4,788 research outputs found

    Near-Term Greenhouse Gas Emissions Targets

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    At the present time no widely accepted temporal emissions path for greenhouse gases has been developed and adopted at either a country or a global level. What does exist is a set of nearterm, country-level emissions targets associated with the first commitment period of the Kyoto Protocol and a process for the determination of targets for subsequent commitment periods. However, the first commitment period targets specified by the protocol have been heavily criticized on the grounds that they are arbitrary and ad hoc. The purpose of this paper is to examine the conceptual foundations upon which one might base a domestic climate policy for the United States and to attempt to determine whether a near-term emissions target can indeed be derived from structured decisionmaking resting upon these conceptual foundations.U.S. climate policy, greenhouse gas target, cost-effectiveness analysis, costbenefit analysis

    Kopp (Dr Clemens), Elias und Christentum auf dem Karmel.

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    Janin Raymond. Kopp (Dr Clemens), Elias und Christentum auf dem Karmel.. In: Échos d'Orient, tome 29, n°158, 1930. p. 238

    Economic incentives and point source emissions : choice of modeling platform

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    The purpose of this study is to identify the best modeling platform for the analysis of alternative environmental policy instruments designed to reduce the emission of pollutants from point sources, most notably, central power generating stations and manufacturing facilities. The primary analysis of concern is a cost-effectiveness investigation of the policy; where for the most part, the cost of compliance is a multidimensional variable that includes the private costs incurred by the owners of the facility, measures of the change in the cost of providing the facility's product, and estimates of the change in facility capacity factors. The range of pollutants under consideration include the usual menu of air- and waterborne emissions as well as solid and liquid wastes finding their way to landfills and other such disposal options. The range of policies considered include: (a) tariffs on the emission of pollutants; (b) tariffs and subsidies applied to the inputs or the outputs of the point source activities under consideration; (c) limits on the pollutant emissions themselves; and (d) directives regarding the installation of particular equipment and/or the alteration of process activities. The paper also discusses a nonexhaustive set of issues associated with the modeling of point source emissions and policies for their control.Economic Theory&Research,Access to Markets,Markets and Market Access,Consumption,Environmental Economics&Policies

    Interview with Richard Hackl and Patricia Kopp, Class of 1956

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    Oral history interview with Illinois State Normal University alumni Mary Patricia “Pat” (White) Kopp and Richard “Dick” Hackl, Class of 1956. The interview was conducted on October 17, 198 by Heidi Hanson, then a member of the Student Alumni Council. Kopp and Hackl recount their experiences living in the men’s and women’s dormitories on campus. For Kopp in her role as an Honor Resident, this included enforcing a 10 p.m. curfew for female students. Both remember mailing their laundry home to be washed and having to abide by formal dining rules in the dorm cafeterias. They reminisce about University President Raymond Fairchild and Dean Larsen, who were influential figures during their time at the university. Deans Anna Keaton and Ralph Linkins are also mentioned as memorable individuals who played significant roles in student life. They describe a range of extracurricular activities, including sports events, class boards, Women\u27s League, Men\u27s Club, Women\u27s Recreation Association, and Blackfriars theatrical fraternity. The conversation delves into prices for common goods during the 1950s and reflects on the relatively low cost of tuition and textbooks, as well as the fact that most students worked to finance their education. Regarding entertainment, Hackl and Kopp recall attending Big Four dances featuring famous bands, and entertainment series such as lectures, concerts, and dance performances. They also discuss the development of Normal and Bloomington over the years, noting the expansion of the university and changes in the surrounding area. Hackl and Kopp touch upon the use of tobacco and alcohol by students, acknowledging the prohibition on alcohol on campus and the clandestine nature of student drinking. They reminisce about the strict rules and consequences for violating alcohol policies, as well as the cultural attitudes towards smoking during that era. They note their appreciation for the friendly atmosphere and the sense of community on campus. Hackl specifically mentioned the strong reputation of the education department at ISNU, which helped graduates secure jobs easily. Kopp highlights special moments of dorm life, including Christmas parties and the warmth of the campus community during the cold winters. They also discuss some of the regulations and restrictions they experienced, such as curfews for female students and mandatory assemblies.https://ir.library.illinoisstate.edu/aoh/1016/thumbnail.jp

    Raymond Williams and the limits of cultural materialism

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    Cultural materialism has become an influential discipline in recent years, particularly so in 'Renaissance' studies, but also more generally in 'English', as well as departments defined as practising 'cultural' or 'communications' studies. The phrase is usually linked with the name of Raymond Williams, but a cursory examination of Williams's own work quickly establishes that it is a phrase he rarely uses, and only schematically attempts to define. The thesis therefore takes the form of an investigation into the way cultural materialism has come to be understood, by examining in detail the trajectory of Raymond Williams's theoretical development, and how his own engagement with various theoretical positions has helped to set 'limits' on the meaning of cultural materialism. Chapters 1 and 2 deal with some of Williams's earliest work, particularly Reading and Criticism, as a way of investigating how reasonable it is to tag him as a 'Left-Leavisite', arguing that Leavis's undoubted influence is resisted (though not entirely rejected) from a very early stage. The first chapter considers in detail Leavis's work at Cambridge, the influence of Eliot, and the significance of the 'Organic Community'. Chapter 2, which is based around a comparative analysis of Williams's and Leavis's readings of Dickens, argues that Williams rejects the 'organic community' in favour of his 'knowable community'. Chapters 4 and 5 deal with specific 'theoretical' issues: the first, based around a reading of Terry Eagleton's critique of Williams's use of the Marxist metaphor of 'base and superstructure', shows some of the problems which arise from Williams's cultural model, as well as suggesting refinements; the second deals with the influence of Volosinov's theories on Williams. Chapter 6 comes out of Williams's readings of the 'Country-House' poems in The Country and the City, showing how his practice of literary criticism relies on an acceptance of 'ideology' apparently denied in his more 'theoretical' writings. This analysis is extended as a result of investigations into the 'De L'Isle' manuscripts relating to the Penshurst estate. Chapter 7 argues that it is possible to see the work of Fredric Jameson as developing Williams's cultural materialism into Jameson's debates on postmodernism. In the Introduction and Conclusion, I have taken the opportunity to look briefly at the activity of cultural materialism as it has developed since Raymond Williams's death in 1988. The Introduction emphasizes what I see to be important methodological differences between 'cultural materialism' and 'new historicism'; the Conclusion deals with the continuing debate over the value of a cultural materialist approach by considering the 'appropriation' of Shakespeare

    Raymond Gervais : 3 x 1

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    "Raymond Gervais 3 X 1 traces and elucidates the important or little-known moments in the practice of Raymond Gervais, an artist who has explored the notion of the aural imagination since the mid 1970s. An erudite author, Gervais joins forces here with Nicole Gingras, a researcher and curator interested in what connects sound, image, and words. The first major publication on the work of a conceptual artist questioning whether thought is acoustic" -- p. [4] of cover

    Special announcement from Raymond R. Best, Raymond R., Director of the Tule Lake camp, Japanese = 特別告示

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    Japanese translation of a special announcement from Raymond R. Best, Raymond R., Director of the Tule Lake camp regarding permanent leave from the segregation center.The Kiyoshi Uyekawa Tule Lake Camp Collection comprises of the wartime publications collected by Kiyoshi Uyekawa while incarcerated in the Tule Lake camp, such as Tule Lake newsletters and bulletins, materials issued by the Pro-Japanese group, Sokoku Hoshidan (or Hoshi Dan), WRA publications, his family's incarceration documents, which include documents regarding his and his wife, Mitsuye‘s repatriation, his fictional works’ manuscripts, bulletins and manuscripts of haiku poems authored by the members of the haiku societies incarcerated in the camps, and letters from Kyo Koide, who was a prominent figure in the community as a photographer, physician, and poet under the pseudonym, Banjin Koide

    Shanxi (China), red soil basin around Qin Xian

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    Topography in the red soil basin around Chinchow.Image is part of research conducted by Raymond T. Moyer for the article: Agricultural Soils in a Loess Region of North China Author(s): Raymond T. Moyer Source: Geographical Review, Vol. 26, No. 3 (Jul., 1936), pp. 414-425 Published by: American Geographical Society Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/209047http://www.jstor.org/stable/209047Grayscal

    Shanxi (China), profile of soils

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    Profile of soils of the Gray Brown Subgroup, showing zone of accumulation.Image is part of research conducted by Raymond T. Moyer for the article: Agricultural Soils in a Loess Region of North China Author(s): Raymond T. Moyer Source: Geographical Review, Vol. 26, No. 3 (Jul., 1936), pp. 414-425 Published by: American Geographical Society Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/209047http://www.jstor.org/stable/209047Grayscal

    Shanxi province (China), people irrigating from a well on the Taiyuan plain

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    Irrigating from a well on the Taiyuan Plain.Image is part of research conducted by Raymond T. Moyer for the article: Agricultural Soils in a Loess Region of North China Author(s): Raymond T. Moyer Source: Geographical Review, Vol. 26, No. 3 (Jul., 1936), pp. 414-425 Published by: American Geographical Society Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/209047http://www.jstor.org/stable/209047Grayscal
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