1,802,968 research outputs found

    tania-k/Friedmanniomyces_Analysis:

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    Friedmanniomyces spa. analysis completed by Tania Kurbessoian

    Tania Sarmento

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    Tania Sarmento, an exchange student from Brazil

    Tania Sarmento

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    Tania Sarmento, an exchange student from Brazil

    Tania Miah

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    Improving Mental Health for Inmates at the Erie County Holding Center Tania Miah, Social WorkFaculty Mentor: Professor Tonya Myles-Day, Social Work Tania is a senior majoring in Social Work who is graduating in the spring of 2021. She has a passion for advocating for social justice issues, including those experienced among the prison population. After graduation, she plans to pursue a master’s degree in Social Work at the University at Buffalo and aspires to a career working with children. During her fellowship, Tania created a survey that was administered to the staff at the Erie County Holding Center. Based on her survey results, news articles, and an official report by the prison, she proposed new ideas to help reduce the deaths at the Erie County Holding Center. Tania proposed effective communication strategies within the different departments, as well as implementing more training focused around trauma-informed care and a new screening tool for inmates as they undergo processing procedures.https://digitalcommons.buffalostate.edu/srcc-sp21-usrfp/1010/thumbnail.jp

    Tania Murray Li (Interview)

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    This is the submitted interview transcript from Tania Murray Li’s chapter in the book Critical Dialogues: Thinking Together in Turbulent Times. Details of the definitive published version and how to purchase it are available online at: https://policy.bristoluniversitypress.co.uk/criticaldialogues. The audio recording of the interview can be found on SoundCloud: https://soundcloud.com/bristol-university-press/critical-dialogues-tania-li?in=bristol-university-press/sets/critical-dialoguesOriginal conversation between John Clarke and Tania Li, about the dynamics of thinking critically in the social sciences

    Ep. #037 - Everyday Ogres (feat. Tania Mouraud & Allison Myers)

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    This recording and transcript form part of a collection of podcasts conducted by the Cultures of Energy at Rice University. Cultures of Energy brings writers, artists and scholars together to talk, think and feel their way into the Anthropocene. We cover serious issues like climate change, species extinction and energy transition. But we also try to confront seemingly huge and insurmountable problems with insight, creativity and laughter.We talk art and artistic superpowers on this week’s Cultures of Energy podcast. Our special guests (9:59) are the celebrated conceptual and multimedia artist Tania Mouraud (http://taniamouraud.com) and Allison Myers, the curator of Tania’s new exhibition, Everyday Ogres. The exhibition is composed of three videos, Once Upon a Time, Face to Face and Fata Morgana, which bring to life the immensity and intensity of industrial sites around the world. Fata Morgana, for example, was filmed at an oil refinery in Pasadena, TX, and captures the “invisible death” it sets into motion. We hear the stories behind the making of the videos and Tania explains why she seeks not a documentary process with her work but rather to forge an emotional and sensory connection through our bodies. We go on to cover Tania’s coming of age as an artist, why she burned all her paintings that one time, and why she loves to change mediums. Tania and Allison reflect on death and the Anthropocene as muses and we turn toward how the arts engage our environmental situation today. Tania explains why her view of ecology is not reductive; it is about finding new ways of being a citizen in the world. Everyday Ogres will be shown at the University of Texas-Austin Visual Arts Center until December 10th, http://utvac.org/exhibitions/tania-mouraud-everyday-ogres . Please check it out

    Tania Girard-Savoie

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    Mapping the stars: Tania Kovats in conversation

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    Tania Kovats completed a year long Residency at North West Cambridge Development where she worked with Professor Gerry Gilmore at the Institute of Astronomy. She has been profoundly inspired by the Institute's role in the remarkable space observatory Gaia, which will map the Milky Way in unprecedented detail, and she has produced a spectacular sculpture in response to this entitled One Billion Objects in Space. In this talk Professor Gilmore and Tania Kovats looked back over the residency year and discussed the history of mapping the stars as well as the cultural implications of Gaia

    Poemas inéditos de Emily Dickinson. (Trad. de Tania Ganitsky)

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    Poemas inéditos de Emily Dickinson. (Trad. de Tania Ganitsky

    Poemas inéditos de Emily Dickinson. (Trad. de Tania Ganitsky)

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    Poemas inéditos de Emily Dickinson. (Trad. de Tania Ganitsky
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