109 research outputs found
Barbarella: Cravo e Canela
Article on Ernesto Neto's work as part of Ernesto Neto's exhibition catalogue
Religious Conscience, Religious Exemptions and the Establishment Clause
Eric J. Segall graduated from Emory University, Phi Beta Kappa and summa cum laude, and from Vanderbilt Law School, where he was the research editor for the Law Review and member of Order of the Coif. He clerked for the Chief Judge Charles Moye Jr. for the Northern District of Georgia, and Albert J. Henderson of the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals. After his clerkships, Segall worked for Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher and the U.S. Department of Justice, before joining the Georgia State faculty in 1991.
Segall teaches federal courts and constitutional law I and II. He is the author of the book Supreme Myths: Why the Supreme Court is not a Court and its Justices are not Judges. His articles on constitutional law have appeared in, among others, the Stanford Law Review, the UCLA Law Review, the George Washington Law Review, the Washington University Law Review, the University of Pennsylvania Journal of Constitutional Law, the Northwestern University Law Review Colloquy, and Constitutional Commentary.
Segall has served on the executive committee of the AALS section on federal courts, and has given numerous speeches both inside and outside the academy on constitutional law questions and the Supreme Court. He appears regularly on the national XM Radio show StandUp with Pete Dominick talking about the Supreme Court and constitutional law
Computational Dimensionalities of Global Supercomputing
This Invited Paper pertains to subject of my Plenary Keynote Speech at the 17th World Multi-Conference on Systemics, Cybernetics and Informatics (WMSCI 2013) held in Orlando, Florida on July 9-12, 2013. The title of my Plenary Keynote Speech was: "Dimensionalities of Computation: from Global Supercomputing to Data, Text and Web Mining" but this Invited Paper will focus only on the "Computational Dimensionalities of Global Supercomputing" and is based upon a summary of the contents of several individual articles that have been previously written with myself as lead author and published in [75], [76], [77], [78], [79], [80] and [11]. The topics of these of the Plenary Speech included Overview of Current Research in Global Supercomputing [75], Open-Source Software Tools for Data Mining Analysis of Genomic and Spatial Images using High Performance Computing [76], Data Mining Supercomputing with SAS™ JMP® Genomics ([77], [79], [80]), and Visualization by Supercomputing Data Mining [81].
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[11.] Committee on the Future of Supercomputing, National Research Council (2003), The Future of Supercomputing: An Interim Report, ISBN-13: 978-0-309-09016- 2, http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10784.html
[75.] Segall, Richard S.; Zhang, Qingyu and Cook, Jeffrey S.(2013), "Overview of Current Research in Global Supercomputing", Proceedings of Forty- Fourth Meeting of Southwest Decision Sciences Institute (SWDSI), Albuquerque, NM, March 12-16, 2013.
[76.] Segall, Richard S. and Zhang, Qingyu (2010), "Open-Source Software Tools for Data Mining Analysis of Genomic and Spatial Images using High Performance Computing", Proceedings of 5th INFORMS Workshop on Data Mining and Health Informatics, Austin, TX, November 6, 2010.
[77.] Segall, Richard S., Zhang, Qingyu and Pierce, Ryan M.(2010), "Data Mining Supercomputing with SAS™ JMP®; Genomics: Research-in-Progress, Proceedings of 2010 Conference on Applied Research in Information Technology, sponsored by Acxiom Laboratory of Applied Research (ALAR), University of Central Arkansas (UCA), Conway, AR, April 9, 2010.
[78.] Segall, Richard S., Zhang, Qingyu and Pierce, Ryan M.(2009), "Visualization by Supercomputing Data Mining", Proceedings of the 4th INFORMS Workshop on Data Mining and System Informatics, San Diego, CA, October 10, 2009.
[79.] Segall, Richard S., Zhang, Qingyu, and Pierce, Ryan (2010), "Data Mining Supercomputing with SAS™ JMP® Genomics", Proceedings of 14th World Multi-Conference on Systemics, Cybernetics and Informatics: WMSCI 2010, Orlando, FL, June 29-July 2, 2010
[80.] Segall, Richard S., Zhang, Qingyu, and Pierce, Ryan (2010), "Data Mining Supercomputing with SAS™ JMP® Genomics", Journal of Systemics, Cybernetics and Informatics (JSCI), Vol. 9, No. 1, 2011, pp.28-33.
[81.] Segall, RS, Zhang, Q., and Pierce, RM (2009), Visualization by supercomputing data mining, Proceedings of the 4 th INFORMS Workshop on Data Mining and System Informatics, San Diego, CA, October 10, 200
Fotografía y excepcionalidad: Barbara Brändli, Thea Segall y el sur venezolano
The economic exploitation of abundant natural resources in southern
Venezuela helped lend credence to a paradigm of exceptionality that informed much
of the political, academic, and cultural discourse about the country during the second
half of the twentieth century. Within this context, the way in which questions about
indigeneity and rural traditions played out in discussions about modern national
identity diff ered from other countries in Latin America. This paper considers the
participation of photographers Barbara Brändli and Thea Segall in projects centered
in southern Venezuela. Taking into consideration their perspective as foreignborn women and underscoring certain diff erences in their authorial discourse as
photographers, the author examines the publication of their images in printed
materials that, in their advocacy of Venezuela’s ostensibly exceptional modernity,
postulate a peculiar relationship between the country’s present and its premodern
pastLa explotación económica de los extraordinarios recursos naturales
del sur venezolano contribuyó a alimentar el paradigma de excepcionalidad venezolana que permeó buena parte del discurso político, académico y cultural sobre el país
durante la segunda mitad del siglo veinte. Dentro de este contexto, el modo en que en
Venezuela se dio sentido a lo indígena y a lo rural como componentes de la identidad
nacional contrasta con el devenir de otras modernidades latinoamericanas. Este
trabajo examina la participación de las fotógrafas Barbara Brändli y Thea Segall en
proyectos etnográfi cos centrados en el sur venezolano. Considerando su perspectiva
como mujeres extranjeras residenciadas en el país y poniendo de manifi esto algunas
diferencias en su discurso autoral como fotógrafas, el autor examina la publicación de
sus imágenes en materiales impresos que, promoviendo la idea de una modernidad
venezolana excepcional, postulan una relación peculiar entre el presente del país y su
pasado pre-modern
Equality and Non-discrimination in Hiring – Introduction
In this introduction, the author briefly presents the way in which Clayton, Segall and
Lippert-Rasmussen deal with what egalitarianism has to say about non-discrimination in
hiring. Parallels and differences between their approaches are stressed
Book Review, \u3ci\u3eAbortion and the Law in America: Roe v. Wade to the Present\u3c/i\u3e (Cambridge University Press, 2020, pp.326)
Professor Mary Ziegler is the author of three books on abortion. Her latest book, Abortion and the Law in America: Roe v. Wade to the Present, like the first two, makes major contributions to the unfortunately divisive debates about women\u27s right to control their reproductive choices and the concerns of millions of Americans for the fetuses killed when women exercise those rights. Readers will not uncover Ziegler\u27s personal views on abortion when reading this book, which is just one of the many strengths of this wonderful new treatment of a very old topic
Friedmann and Rosenthal Families.
Family documents, genealogical tables, wedding announcements and wedding journal, map of WestprussiaThe following families are mentioned in this collection:Abrahams family; Abrahamson family; Adler family; Bader family; Behr family; Beimel family; Brenner family; Bukofzer family; Caspari family; Conitzer family; Ephraim family; Friedlaender family; Friedman family; Friedmann family; Grosser family; Halevi family; Hasenkaemper family; Hirschfeld family; Huehnerberg family; Hupke family; Kalenscher family; Katz family; Kurtzig family; Lachmann family; Lasker family; Leuenberger family; Lewinski family; Lewy family; Lindenheim family; Lissen family; Lublinski family; Marcuse family; Margolis family; Markus family; Meyer family; Moeller family; Nathan family; Niesner family; Orenstein family; Rachel family; Richter family; Rosenberg family; Rosenthal family; Schlesinger family; Segall family; Selbiger family; Sessler family; Silbermann family; Simons family; Sommer family; Steiner family; Steinert family; Steuermann family; Treumann family; Vandsburger family; Wagner family; Wohlgemuth family; Wolff family; Zeitz familyMrs. Al Zimet, 1990See Inventory listdigitize
Recommended from our members
Book Review, \u3ci\u3eAbortion and the Law in America: Roe v. Wade to the Present\u3c/i\u3e (Cambridge University Press, 2020, pp.326)
Professor Mary Ziegler is the author of three books on abortion. Her latest book, Abortion and the Law in America: Roe v. Wade to the Present, like the first two, makes major contributions to the unfortunately divisive debates about women\u27s right to control their reproductive choices and the concerns of millions of Americans for the fetuses killed when women exercise those rights. Readers will not uncover Ziegler\u27s personal views on abortion when reading this book, which is just one of the many strengths of this wonderful new treatment of a very old topic
What Peace? Grasping the Empirical Realities of Peace(s) in Post-war Mitrovica
Urban peacebuilding has proved particularly challenging in cities contested on grounds of state legitimacy where group identities are salient. Ever since the end of the Kosovo War in 1999, the city of Mitrovica has remained divided and been further polarized by outbreaks of violence, post-war politics, and strained inter-group relations. This single case study describes and conceptualizes the empirical realities of peace in the post-war city by applying the Peace Triangle as an analytical tool for understanding the quality and characteristics of the peace that prevails beyond the cessation of large-scale violence. The author builds on the conceptual model by arguing that a more multifaceted and peace-grounded analysis of peace is necessary. The research paper concludes by suggesting an altered analytical model that may yield a more nuanced understanding of peace(s) by encompassing aspects grounded in peace-conducive activities
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