2,965 research outputs found

    Colin Humphris

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    "Colin Humphris 2 Sqdrn. RAAF. 1941 - 1942 Author of - 'Trapped on Timor' (as a result of bombing of Darwin Feb. 19, 1942)".Colin Humphris. 2 Squadron, Royal Australian Air Force 1941 - 1942. Author of - 'Trapped on Timor' (as a result of bombing of Darwin February 19, 1942)

    sj-pdf-1-bji-10.1177_17571774211060394 – Supplemental Material for Using FaceReader to explore the potential for harnessing emotional reactions to motivate hand hygiene

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    Supplemental Material, sj-pdf-1-bji-10.1177_17571774211060394 for Using FaceReader to explore the potential for harnessing emotional reactions to motivate hand hygiene by Sophie Rutter, Marc Bonne, Catherine Stones and Colin Macduff in Journal of Infection Prevention</p

    Interview with Colin Wilson, part 4, undated

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    Interview with Colin Wilson, part 4, features an interview with author Colin Wilson in which he discusses his views regarding society and art, his reclusive nature, and the intellectual and fantastical elements of his works, undated

    Interview with Colin Wilson, part 2, undated

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    Interview with Colin Wilson, part 2, features an interview with author Colin Wilson in which he discusses his views regarding society and art, his reclusive nature, and the intellectual and fantastical elements of his works, undated

    Providence College Faculty Author Series 2017-2018: D. Colin Jaundrill

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    In this installment of the Faculty Authors Series, D. Colin Jaundrill (History, Providence College) discusses his newest book, Samurai to Soldier: Remaking Military Service in Nineteenth-Century Japan

    Providence College Faculty Author Series 2017-2018: D. Colin Jaundrill

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    In this installment of the Faculty Authors Series, D. Colin Jaundrill (History, Providence College) discusses his newest book, Samurai to Soldier: Remaking Military Service in Nineteenth-Century Japan

    The PhD thesis as a virtual guest house.

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    PhD theses. Who reads them? Within UK nursing the answer is: hardly anybody, save a few PhD supervisors, students and enamoured academics. Since the millennium, the Royal College of Nursing’s Steinberg Collection of over 1000 hard bound theses has seen around 250-300 episodes of access each year. This low level of thesis usage is also characteristic of university libraries in the UK (Copeland and Penman 2004), where processes for accessing these tombstone-like tomes are often tortuous. However, libraries throughout the world are increasingly making electronically formatted theses (e‐theses) freely accessible on‐line via web‐based Institutional Repositories (Copeland et al. 2005). This offers an opportunity to transform PhD access and use. North America, Australia, Sweden, Germany and the UK have been in the vanguard of development. Following a slow start, UK nursing is gradually waking up to this opportunity. At the time of writing, within Scotland, there are five nursing PhD theses available electronically. This article draws on recent experience of actively disseminating a new nursing PhD electronically (Macduff 2007), and on many nights spent in guest houses during academic research work

    Interview with Colin Jerolmack

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    Colin Jerolmack is an Assistant Professor at New York University in Sociology and Environmental Studies. He is the author of The Global Pigeon (forthcoming) and an alumnus of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Scholars in Health Policy Program at Harvard University

    Colin Fraser

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    Photograph - Colin Fraser (third from right) in a loaded scow leaving for Fort Chipewyan from Athabasca, Alberta. A group of men are also standing on the pie

    From Foucauldian Biopower to Energopower and Infopower:An Interview with Dominic Boyer and Colin Koopman

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    Kirsten Hasberg talks to Dominic Boyer, anthropologist and author of Energopolitics: Wind and Power in the Anthroprocene, and to Colin Koopman, philosopher and author of How We Became our Data: A Genealogy of the Informational Person. Their books published in mid-2019 put forward novel conceptualizations of Foucauldian biopower, which they term infopower and energopower, respectively. Criss-crossing between philosophical conceptualizations and concrete problems like the struggles of renewable energy communities (Boyer) and the influence of economic thinking on datafication (Koopman), the conversations show how Foucauldian concepts are relevant to today's power struggles inherent to the energy transition and the digital transformation.Kirsten Hasberg talks to Dominic Boyer, anthropologist and author of Energopolitics: Wind and Power in the Anthroprocene, and to Colin Koopman, philosopher and author of How We Became our Data: A Genealogy of the Informational Person. Their books published in mid-2019 put forward novel conceptualizations of Foucauldian biopower, which they term infopower and energopower, respectively. Criss-crossing between philosophical conceptualizations and concrete problems like the struggles of renewable energy communities (Boyer) and the influence of economic thinking on datafication (Koopman), the conversations show how Foucauldian concepts are relevant to today's power struggles inherent to the energy transition and the digital transformation
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