24,817 research outputs found

    Forskerskolen forord

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    Forord til Martin Severin Frandsen: Samskabelse som læreproces - en fortælling om et byudviklingslaboratorium og en boligsocial helhedspla

    Socialt bæredygtige byer og lokalsamfund:Fra bekæmpelse af “parallelsamfund” til lokal kapacitetsopbygning

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    Martin Severin Frandsen & Jonas Egmose behandler i deres artikel følgende problemstilling: Hvordan udvikles og opretholdes socialt bæredygtige byer og lokalsamfund? Forfatternes udgangspunkt er en teoretisk forståelse af social bæredygtighed som et spørgsmål om evnen til at opretholde byer og lokalsamfund som sociale, politiske og kulturelle fællesskaber. De argumenterer for, at udviklingen og opretholdelsen af socialt bæredygtige byer og lokalsamfund må medtænke to akser: 1. En vertikal akse, som handler om strukturelle vilkår for social bæredygtighed, herunder spørgsmål om samfundsmæssig omfordeling gennem planlægning, politik og regulering. 2. En horisontal akse, der handler om lokal kapacitet til at opretholde fællesskaber

    sj-pdf-2-mpp-10.1177_23814683221081434 – Supplemental material for Development and Test of a Decision Aid for Shared Decision Making in Patients with Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury

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    Supplemental material, sj-pdf-2-mpp-10.1177_23814683221081434 for Development and Test of a Decision Aid for Shared Decision Making in Patients with Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury by Hanne Mainz, Lone Frandsen, Martin Lind, Peter Fauno and Kirsten Lomborg in MDM Policy & Practice</p

    sj-docx-1-mpp-10.1177_23814683221081434 – Supplemental material for Development and Test of a Decision Aid for Shared Decision Making in Patients with Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury

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    Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-mpp-10.1177_23814683221081434 for Development and Test of a Decision Aid for Shared Decision Making in Patients with Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury by Hanne Mainz, Lone Frandsen, Martin Lind, Peter Fauno and Kirsten Lomborg in MDM Policy & Practice</p

    Genopdagelsen af gadens kultur – om Isaac Joseph og den pragmatiske vending i fransk bysociologi

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    Denne artikel tager afsæt i den aktuelle sociologiske og offentlige diskussion om offentlige byrum og præsenterer nyere og i dansk sammenhæng stort set ukendte bidrag fra den strømning i fransk sociologi, der betegnes som ”den pragmatiske vending”. Artiklen har to hovedpointer. For det første at den pragmatiske bysociologi kan bidrage til denne diskussion ved at beskrive og fremhæve betydningen af de oftest upåagtede og dagligdags kompetencer, ved hjælp af hvilke byboere skaber sociale overenskomster og fredelig sameksistens på offentlige steder i socialt og kulturelt differentierede byer. For det andet at bysociologien ifølge de pragmatiske sociologer ikke kan standse ved analyser af segregation, ghettodannelser og lokale fællesskabers tilegnelser af territorier. ”At tænke byen” indebærer at bevæge sig videre til også at undersøge de byrumsmæssige design og trafikale forbindelser og passageveje, der skaber sammenhængen i det urbane væv og tillader byboeren at overvinde fremmedheden på et ikke fortroligt territorium. ENGELSK ABSTRACT: Martin Severin Frandsen: Rediscovering Urban Culture and Public Space: On Isaac Joseph and the Pragmatic Turn in French Urban Sociology This article analyses current sociological and public discussions concerning public urban spaces, and introduces new (and in a Danish context largely unknown) contributions from the movement in French sociology that has been labelled ”the pragmatic turn”. The article makes two main arguments. Firstly, the pragmatic urban sociology can contribute to these discussions by highlighting the importance of the often unnoticed and everyday civilities through which city-dwellers create social agreements and peaceful co-existence in public places in socially and culturally heterogeneous cities. Secondly, urban sociology cannot, according to the pragmatic sociologists, stop with inquiries into segregation, ghettos and local populations appropriations of territories. Imagining the city implies moving on to explore the designs of public spaces and public transit systems that create continuity and mobility in urban agglomerations and allow city-dwellers to overcome the strangeness of unfamiliar territories

    Dark matter in (partially) composite Higgs models

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    Abstract We construct composite and partially composite Higgs models with complex pseudo-Nambu-Goldstone (pNGB) dark matter states from four-dimensional gauge-Yukawa theories with strongly interacting fermions. The fermions are partially gauged under the electroweak symmetry, and the dynamical electroweak symmetry breaking sector is minimal. The pNGB dark matter particle is stable due to a U(1) technibaryon-like symmetry, also present in the technicolor limit of the models. However, the relic density is particle anti-particle symmetric and due to thermal freeze-out as opposed to the technicolor limit where it is typically due to an asymmetry. The pNGB Higgs is composite or partially composite depending on the origin of the Standard Model fermion masses, which impacts the dark matter phenomenology. We illustrate the important features with a model example invariant under an SU(4) × SU(2) × U(1) global symmetry

    Jack Alive / Martin Dead : The Location of the "Author" in Jack London\u27s Martin Eden

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    This essay is an attempt to read Martin Eden, Jack Londonʼs autobiographical novel, in terms of the inextricable relationship between the author and the protagonist. Critics have often taken the unbalanced plot and the lack of ironic distance between narrator and character in Martin Eden as the technical weakness of London, but this paper argues that the achievement of this novel owes a great deal to the attachment of London to Martin. The unbalanced structure is a necessary product of the severe struggle of the author to kill his romantic alter ego. // Martin, who aspires to win Ruth Morse, tries to cross class boundaries by making a career of a writer. Even after realizing the emptiness of Ruth, who turns out to be nothing but a typical figure of the bourgeoisie, he somehow persists in loving her. The notion underlying here is that, for Martin, love, career and art are fundamentally inseparable. He objects to the aestheteʼs view of Brissenden on account of his separation of art from career. Martinʼs identity and life consist only in the triunity of love/career/art; the alternative is the repudiation of life. Thus, the unnatural delay of his disappointment in love can be regarded as Londonʼs strategy to set the suicide of Martin as the necessary consequence of the story. // By finishing the story and killing Martin, London finally detaches himself from Martin, reconstructs his self, and, unlike Martin, survives as a professional writer. In this sense, Martin Eden is a story about “writerʼs self-reconstruction.
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