1,407 research outputs found
Reading Stuart Elden’s The Birth of Territory
The Birth of Territory is an outstanding scholarly achievement, a book ‘of remarkable depth and breadth’, as noted by Alec Murphy in his comment, a book that already promises to become a ‘classic’ in geography, together with very few others published in the past decades. But Elden's book is also a difficult one to position within mainstream human geography. Its genealogical engagement with multiple sources/texts in various historical and linguistic contexts is far reaching, and it has very few precedents in the discipline—since it is deliberately inspired by the Cambridge school of contextual history, and the German tradition of Begriffsgeschichte, conceptual history. The Birth of Territory is also methodologically challenging, as its account of territory is carved out of a clear selection of ‘presences and absences’ operated by the author that, like all work of this kind, is open to criticism in relation to the strategies of inclusion/exclusion (of texts, concepts, people) adopted. What follows is a brief account of an Author meets Critics panel on The Birth of Territory held at the AAG Conference held in Tampa in April 2014
Emerging Trends and Technologies in the Information Ecosystem, April 8, 2022
Presentation: "The Importance of Supporting POC Gamers and Data Visualizations"April’s Emerging Trends presentations provided tips on using technology for the creation and delivery of information and featured Bryan Briones & Patrice Williams' Emerging Tech Shop: Importance of Supporting POC Gamers & Data Visualization. In their joint talk, Patrice and Bryan covered the basic vocabulary of Esports, data visualizations and academic libraries, introduced information about Spelman College’s Innovation Lab, and answered questions relating to the libraries role in the gaming community
Just Mercy by Bryan Stevenson: W&L Law Faculty Panel
On March 27, 2019, the W&L Law Library hosted a panel discussion of Just Mercy, the bestselling true story of a lawyer exonerating the wrongly convicted and representing society’s most vulnerable through the perils of our justice system.
The event continued an annual tradition of faculty panel discussions on popular works of fiction and non-fiction with a connection to the law, featuring perspectives from W&L Law professors David Bruck, Nora Demleitner, Brandon Hasbrouck, and Jon Shapiro. Professor J.D. King moderated the discussion, and librarian Andrew Christensen provided introductory remarks.
Author Bryan Stevenson will speak at the W&L Law commencement ceremony on May 10, 2019.
Please note that, at the speaker\u27s request, Prof. Hasbrouck\u27s audio has been suppressed in this video (46:30 through 58:43)
Can We Still Believe the Bible? : and Does it Really Matter?
Celebrated author Bryan Ball answers the hard questions in an easy-to-read, easy-to-understand book that was inspired from teaching a teen Bible class. A compact and compelling presentation of the amazing Bible, that is hard to put down
Linear electron beam assisted roll-to-roll in-vacuum flexographic patterning for flexible thermoelectric generators
In this work, we investigated the use of in-line linear electron beam irradiation (LEB) surface treatment integrated into a commercially compatible roll-to-roll (R2R) processing line, as a single fluorocarbon cleaning step, following flexography oil masking used to pattern layers for devices. Thermoelectric generators (TEGs) were selected as the flexible electronic device demonstrator; a green renewable energy harvester ideal for powering wearable technologies. BiTe/BiSbTe-based flexible TEGs (f-TEGs) were fabricated using in-line oil patterned aluminium electrodes, followed by a 600 W LEB cleaning step, in which the duration was optimised. A BiTe/BiSbTe f-TEG using an oil-patterned electrode and a 15 min LEB clean (to remove oil prior to BiTe/BiSbTe deposition) showed similar Seebeck and output power (S ~ 0.19 mV K−1 and p = 0.02 nW at ΔT = 20 K) compared to that of an oil-free reference f-TEG, demonstrating the success of using the LEB as a cleaning step to prevent any remaining oil interfering with the subsequent active material deposition. Device lifetimes were investigated, with electrode/thermoelectric interface degradation attributed to an aluminium/fluorine reaction, originating from the fluorine-rich masking oil. A BiTe/GeTe f-TEG using an oil-patterned/LEB clean, exceeded the lifetime of the comparable BiTe/BiSbTe f-TEG, highlighting the importance of deposited material reactivities with the additives from the masking oil, in this case fluorine. This work therefore demonstrates (i) full device architectures within a R2R system using vacuum flexography oil patterned electrodes; (ii) an enabling Electron beam cleansing step for removal of oil remnants; and (iii) that careful selection of masking oils is needed for the materials used when flexographic patterning during R2R
Contributions to the Science of Environmental Impact Assessment: Three Papers on the Arctic Cisco (Coregonus autumnalis) of Northern Alaska
Editor's Introduction -- D. W. Norton; An Assessment of the Colville River Delta Stock of Arctic Cisco--Migrants from Canada? -- B. J. Gallaway, W. B. Griffiths, P. C. Craig, W. J. Gazey, and J. W. Helmericks; Temperature Preference of Juvenile Arctic Cisco (Coregonus autumnalis) From the Alaskan Beaufort Sea -- R. G. Fechhelm, W. H. Neill, and B. J. Gallaway; Modeling Movements and Distribution of Arctic Cisco (Coregonus autumnalis) Relative to Temperature-Salinity Regimes of the Beaufort Sea Near the Waterflood Causeway, Prudhoe Bay, Alaska. -- W. H. Neill, R. G. Fechhelm, B. J. Gallaway, J. D. Bryan, and S. W. Anderson; Notice to Author
Risk Assessment in Economic Feasibility Analysis: The Case of Ethanol Production in Texas
The objective of this study is to demonstrate the benefits of quantifying the economic viability of a proposed agribusiness under risk relative to a feasibility study which ignores risk. To achieve this objective, the economic viability of a 50 MMGPY ethanol facility in Texas is analyzed over a 10-year period in two ways: with no risk and with historical risk for prices and costs.Risk and Uncertainty,
[Plaque on Building]
Photograph of a plaque bolted to the red brick wall of a building in Centerville, Texas. It reads: "County of Leon, Texas. Courthouse Office Annex 1973. County Officials: W. A. Plunkett, County Judge; Julian Wakefield, Commissioner, Precinct No. 1; Memory Morgan, Commissioner, Precinct No. 2; Jodie Vann, Commissioner, Precinct No. 3; Curtis Easterling, Commissioner, Precinct No. 4; Roy Carrigan, County Clerk. Architects: Robert W. Caldwell and Associates, Planning Consultants; Russel L. Stogsdill, Architect Associate, Bryan, Texas. Contractor: Thurmond & Stuart, Bryan, Texas. Financial Assistance provided by Economic Development Administration"
The Layburnes and their world, circa 1620-1720: the English Catholic community and the House of Stuart
This thesis concerns Catholics in north-western England in the late
seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries, in particular the Layburne family
of Cunswick, Cumbria. It examines their role in local society and at the courts
of the Stuart queens in London and St Germains. It traces their growing
commitment to the Jacobite cause and their hopes of thereby regaining
positions of influence at court and in the country.
The north-western Tory gentry's sympathy with their Catholic counterparts is
contrasted with the treatment given to the Quakers in the same area. The latter
were regarded as a danger to the fabric of society, representing an economic
and political threat to the government. As an example of how integrated the
Catholics were, the services in Kendal parish church were more Papist than
non-conformist, even under the Protectorate. At the Restoration the Catholics
continued to contribute to the upkeep of the church and were well-regarded in
the area.
The Layburnes occupied positions during the reign of James II, both in the
north-west and at court. Bishop John Laybume acted as James II's Catholic
bishop, and had also been involved in the Secret Treaty of Dover in 1670,
under Charles II. during James II's reign bishop Layburne had organised the
funding of Catholic chapels, clergy and education. This activity was
discovered and used in the prosecution of Catholic gentry in the trials
following the Lancashire Plot (1694). On acquittal, the Jacobites vigorously
renewed their plotting in Lancashire. Planning for a Jacobite invasion reached
its culmination in the 1715 Rising, only to end with the siege of Preston.
Despite some executions and the forfeiture of estates, many Catholic Jacobite
families survived the 1715 rising. Few rose in 1745 and many Catholic
families, with the exception of the Layburnes, prospered and continue to this
day
Physical Vapor Deposited Biomedical Coatings
The book outlines a series of developments made in the manufacturing of bio-functional layers via Physical Vapour-Deposited (PVD) technologies for application in various areas of healthcare. The scrutinized PVD methods include Radio-Frequency Magnetron Sputtering (RF-MS), Cathodic Arc Evaporation, Pulsed Electron Deposition and its variants, Pulsed Laser Deposition, and Matrix-Assisted Pulsed Laser Evaporation (MAPLE) due to their great promise, especially in dentistry and orthopaedics. These methods have yet to gain traction for industrialization and large-scale application in biomedicine. A new generation of implant coatings can be made available by the (1) incorporation of organic moieties (e.g., proteins, peptides, enzymes) into thin films using innovative methods such as combinatorial MAPLE, (2) direct coupling of therapeutic agents with bioactive glasses or ceramics within substituted or composite layers via RF-MS, or (3) innovation in high-energy deposition methods, such as arc evaporation or pulsed electron beam methods
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