1,043 research outputs found
Emergency
Exhibition Catalogue for the Emergency exhibition by Sarah Casey. Explores drawing and sculpture as means to understand and think through glacial archaeology. Includes photographic documentation and written contributions by Anita Taylor, Gary Sangster, Pierre-Yves Nicod, Philippe Curdy, Tania Kovats, Emma Stibbon and Sarah Casey
La descrizione delle risorse bibliografiche in linked data
The article is an appendix of the volume Come lavorare con Wikidata in biblioteca = How to work with Wikidata in the library, written by Alessandra Boccone and Tania Maio, published by Editrice Bibliografica in April 2021. In this article, after a brief introduction to Wikidata and to the construction of an element, the tables of the WikiProject Books and Periodicals are reported. They have been translated, revised and expanded by the author, for the benefit of librarians who wish to approach the creation of items of bibliographic interest, such as authors, monographs, journals, articles in linked open data. It ends with a brief reflection on the possibilities offered by Wikidata in the field of authority control
. 1096 Año 22 (2023) septiembre. El Tlacuache
Las festividades dan cuenta de una diversidad de formas de relaciones sociales y de vinculación social con el territorio. Se ha destacado el papel que han tenido para generar momentos de convivencia y cooperación colectiva. Las personas brindan a la comunidad trabajo, dinero, productos y/o aportan capital social (es decir, facilitar algún trámite o el uso de algún espacio en la localidad).- Territorialidad y festividad. Celebración a Santo Domingo de Guzmán en Oaxtepec por Tania Alejandra Ramírez Rocha y Patricia Ramírez Ramírez.Jaripeo. Fotografía: Patricia Ramírez Ramírez, Oaxtepec, Morelos, 2023
El Tlacuache Núm. 921 (2020). 921 Año 19 (2020) febrero. El Tlacuache
El devenir de la infancia en México por Tania Alejandra Ramírez Rocha
El Tlacuache Núm. 926 (2020). 926 Año 19 (2020) marzo. El Tlacuache
- La participación de la niñez en los huehuenches de Tlayacapan por Tania Ramírez Rocha y Patricia Ramírez Ramírez
Spatial and temporal variation in metals in sediments at Casey.
PCA ordination of metal concentrations in marine sediments at Casey station (normalised data). PC1 and PC2 explain 68% of variation in metals. Vector plot of correlations of individual metals with PC axes overlaid on ordination. BBI = Brown Bay Inner; BBM = Brown Bay Middle; BBO = Brown Bay Outer; CW = Casey Wharf; HKI–Honkala Island; MGC = McGrady Cove; OB1-3 = O’Brien Bay-1 to -3; OLDCAS = Old Casey; SB = Sparkes Bay; SHB = Shannon Bay; STC = Stevenson Cove; WK = Wilkes.</p
The success of a collective mobilization
Tania Scacchetti, General Secretary of CGIL, introduces a comment on the collective agreement by Just Eat and Filt CIGL, Fit CISL, UIL Trasporti. The Author explains the
legislative and negotiating framework in which the last collective agreement was born and reconstructs the antecedents that led to its stipulation. She also discusses what she considers to be the salient parts of the contract, including the regulation of working time and rider compensation
Spatial variation in hydrocarbons in sediments at Casey station.
Spatial variation in hydrocarbons in sediments at Casey station.</p
Spatial variation in nutrients in sediments at Casey.
Spatial variation in nutrients in sediments at Casey.</p
#201| At Land's End: The Emergence Of Capitalist Relations On An Indigenous Frontier w/ Tania Li
Episode Notes: Learn more about Tania’s work at: taniamurrayli.wordpress.com, Learn more about ‘Land’s End’ and purchase a copy: bit.ly/2XZRO9b / bit.ly/2YPJeXA, The title card features a photo by Tania Li.
WEBSITE: www.lastborninthewilderness.com,
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DROP ME A LINE: Call (208) 918-2837 or bit.ly/LBWfiledrop,
EVERYTHING ELSE: linktr.ee/patterns.of.behavior,In this episode, I speak with Tania Li, Ph.D — Professor of Anthropology at the University of Toronto and the author of ‘Land’s End: Capitalist Relations on an Indigenous Frontier.’
In our era of globalized neoliberal capitalism, we tend to examine the emergence of capitalist economic and social relations among indigenous communities primarily as a result of overbearing external pressures, e.g. governments, nonprofit organizations, and multinational corporations (often in tandem). It is important, however, to recognize that while this is often the case, this view does not include the ways capitalism can emerge and take hold in far more subtle ways. As documented in ‘Land’s End,’ from 1990 to 2009 Tania conducted annual ethnographic research in the Lauje highlands of Sulawesi Indonesia, and bore witness to the indigenous population’s rapid adoption of the tree crop cocoa for cultivation, transitioning away from the more communally managed production of food crops, as had been done traditionally in these communities for generations. As Tania explains in this episode, the seemingly banal transformation the highlanders of this region experienced —transitioning from the communal production of food crops to the more privatized production of cocoa — not only produced capitalist relations among the Lauje, but did so with very minimal to non-existent pressures from outside institutions. How did this happen? What can we learn about nature of capitalism and its emergence from Tania’s profound ethnographic study, and how can we apply this knowledge to more adequately respond to the material conditions that produce these results? Tania and I discuss these questions and much more in this episode.
Tania Li, Ph.D is Professor of Anthropology at the University of Toronto and the author of several books, including ‘The Will to Improve,’ ‘Powers of Exclusion,’ and ‘Land’s End: Capitalist Relations on an Indigenous Frontier.’ Her current writing project is an ethnography, exploring the forms of social, political, cultural and economic life that emerge in Indonesia’s oil palm plantation zone
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