4,960 research outputs found
Robertson, Stuart Wilkinson, NX34400
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/413746Surname: ROBERTSON. Given Name(s) or Initials: STUART WILKINSON. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: NX34400. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 23012.232456
Item: [2016.0049.46007] "Robertson, Stuart Wilkinson, NX34400
The characterisation of the high throughput imaging Echelle spectrograph and investigations of hydrogen Balmer β emission over Svalbard
EThOS - Electronic Theses Online ServiceGBUnited Kingdo
Dan Robertson Discusses his Deming Journey
In this episode of the Deming Podcast, Tripp Babbitt interviews Dan Robertson, Deming Institute Advisory Board member and Co-author of Deming\u27s Profound Changes.
Dan discusses his Deming journey at Hewlett Packard and his experience writing Deming\u27s Profound Changes with co-author Kenneth Delavigne, as a tribute to Dr. Perry Gluckman.https://digitalcommons.butler.edu/deming_podcast/1003/thumbnail.jp
Melanie Christina (Doyle) Robertson
chosen dau of Stuart Robertson + Grace (John) Doyle ; former St.F.X. staff (Sodexo Canada Ltd.
John Stuart Mill’s projected science of society: 1827-1848
The purpose of the thesis is to examine John Stuart Mill’s political thought from
about 1827 to 1848 as an exercise in intellectual history. It focuses, first, on Mill’s view,
formulated by the late 1830s, that contemporary society was ‘civilized’, and second, on
his project of a science of society, which he aspired to develop in the late 1830s and
early 1840s.
By the late 1830s, Mill came to the view that his contemporary society was a
‘commercial society or civilization’, dominated by the middle, commercial class. The
first part of my thesis, constituted by Chapters 2-4, discusses the way in which Mill
formed his notion of civilization, and what he meant by the term ‘civilization’. Mill paid
attention to the implications of the rise of the middle class, and regarded such
phenomena of contemporary society as the corruption of the commercial spirit and
excessive social conformity as an inevitable consequence of the rise of the middle class.
The second part of the thesis, constituted by Chapters 5-9, examines Mill’s
projected science of society. In the late 1830s and early 1840s, Mill attempted to
develop a new science of society whose subject-matter was the nature and prospects of
commercial, civilized society. This aspiration culminated in A System of Logic,
published in 1843. In examining Mill’s projected science, I pay particular attention to
the fact that he conceived new sciences of history and of the formation of character,
both of which were indispensable in his project, although he failed to give a complete
account of these sciences. My thesis shows that the implications of his interest both in
history and in the formation of character are more significant than Mill scholars have
assumed
Geoffrey Robertson on the History of Human Rights
Queen\u27s Counsel, broadcaster and author Geoffrey Robertson has achieved international fame by defending high-profile cases, often representing victims of alleged human rights abuses. Here, at an event organised by Amnesty Australia, he gives a short history of human rights, from the Magna Carta to the present
The life and memoirs of Miss Robertson, of Blackhearth,
With autograph of C. Sharpe, for whose benefit as well as her own, Miss Robertson wrote the book.Mode of access: Internet
Partisan Bias Scores for Web Domains
Partisan Audience Bias Scores
These scores were derived from the sharing patterns of web domains by ~500K known Democrats and Republicans on Twitter. The scores scale from -1 (shared only by Democrats) to 1 (shared only by Republicans), and we excluded domains shared by less than 50 unique accounts. For more details on the scores, you can download the full paper here.
We provide our scores below for research purposes only. All scores have been rounded to four digits past the decimal, and to prevent the potential for reidentification, we do not provide the number of tweets or unique accounts that shared a domain, only the domain and the rounded score. In addition, we also provide the partisan bias scores from several other projects that we used to validate our scores.
If you use our scores, please cite our work:
Robertson, R. E., Jiang, S., Joseph, K., Friedland, L., Lazer, D., & Wilson, C. (2018). Auditing partisan audience bias within Google Search. In Proceedings of the ACM: Human-Computer Interaction, 1(2), Article 148. DOI: 10.1145/3274417
BibTeX citation:
@article{robertson2018auditing,
title={Auditing Partisan Audience Bias within Google Search},
author={Robertson, Ronald E and Jiang, Shan and Joseph, Kenneth and Friedland, Lisa and Lazer, David and Wilson, Christo},
journal={Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction},
volume={2},
number={CSCW},
pages={148},
year={2018},
publisher={ACM}
}
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Submission to the Inquiry on NDIS Workforce
This submission is directed towards the terms of inquiry, specifically (b.) and (c.) The submission will address rural challenges, training needs, remuneration, working conditions and working environment. This submission draws on the findings of a research project conducted in 2019 at the University of New England, Faculty of Medicine and Health. This research was part of an Honours Thesis titled "Changing nature of the disability workforce under the NDIS in rural areas: Impacts for disability support workers" by Melissa van Leeuwen in conjunction with the supervisor team of Dr Stuart Robertson and Dr Erica Russ
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