7,510 research outputs found
Jan C. Jansen, Jürgen Osterhammel, Decolonization. A Short History (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2017), pp. 252, ISBN: 9781400884889
Book review: Jan C. Jansen, Jürgen Osterhammel, Decolonization. A Short History (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2017), pp. 252, ISBN: 9781400884889Compte rendu : Jan C. Jansen, Jürgen Osterhammel, Decolonization. A Short History (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2017), pp. 252, ISBN: 978140088488
Refugees and Revolution in the Atlantic World – An Interview with Jan C. Jansen
In October 2020, the five-year research project “Refugees and Revolution in the Atlantic World (1770s–1820s)” started. The project will undertake a systematic exploration of the period as an age of refugee movements, a period in which political migrants and their movements became a defining feature. The project is funded by a prestigious ERC Starting Grant and was conceptualized by Jan C. Jansen, until recently a research fellow at the German Historical Institute Washington DC and now a Junio..
Philips (J. F. R.), Jansen (J. C. G. M.), Claessens (Th. J. A. H.). Geschiedenis van de landbouw in Limburg, 1750-1914
Craeybeckx Jan. Philips (J. F. R.), Jansen (J. C. G. M.), Claessens (Th. J. A. H.). Geschiedenis van de landbouw in Limburg, 1750-1914. In: Revue belge de philologie et d'histoire, tome 45, fasc. 1, 1967. Antiquité - Oudheid. pp. 215-217
Recensione a Jan C. Jansen, Kirsten McKenzie (a cura di), Mobility and Coercion in an Age of Wars and Revolutions: A Global History, c. 1750–1830, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2024, 303 p.
Recensione al volume di Jan C. Jansen, Kirsten McKenzie (a cura di), Mobility and Coercion in an Age of Wars and Revolutions: A Global History, c. 1750–1830, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2024, 303 p
In Search of Atlantic Sociability: Freemasons, Empires, and Atlantic History Jan C. Jansen
Crystal c-axes (fabric analyser G50) of ice core samples (vertical thin sections) collected from the polar ice core EGRIP, 118-350 m depth (2017)
Papers and Trails: Migration Control and Agency during the Atlantic Age of Revolutions (1770s- 1820s)
The revolutionary upheavals that rocked the Atlantic world in the half-century between the American
Revolution in the 1770s and the revolutions in Spanish America in the 1810s and 1820s unleashed
political refugee movements of an unprecedented scale. As a consequence, the "age of revolutions"
saw a proliferation of official or semi-official paperwork relating to the whereabouts, trajectories and
status of individuals moving between the Atlantic's arenas of revolutionary politics. Discussing
different types of documents from several regional contexts, the paper argues that this massive
growth in documentary evidence was driven by two apparently opposing factors: the attempts by
authorities to contain and control migratory movements and the need of individual migrants and
refugees to navigate through a world in turmoil.
Jan C. Jansen is research fellow at the German Historical Institute, Washington, DC. Prior to joining
the GHI, he was a lecturer and fellow at the University of Konstanz and held research positions in
London (SOAS) and Tunis (IRMC). His main research interests concern the comparative history of
colonial empires and decolonization with a particular focus on the Mediterranean and Atlantic
worlds since the eighteenth century. His books include Erobern und Erinnern: Symbolpolitik,
öffentlicher Raum und französischer Kolonialismus in Algerien, 1830-1950 (2013), Decolonization: A
Short History (co-authored with Jürgen Osterhammel, 2017), and Refugee Crises, 1945-2000: Political
and Societal Responses in International Comparison (co-edited with Simone Lässig, 2019). He is
currently engaged in a research project on the Saint-Domingue diaspora
A 0.12mm<sup>2</sup> Wien-Bridge Temperature Sensor with 0.1°C (3σ) Inaccuracy from -40°C to 180°C
Resistor-based temperature sensors can achieve much higher resolution and energy efficiency than conventional BJT-based sensors [1], but they typically occupy more area (> 0.25 mm 2 ) and have lower operating temperatures (le 125 {circ} {C}) [2]-[4]. This work describes a 0.12mm 2 resistor-based sensor that uses a Wien-bridge (WB) filter to achieve 0.1 {circ} {C} (3 sigma) inaccuracy from - 40 {circ} {C} to 180 {circ} {C}. Compared to a state-of-the-art WB sensor [4], it occupies 6 × less area and achieves comparable relative accuracy over a 76% wider operating range. Session 10.3 Green Open Access added to TU Delft Institutional Repository ‘You share, we take care!’ – Taverne project https://www.openaccess.nl/en/you-share-we-take-care Otherwise as indicated in the copyright section: the publisher is the copyright holder of this work and the author uses the Dutch legislation to make this work public.Electronic InstrumentationMicroelectronic
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