328,143 research outputs found

    Michael S. Dodge

    No full text
    Michael S. Dodge currently serves as an Assistant Professor in the Department of Space Studies at the University of North Dakota. Prof. Dodge received his LL.M. degree in Aviation & Space Law from McGill University in the Fall of 2011 (thesis: “Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) and the GPS-Galileo Agreement”). Before attending McGill, he obtained his J.D. in 2008 from the University of Mississippi School of Law, where he was also the first recipient of the Certificate in Remote Sensing, Air, and Space Law. He obtained dual degrees in B.S. (in Biological Sciences) and B.A. (in Philosophy) in 2005, from the University of Southern Mississippi. Prof. Dodge teaches several courses for Space Studies, including Space Politics and Policy (SpSt 560), Space Law (SpSt 565), and Remote Sensing Law and Policy (SpSt 575). These courses include a multitude of historical, political, and legal facets to space activities, and cover subjects such as legal issues in space exploration; regulation, privacy law, and Constitutional concerns surrounding the use of remote sensing technology; licensing and regulatory requirements for space activity; the historical and evolutionary nature of space policy (both nationally and internationally); public international law; and domestic United States legal governance of space activity. Prof. Dodge’s research has included GNSS law, remote sensing law & regulation, environmental regulation of outer space, concepts of sovereignty and ownership rights in space, and the nexus of remote sensing technology with global humanitarian law and disaster relief law. Future studies include examination of future environmental regulatory structures for orbital space, as well as domestic United States legislation and its relationship with the precept of non-appropriation in outer space, including an analysis of the ownership of celestial resources from potential asteroid mining operations.https://commons.erau.edu/stm-images/1037/thumbnail.jp

    Michael Dodge

    No full text
    Michael S. Dodge currently serves as an Assistant Professor & Graduate Program Director in the Department of Space Studies at the University of North Dakota. Prof. Dodge received his LL.M. degree in Aviation & Space Law from McGill University in the Fall of 2011 (thesis: “Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) and the GPS-Galileo Agreement”). Before attending McGill, he obtained his J.D. in 2008 from the University of Mississippi School of Law, where he was also the first recipient of the Certificate in Remote Sensing, Air, and Space Law. He obtained dual degrees in B.S. (in Biological Sciences) and B.A. (in Philosophy) in 2005, from the University of Southern Mississippi. Prof. Dodge teaches several courses for Space Studies, including Space Politics and Policy (SpSt 560), Space Law (SpSt 565), and Remote Sensing Law and Policy (SpSt 575). These courses include a multitude of historical, political, and legal facets to space activities, and cover subjects such as legal issues in space exploration; regulation, privacy law, and Constitutional concerns surrounding the use of remote sensing technology; licensing and regulatory requirements for space activity; the historical and evolutionary nature of space policy (both nationally and internationally); public international law; and domestic United States legal governance of space activity. Prof. Dodge’s research has included GNSS law, remote sensing law & regulation, environmental regulation of outer space, concepts of sovereignty and ownership rights in space, and the nexus of remote sensing technology with global humanitarian law and disaster relief law. Future studies include examination of future environmental regulatory structures for orbital space, as well as domestic United States legislation and its relationship with the precept of non-appropriation in outer space, including an analysis of the ownership of celestial resources from potential asteroid mining operations.https://commons.erau.edu/stm-images/1111/thumbnail.jp

    Oral History Interview: Charles H. Dodge interviewed by Juliet DeRuchie

    No full text
    15 page transcript. The original interview was recorded on one cassette tape. This recording has been digitized into two files (DR-100_227 = 23:25; DR-100_229 = 22:35)Charles H. Dodge (b. 1919-d.2006) ??? Charles H. Dodge was born on May 10, 1919 in Brentwood, California to Charles H. Dodge, Senior and Mary Woolesy Dodge. His interview gives insights to life on the Miller and Lux Ranch at Buttonwillow as well as his career in Kern County Law Enforcement. He served as Sheriff of Kern County from 1967 to 1974. He was married to Bakersfield???s first policewoman, Mary Holman Dodge

    Letter from A. Dodge to W. S. Featherston 12 September 1868

    No full text
    Handwritten letter from A. Dodge to W.S. Featherston, regarding upcoming presidential election, Radical Party in the Northwest, and Reconstruction grievances; sent from Berlington, IAhttps://egrove.olemiss.edu/ciwar_corresp/1261/thumbnail.jp

    Tyrone, Election Day

    No full text
    Men line up to vote at Old Tyrone.The 19th Amendment to the U. S. Constitution was not ratified until 1920.8 bit; 326 ppi; ScanMaker 9800X

    DynamoVis - Dynamic Visualization of Animal Movement Data

    No full text
    Exploring movement, as an important aspect of spatiotemporal processes, has gained new momentum from the availability of large spatiotemporal datasets. This has given rise to the development of new exploratory and analytical techniques to generate new insight into dynamic processes and the spatiotemporal context in which they operate. This study develops a new dynamic visualization tool, called ``DYNAMOVis: Dynamic Visualization of Movement'', developed for the exploratory analysis of movement in relation to the environment and geographic context. DYNAMOVis applies visual variables such as point and line width, color, and directional vector to visualize movement tracks in their attribute space (e.g. movement parameters and context attributes). Using real case studies from Movement Ecology, we show how hybrid and dynamic visualizations can strengthen spatiotemporal research by facilitating data exploration, generating new hypotheses, discovery of patterns and dependencies, as well as promoting interdisciplinary research collaborations.Somayeh Dodge; Glenn Xavier; Wing Yi Wong. (2018). DynamoVis - Dynamic Visualization of Animal Movement Data. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://doi.org/10.13020/D6PH49
    corecore