553 research outputs found
Lacrimal Gland and Orbital Lesions in LatY136F Knock-in Mice, a Model for Human IgG4-Related Ophthalmic Disease
博士論文 要旨Abstract/本文Full 以下に掲載:Current Eye Reserch 47(10) pp.1405-1412 2022. Taylor & Francis. 共著者:Shoko Hamaoka, Masayuki Takahira, Mitsuhiro Kawano, Kazunori Yamada, Kiyoaki Ito, Tetsuhiko Okuda, Sachiyo Hatakeyama, Marie Malissen, Bernard Malissen, Kazuhisa Sugiyam
Lacrimal Gland and Orbital Lesions in LatY136F Knock-in Mice, a Model for Human IgG4-Related Ophthalmic Disease
金沢大学博士(医学)博士論文 要旨Abstract/本文Full 以下に掲載:Current Eye Reserch 47(10) pp.1405-1412 2022. Taylor & Francis. 共著者:Shoko Hamaoka, Masayuki Takahira, Mitsuhiro Kawano, Kazunori Yamada, Kiyoaki Ito, Tetsuhiko Okuda, Sachiyo Hatakeyama, Marie Malissen, Bernard Malissen, Kazuhisa Sugiyamadoctoral thesi
Education for All as a Global Regime of Educational Governance:Issues and Tensions
The chapter traces the genealogy of the Education for All (EFA) Movement understood as a global regime of educational governance between 1990 and 2005. The chapter sets out the achievements of EFA including some success in uniting diverse interests around a common set of goals. It will also discuss the key tensions related to the Northern and Western-led nature of EFA; tensions between the multilateral agencies over the leadership of EFA and the issues associated with the hegemonic status assumed by the World Bank; the tension between a wider EFA agenda and a narrower focus on a few quantifiable targets; and the associated tensions between more economistic and rights-based views ofEFA. It will be argued that the development of these tensions can be understood in relation to different kinds of power linked to the international political economy and to the impact of other global regimes
Anti-apoptotic Effects of PCP4/PEP19 in Human Breast Cancer Cell Lines: A Novel Oncotarget
博士論文全文, 博士論文要旨Taiji Hamada, Masakazu Souda, Takuya Yoshimura, Shoko Sasaguri, Kazuhito Hatanaka, Takashi Tasaki, Takako Yoshioka, Yasuyo Ohi, Sohsuke Yamada, Masato Tsutsui, Yoshihisa Umekita and Akihide Tanimoto
Anti-apoptotic Effects of PCP4/PEP19 in Human Breast Cancer Cell Lines: A Novel Oncotarget
Oncotarget. 2014; 5(15):6076-6086.
https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.216
External and Internal Influences on the Vocationalizing Policies of Secondary Education in Colonial and Present-day Ghana
This paper will examine how far external and internal factors have influenced secondary education policies from colonial period. Especially, it will compare vocationalization policies (shifting curricular focus from academic to employable skill preparation) in the colonial period (the 1920s-30s) and the present against the social, political, and economic backgrounds of the different time periods. Ghana's secondary education, from its inception in the colonial period, has been driven by strong external forces, such as the British colonial administration or international organizations such as the World Bank and the United Nations oganizations. However, policies brought in from outside have been transformed through the process of appropriating them into local context. The author points out that, in Ghana, the strongest internal factor which affected the policy appropriation process has been the common belief that formal education is for white-collar employment. Throughout its history, Ghanaian formal education functioned as credential system for employment. The level of completed education, not the content of education, has determined the type of jobs people could attain. Because of its job market structure and public aspiration, there has always been demand for higher and more academic education than for vocational training. By investigating the gap between public aspiration for education and governmental drive for vocationalization, the author argues that although external forces often dominate the initial policymaking stage, in the process of implementation, public demands work to bend the original intention of the policy. This historical analysis provides a perspective to understand the causes of recurring failure of vocationalization policies of secondary education in Ghana and suggests an alternative policy-making process
ヒト乳癌細胞におけるPCP4/PEP19の抗アポトーシス作用 : 新規の癌標的分子
鹿児島大学博士(医学)Doctor of Philosophy in Medical Science博士論文全文, 博士論文要旨Taiji Hamada, Masakazu Souda, Takuya Yoshimura, Shoko Sasaguri, Kazuhito Hatanaka, Takashi Tasaki, Takako Yoshioka, Yasuyo Ohi, Sohsuke Yamada, Masato Tsutsui, Yoshihisa Umekita and Akihide Tanimoto
Anti-apoptotic Effects of PCP4/PEP19 in Human Breast Cancer Cell Lines: A Novel Oncotarget
Oncotarget. 2014; 5(15):6076-6086.
https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.2161doctoral thesi
Two Types of Landlords Drawn in Elizabeth Gaskell's "The Doom of the Griffiths" (Special Issue Dedicated to Professor NAKAMURA, Shoko)
The short story, “The Doom of the Griffiths” was written by Elizabeth Gaskell in 1857, more than one year after her former fictional creation, “The Poor Clare”. The story presents a conflict between two types of landlords ; a landlord who may prosper and one who may not. This is the author's first treatment of an issue that becomes a major theme in her later works. “The Doom of the Griffiths” is a tale about the fall of the Griffiths family, people of the landlord class. At the beginning of the story is an explanation of why the Griffiths were doomed to fall. When Owen Glendower, a Welsh hero in the Middle Ages, rebelled against Henry IV, an ancestor of the Griffiths named Rhys ap Gryfydd betrayed Owen, who believed in him. It means that Rhys ap Gryfydd was shrewd, and that he tried to side with those most likely to be victorious. In great anger, Owen, who was said to be able to use magic, cursed the traitor and his descendants. As a result, members of the Griffiths family were doomed by Owen to fail and disappear after nine generations. Owen prophesied that at that time a son should slay his father, the ninth Griffiths. After this brief explanation the main plot begins. Two generations are described ; the ninth named Robert Griffiths and his son, Owen Griffiths. They are father and son, but are quite different in manners. Robert is the second son and inherits the estate of the Griffiths as a result of his elder brother's death. He is gifted and able to create his own future. On the other hand, Owen is the only son who is an heir to the estate from the moment of his birth. He has no choice but to succeed his father. Therefore, he is passive and does not try to take a step forward, even though he becomes under the necessity of earning a living. Their attitudes toward marriage also differ. The father gets married to a rich attorney’s daughter after he inherited his family's estate. And after his first wife, who is Owen's mother, died, he marrys again a beautiful young widow with a little boy named Robert, who, coincidentally, has his stepfather's name. The son, on the other hand, secretly gets married to the beautiful daughter of a man who works as a half farmer and half fisherman. The girl's name is Nest. They have a baby named Owen. Because the young couple cannot make a living, the wife and their baby live with her father in his cottage. Owen frequently and surreptitiously comes to the house from his father's manor house. The wife's father, who is a tenant of the Griffiths estate, endures this irregular situation, believing that his daughter will be Lady Griffiths in the future. Robert's new wife schemes to drive Owen out of the mansion and make her child Robert inherit the family's estate. As a result of her scheming, her husband becomes estranged from his son and begins to favor his stepson. One day she tries to irreparably break the relationship between Robert and his biological son to make sure of her biological son’s inheritance, and she exposes Owen's secret marriage to her husband, lying and insinuating that Nest is a prostitute. The angry father goes to his son’s secret home to require him to separate from his wife, and snatches the little Owen from Owen's arms to throw the baby back at Nest. As a result, the baby falls to the floor and dies. At last, Owen decides to leave his father's mansion for ever to live with his wife in a big city, earning his bread. It is, however, too late. After some troubles, the father moves into action. He and his son are placed in a situation in which they struggle on the edge of a precipice. A push of the son to escape from the father's grip causes the father to fall off the cliff, to hit his head against the edge of a boat, and to die. Though it seems that this is a fulfillment of the prophecy, the author denies the supernatural element, emphasizing that the father's death is accidental. As a squire, Robert, a person who is shrewd and selfish like his ancestor Rhys ap Gryfydd, prospers, but he is also very cruel, while Owen, a passive liberal, is disqualified as a landlord. Through the story, the author is critical of the father. The last of the story deals with Owen, his wife, and her father, who should leave the country before the dead body of the squire is found. They venture out on a stormy sea to disappear into the night. The author partly suggests that the three are shipwrecked and die. She, however, leaves room for another interpretation. The three might safely arrive in Liverpool, where Owen could “gain a livelihood by his own exertions.” The author accepts Owen's way of living when he leaves the status of a landlord. That is the reason that Owen is the younger of the two central characters. It is important that the name of the second son Roger in Wives and Daughters, who is Robert's successor, has the initial “R”, and that of the elder son Osborne in the same novel, who is Owen's successor, has also the initial “O”. It means that “The Doom of the Griffiths” developed into Wives and Daughters.9KJ00002373446論文Articledepartmental bulletin pape
Asian ways: making sense of international educational cooperation by Asian countries in contrast to “traditional” Western donors
Introduction: emergence of new types of donors in international educational cooperation The emergence of former recipient countries as donors is a significant factor that is transforming the ideas and structure of international educational development. For people who are used to the traditional donor community’s way of doing things, emerging donors look very different from, and sometimes even threatening to, the existing structure. Many traditional donors have commissioned research to grasp t..
The audio database of Hatoma lexicon (Southern Ryukyuan)
This is a database of words and expressions of Hatoma language (Yaeyaman, Southern Ryukyuan). Almost all lexical entries have corresponding audio files, spoken and recorded by the first author.
Follow the readme file in NINJAL repository
"A History of African Higher Education from Antiquity to the Present: A Critical Synthesis" - By Y. G-M. Lulat
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