla 1 (Fig. 2 f) with a biarticulate palp, ending in 4 subequal setae. Inner endite with a prominence on the middle of the outer side, fine hairs on lateral margins and five single sided pinnate setae apically situated. Outer endite long and narrow, lateral sides hairy, 11 spiniform setae on apical margin and two subterminal simple setae. Maxilla 2 (Fig. 2 e) with no special features; broad, having lobes with simple and with setulated setae, outer fixed lobe with two trifurcate and three pinnate setae. Maxilliped (Fig. 3 a) basis longer than wide with 4 plumose setae diagonally; palp of 4 articles, first article wider than long, with plumose seta at inner margin; second article broadest, larger at base, with 4 short plumose setae and several simple setae at inner margin; third and fourth articles equal in length with simple setae distally. Endite with with several kinds of setae and two coupling hooks. Epignath (Fig. 2 h) lobate with one simple seta distally. Cheliped (Fig. 4 c) with exopodite (broken off, not illustrated); basis globose; carpus 1.5 times the merus length. Propodus large, broad with row of simple setae on dorsal margin of fixed finger. Pereopod 1 (Fig. 3 b) long and thin, approximately similar to the following ones, but a little shorter than the last three pereopods. Exopod absent. Coxa rounded. Basis slightly longer than merus, carpus and propodus together, ventral margin with sparce short setae, dorsal margin with one strong denticle and some short spiny projections. Merus shorter than the carpus or propodus. Carpus and propodus bearing 4–5 short cuspidate setae along ventral margin, an elongate seta distally on propodus; dactylus about 2.5 times longer than curved unguis. Pereopods 2 and 3 (Fig. 3 c,d) relatively similar to the preceding one, but a little smaller; the fourth pereopod smaller than the third one. Pereopods 4 to 6 (Fig. 3 e–g) subequal, fourth pereopod longer than others. Pereopod 4 carpus and propodus with cuspidate setae ventrally, last article with one pinnate and some simple setae distally. Pereopod 5 bearing a dense row of short spiniform setae at distal half. Pereopod 6 (Fig. 3 g) dactylus with a conspicuous protuberance larger than in preceding pereopods. Pleopod (Fig. 3 h) in five pairs, well developed in males and females, decreasing in size posteriorly. Protopod long with two articles, basal article nearly 14 times shorter, distal article with 2 long plumose setae. Endopod biarticulate with long plumose setae distally; exopod slightly longer than endopod bearing a short proximal and a long distal plumose seta. Uropod (Fig. 4 a) basal article about 2.7 times longer than wide; exopod triarticulate, endopod with 17 articles. Oostegites in 4 pairs. Description of the males. Body similar to the same of females. Chelipeds subequal. Propodus of the larger cheliped approximately of the same length as first four pereonites together; basis with dorsal margin serrate. Another cheliped about 2.5 times smaller than larger one. Exopod (Fig. 1 e. 1) triarticulate, with two plumose setae. Geographic distribution. BRASIL: Bahia. Habitat. Shallow waters, bottom with corals, algae, carbonate materials and/or rhodolites. Remarks. The right cheliped on young males was found to be larger than the left (Fig. 4 b 1, b 2), the opposite that occurs on adults (Fig. 1 e,f) as observed in two undamaged exemplars. This appendage is easily broken probably because of its great size when compared with the body length, or lost by autotomy. From all the examined specimens, only two males were found with chelipeds. Males without chelipeds were recognized by the presence of their genital cone. The number of antennal and uropodal articles in addition to pereopodal setation varies between individuals. In spite of the absence of the illustration of the cheliped in the original description (Brum, 1973) and the lack of cheliped in the type material we examined, the author stated that this appendix lacks an exopod. This statement was not confirmed through the examination of our material. Brum (1973) also described the rostrum of P. c a r i n a t u s as having a short tiny mesial spine. However, the species has a truncate rostrum and what can be observed in a dorsal view is the apex of the epistoma. Indeed, the epistoma was also named, in a wrong way, of pseudorostrum (Brum, 1973) and conic clypeus (Brum, 1974).Published as part of Santos, Kátia Christol Dos & Pires-Vanin, Ana Maria Setubal, 2006, Redescription of Parapagurapseudopsis carinatus (Tanaidacea: Apseudomorpha) and remarks about the male form, pp. 39-48 in Zootaxa 1363 on pages 41-47, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.17472
A gestão pedagógica nos primeiros anos de funcionamento do Grupo Escolar Silveira Brum (1912-1930)
A Digital Object Identifier (DOI) disponibilizada não corresponde.O presente artigo investiga a gestão pedagógica do Grupo Esco-
lar Silveira Brum (GESB) da cidade de Muriaé/MG no início do século XX, e sua importância para a instalação de uma nova cultura escolar no município. O período abordado faz um recorte entre os anos de 1912, ano de criação do educandário, e 1930, fim do período da Primeira República. Foi realizada uma
pesquisa bibliográfica sobre o tema ao mesmo tempo em que foi feita uma análise das fontes encontradas nos arquivos. Durante o processo de criação e expansão dos Grupos Escolares, a gestão pedagógica passa a ser fator relevante para o sucesso dos Grupos, a figura do inspetor e do diretor passa a
ser vista como um importante agente na institucionalização da cultura escolar inovadora que se apresenta nesse contexto. Em Muriaé, a inauguração do GESB estabeleceu um novo modelo escolar de educação a fim de atender às especificidades trazidas com a proclamação da República.This paper investigates the pedagogical management of the School Group Silveira Brum (GESB) City Muriaé / MG in the early twentieth century, and its importance for the installation of a new school culture in the city. The period covered is an
indentation between the years 1912, year of creation of primary school and 1930, end of period of the First Republic. We performed a literature search on the topic at the same time
that an analysis of the sources found in the archives. During the process of creation and expansion of School Groups, the educational management becomes a relevant factor for the
success of the groups, the figure of the inspector and the director is now seen as an important agent in the institutionalization of innovative school culture that is presented in Examples. In Muriaé, the inauguration of the GESB established a new school model of education to meet the specific needs brought about by the proclamation of the Republic. The educational management in the early years of the school group Brum Silveira (1912-1930)
CHEMICAL-BOND APPROACH TO THE DIELECTRIC-CONSTANT OF SEMICONDUCTORS
The extension of the Nucho, Ramos, and Wolff method for the non-tetrahedral semiconductors was made by Brum and Ramos. This extended NRW method is applied to the elemental, group III-V, and group II-VI semiconductors and better accuracy is claimed. The ionicity for the II-VI semiconductors (zinc-blende structure) is also calculated and confirms the ionicity scale established by Phillips. Again, Coulson's definition is reconciled with that of Phillips.171241742
Recruitment of ethnic minority patients to a cardiac rehabilitation trial: the Birmingham Rehabilitation Uptake Maximisation (BRUM) study [ISRCTN72884263]
BACKGROUND: Concerns have been raised about low participation rates of people from minority ethnic groups in clinical trials. However, the evidence is unclear as many studies do not report the ethnicity of participants and there is insufficient information about the reasons for ineligibility by ethnic group. Where there are data, there remains the key question as to whether ethnic minorities more likely to be ineligible (e.g. due to language) or decline to participate. We have addressed these questions in relation to the Birmingham Rehabilitation Uptake Maximisation (BRUM) study, a randomized controlled trial (RCT) comparing a home-based with a hospital-based cardiac rehabilitation programme in a multi-ethnic population in the UK. METHODS: Analysis of the ethnicity, age and sex of presenting and recruited subjects for a trial of cardiac rehabilitation in the West-Midlands, UK. PARTICIPANTS: 1997 patients presenting post-myocardial infarction, percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty or coronary artery bypass graft surgery. DATA COLLECTED: Exclusion rates, reasons for exclusion and reasons for declining to participate in the trial by ethnic group. RESULTS: Significantly more patients of South Asian ethnicity were excluded (52% of 'South Asian' v 36% 'White European' and 36% 'Other', p < 0.001). This difference in eligibility was primarily due to exclusion on the basis of language (i.e. the inability to speak English or Punjabi). Of those eligible, similar proportions were recruited from the different ethnic groups (white, South Asian and other). There was a marked difference in eligibility between people of Indian, Pakistani or Bangladeshi origin. CONCLUSION: Once eligible for this trial, people from different ethnic groups were recruited in similar proportions. The reason for ineligibility in the BRUM study was the inability to support the range of minority languages
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