1,455 research outputs found
Peer Interview Script, Danielle Mitchell, Spring 2020
Danielle Mitchell is a rising senior from Compton, California majoring in anthropology and sociology. She is a gifted writer who conducted very special interviews in SIS Seminar
In the Garden, Danielle Mitchell, Spring 2020
Danielle Mitchell is a rising senior from Compton, California majoring in anthropology and sociology. She is a gifted writer who conducted very special interviews in SIS Seminar
Hall Street, Danielle Mitchell, Spring 2020
Danielle Mitchell is a rising senior from Compton, California majoring in anthropology and sociology. She is a gifted writer who conducted very special interviews in SIS Seminar
Excerpts of Interviews with Peers, Danielle Mitchell, Spring 2020
Danielle Mitchell is a rising senior from Compton, California majoring in anthropology and sociology. She is a gifted writer who conducted very special interviews in SIS Seminar
How to write a novel - four fiction writers on Danielle Steel's insane working day
First paragraph: She might be the world’s most famous romance writer, nay the highest selling living author bar none, but there’s little room for flowers and chocolates in Danielle Steel’s writing regime. In a recent interview she laughed at the idea of young people insisting on a work-life balance, and has claimed she regularly writes for 20 to 22 hours a day, and sometimes 24. The result: 179 books in under 50 years, selling about 800m copies.https://theconversation.com/how-to-write-a-novel-four-fiction-writers-on-danielle-steels-insane-working-day-11715
Conversations with Danielle Cronin, Philip Howard and Julian Thomas
This chapter focuses on the expanding civic role and challenges for investigative journalists using digital and social media. The chapter includes conversations with Danielle Cronin (national deputy editor of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation), as well as Professor Philip Howard (director of the Oxford Internet Institute), along with Distinguished Professor Julian Thomas (director of the ARC Centre of Excellence at RMIT University). They share their insights into setting an agenda of priorities for research and practice about public interest journalism. This chapter is an edited transcription of their conversations with the author, Dr Caryn Coatney, for a panel session sponsored by the Australian and New Zealand Communication Association.
- This chapter provides new material about the impact of social media, online audiences and automation on investigative journalism
Adding Spice to the Slog: Humanities in Medical Training.
Writing from personal experience, physician and author Danielle Ofri asks what evidence is needed to justify trying to humanize medical training via the power of literature
2009 Open Access Week: Copyright and Author Rights
A talk about copyright by Danielle M. Conway
Grounded imaginaries: Transforming how we live in climate-changed futures
Danielle Celermajer (Sydney), author of Summertime and owner of the bushfire-surviving Jimmy the Pig, ponders futures made possible by transforming the stories we tell.Griffith ReviewNo Full Tex
Les pratiques des usagers dans les friches urbaines végétalisées et leurs facteurs d’influence : analyse de deux cas montréalais
Dans l’ère post-industrielle, où la densification apparaît comme une solution afin de freiner l’étalement urbain, la question de l’avenir des terrains en friche devient incontournable. En effet, ceux-ci deviennent hautement convoités par les acteurs du redéveloppement urbain puisqu’ils détiennent un potentiel foncier important. Face à ces pressions, cette recherche s’intéresse à la complexité des terrains en friche, puisqu’il existe une diversité de potentiels, outre le foncier.
Parmi ces potentiels, les friches peuvent être utilisées comme des espaces verts urbains. Effectivement, il arrive qu’on retrouve sur ces sites des usagers qui les fréquentent, à différents desseins. L’étude tente ainsi de répertorier et de comprendre les pratiques faites par les usagers, pour deux cas étudiés à Montréal : le Boisé Jean-Milot et le Champ des possibles. L’objectif est non seulement de qualifier ces pratiques, mais également de mettre en évidence les facteurs d’influence qui les sous-tendent.
La recherche s’inscrit dans les approches personnes-environnement. D’un point de vue méthodologique, des entretiens in situ ont été menés avec les usagers afin qu’ils puissent expliquer leur expérience vécue de la friche. Les facteurs d’influence ont émergé des discours tenus en entrevue.
Les cas étudiés montrent que la friche est un espace d’exception en ville : les friches urbaines végétalisées sont le cadre de pratiques exclusives, en plus de faire vivre une variété d’ambiances à l’usager. Les résultats permettent ainsi de placer la friche comme un espace vert complémentaire au parc urbain. La friche fait partie d’un portfolio d’espaces disponibles, utilisés au moment présent.
En relevant les facteurs qui influencent les usagers à fréquenter les friches, on met en lumière des qualités qui pourraient être utiles dans la planification des espaces verts urbains et dans le développement d’une vision innovante pour l’avenir des friches.In a postindustrial context, where densification appears as a solution to urban sprawl, the problematic of wasteland’s future is inescapable. In fact, their real estate potential, attributed to their status of empty spaces primed for development, is highly valued. Considering those pressures, this study examines the complexity of wastelands, as there exists numerous potentials uses other then real estate development.
Among those potentials, wastelands can be used as green urban spaces. Users can visit those sites to undertake a variety of activities. The study attempts to identify and understand these activities in two case studies in Montreal: the Boisé Jean-Milot and the Champ des possibles. The aim is not only to characterize those activities but also to underline the underlying factors that influence them.
The research subscribes to human- environment approaches. For the users to explain their wasteland experience, in situ interviews have been conducted. Users discourses highlighted activities factors of influence.
The cases have shown that wastelands are exceptional city spaces : they are the setting of exclusives activities and offer a diversity of ambiance for users to experience. The results revealed wasteland as complementary green space to urban parks. As currently used, wastelands belong to a portfolio of available spaces.
Understanding how green urban wastelands are used both illuminates the characteristics of the spaces and articulates a vision for the future of urban wastelands
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