4,511 research outputs found
La kalaa des Beni-Hammad
Saladin H. La kalaa des Beni-Hammad. In: Journal des savants. 7ᵉ année, Juin 1909. pp. 255-260
"Prostitution in Cairo"
Selling Sex in the City offers a worldwide analysis of prostitution that takes a long historical approach which covers a time period from 1600 to the 2000s. The overviews in this volume examine sex work in more than twenty notorious “sin cities” around the world, ranging from Sydney to Singapore and from Casablanca to Chicago. Situated within a comparative framework of local developments, the book takes up themes such as labour relations, coercion, agency, gender, and living and working conditions. Selling Sex in the City thus reveals how prostitution and societal reactions to the trade have been influenced by colonization, industrialization, urbanization, the rise of nation states, imperialism, and war, as well as by revolutions in politics, transport, and communication.
Contributors are: Pascale Absi, Dlila Amir, Deborah Bernstein, Francesca Biancani, Thaddeus Gregory Blanchette, Amalia L. Cabezas, Susan P. Conner, Satarupa Dasgupta, Mfon Umoren Ekpootu, Raelene Frances, Pamela Fuentes, Sue Gronewold, Hanan Hammad, Shawna Herzog, Philippa Hetherington, Nicole Keusch, Liat Kozma, Julia Laite, Nomi Levenkron, Mary Linehan, Maja Mechant, Fernanda Nuñez, Marion Pluskota, Cristiana Schettini, Hila Shamir, Yvonne Svanström, Isabelle Tracol-Huynh, Michela Turno, Elise van Nederveen Meerkerk, and Mark David Wyers
Breaking Dichotomies: Counter-Narratives in the Spoken Word Poetry of Suheir Hammad
This article analyzes the spoken word poetry of the Palestinian-American author, Suheir Hammad, who attempts to deconstruct dichotomies between Arabs and Americans and to create a concept of transnational humanness. Through cultural criticism, Hammad reverses the process of Othering when she humanizes Palestinians and detaches suffering from national belonging. Her creative resistance represents a renegotiation of Americaness and its relation to Islam and Arabs, and opens up de-nationalized spaces of comparison
Where are the mothers? Interrogating maternal mortality as a violation of the rights to life and health : a Nigerian and Ethiopian perspective
A Dissertation submitted to the Faculty of Law University of Pretoria, in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree Masters of Law (LLM in Human Rights and Democratisation in Africa). Prepared under the supervision of Dr. Salah Hammad, Faculty of Law, Addis Ababa University, AddisThesis (LLM (Human Rights and Democratisation in Africa))--University of Pretoria, 2009.The author argues that maternal mortality can easily be avoided and that the right to health and life is as much a developmental issue as it is one of human rights. Focuses on the maternal mortality ratio and relevant laws protecting women’s right to life and health in Nigeria and Ethiopia.http://www.chr.up.ac.za/Centre for Human RightsLL
Sharpening the A→Z(∗)h signature of the type-II 2HDM at the LHC through advanced machine learning
The A→Z(∗)h decay signature has been highlighted as possibly being the first testable probe of the Standard Model (SM) Higgs boson discovered in 2012 (h) interacting with Higgs companion states, such as those existing in a 2-Higgs Doublet Model (2HDM), chiefly, a CP-odd one (A). The production mechanism of the latter at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) takes place via bb¯-annihilation and/or gg-fusion, depending on the 2HDM parameters, in turn dictated by the Yukawa structure of this Beyond the SM (BSM) scenario. Among the possible incarnations of the 2HDM, we test here the so-called Type-II, for a twofold reason. On the one hand, it intriguingly offers two very distinct parameter regions compliant with the SM-like Higgs measurements, i.e., where the so-called `SM limit' of the 2HDM can be achieved. On the other hand, in both configurations, the AZh coupling is generally small, hence the signal is strongly polluted by backgrounds, so that the exploitation of Machine Learning (ML) techniques becomes extremely useful. Ours approach in this respect is a three-prong one. Firstly, we adjust ML models to analyze all possible High Energy Physics (HEP) data types, so as to maximize the amount of input information. Secondly, unlike most `black-box' ML approaches currently in use in the HEP community, we exploit a (linear) Centered Kernel Alignment (CKA) similarity metric to analyze the learned representations in the hidden layers, thereby enabling an interpretative element of our results. Thirdly, we emphasise that the proposed ML models are generic and can thus be adopted in other physics problems. Concerning the one at hand, by using such advanced ML implementations, we ultimately show that the sensitivity of LHC searches in the l+l−bb¯ (l=e,μ) final state can significantly be improved with respect to traditional cut-and-count analyses and/or, et
Correspondence dated 28 March 1960 from George H. Forsyth
1. One page typed letter, dated March 28, 1960, from George H. Forsyth to Aziz Atiya, about his planned expedition to Saint Catherine\u27s Monastery on Mount Sinai. 2. One page typed letter, dated March 28, 1960, from George H. Forsyth to Salama Hammad, about his planned expedition to Saint Catherine\u27s Monastery on Mount Sina
Observation of different reaction to in vitro culture initiation of local germplasm of Malus domestica Borkh.
“Challenging the Authority of Religious Interpretation in Saudi Arabia::The Transformation of Suhaila Zain al-Abedin Hammad
Taking as its starting point that a male monopoly is a problem in the recognition of Islamic religious authority, especially in matters related to women, this chapter discusses the possibilities for challenging this monopoly. The author argues that it is necessary to create alternative sources of authority from within the realm of religious scholarship through women scholars laying direct claim to the interpretation of sacred texts. Al Fassi uses the works and experiences of the Saudi scholar, Suhaila Zain al-Abedin Hammad, as a specific example for this approach. Hammad, an accomplished religious scholar, has worked tirelessly through her writing, both in books and her weekly newspaper column, to address difficult issues in Islamic law, to rethink the use of weak hadiths, and to critique Saudi legal rulings. The chapter also considers the intense backlash against her work and her impact on Saudi public opinion. © 2020 selection and editorial matter, Dina El Omari, Juliane Hammer and Mouhanad Khorchide; individual chapters, the contributors
Can board refreshment mitigate managerial power: New evidence from the MENA region
This study investigates the impact of director refreshment on managerial power in the MENA
(Middle East and North Africa) region, a phenomenon often linked to insufficient oversight and
increased agency conflicts. We develop a weighted board refreshment index based on seven director
attributes to evaluate its effect on three measures of CEO power: managerial entrenchment,
duality, and tenure. Our analysis covers 494 publicly traded companies in seven MENA countries
from 2007 to 2022, totaling 3912 firm-year observations. The results show that board refreshment
significantly reduces all three aspects of managerial power. Additionally, we highlight the
crucial role of each refreshment attribute in diminishing managerial control. Overall, this
research not only applies the board refreshment index introduced by Dah et al. (2024) in a novel
context but also contributes to the literature by demonstrating the effectiveness of board
refreshment in enhancing monitoring and board performance
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