4,736 research outputs found

    Life and work of academician Vladimir Bayer

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    Akademik Vladimir Bayer, učenik gimnazije u Osijeku, redoviti profesor na katedri Kazneni postupak Pravnog fakulteta Sveučilišta u Zagrebu i redoviti član JAZU-a, od 1986. jedan je od najistaknutijih i najcjenjenijih hrvatskih pravnika. Autor je brojnih zanstvenih i stručih radova iz procesnog i materijalnog kaznenog prava, povijesti kaznenog prava, penologije i pravne nastave. Znatan dio njegova znanstvenog djela ugrađen je u zakonske propise. Zastupa ideje pravnopolitički liberalno usmjerene teorije kaznenog prava i suglasno tome zalaže se za postavljanje preciznih i čvrstih granica represivnih ovlasti državnih tijela. Zajedno s profesorom Bogdanom Zlatarićem utemeljitelj je uglednog Poslijediplomskog studija iz kaznenopravnih znanosti Pravnog fakulteta Sveučilišta u Zagrebu.The academician Vladimir Bayer, who attended secondary-school in Osijek and has been professor at the Chair of Criminal Procedural Law at the Faculty of Law in Zagreb, University of Zagreb has also been a regular member of JAZU since 1986. He is one of the most significant and highly regarded Croatian jurists, the author of a number of scientific, expert papers in the field of procedural and material criminal law, history of criminal law, penology and law teaching. His scientific work makes a considerable integral part of legal regulations. He stands for the criminal law theory of legal-political liberal orientation and accordingly for setting precise and firm boundaries to repressive powers of the authorities. He established together with professor Bogdan Zlatarić the renowned postgraduate studies in criminal law science at the Faculty of Law in Zagreb

    Names of Vladimir the Great in Liturgical Texts and the Perception of his Sainthood in the 14th and 17th Centuries

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    The article examines attributive and agentive names of the grand prince of Kiev, Vladimir Svyatoslavich as they appear in liturgical texts of the 14th and 17th centuries, that either circulated independently or were employed at church services especially dedicated to the saint. Presuming that the first laudatory songs glorifying Vladimir date back to the 12th century, the author observes the steady increase of the number of such attributive and agentive names in liturgical texts and marks the period from the 14th through the 17th centuries as a peak of textual activity surrounding Vladimir. As the tables included in the article indicate, the increase in number was accompanied by the corresponding increase in semantic and imagery complexity. The names, employed in broader contextual meanings, became associated with various semantic fields and, above all, began to express abstract ideas related to the ideal vision of the personality of the saint and its historical, metaphysical, and spiritual dimensions

    Ivan IV and Vladimir Staritsky: Political Struggle or Competition in Piety?

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    Introduction. The author researched and prepared for publication four acts of 1547–1566 issued by Ivan IV and the appanage prince Vladimir Andreevich on the villages of the Trinity-Sergius Monastery in Vereysky and Dmitrov counties. The diplomas are studied in the context of the corpus of act and narrative sources, containing the plot of the relationship of the appanage prince with his suzerain. Methods and materials. The task of this article is to clarify the real participation of Prince Vladimir in the political and administrative life of the country for three years from 1566 to 1569 and is solved by a comprehensive analysis of narrative texts and the act material in which the real prerogatives of the appanage prince are documented. Analysis. An indicator of Vladimir Staritsky’s administrative and political activity is the intensity and nature of the charters issued and preserved by him, and their correlation with the acts of Ivan IV, to which the key part of the article is devoted. Results. It has been established that in addition to the acts drawn up in the office of the appanage prince relatively independently, acts have been preserved in the compilation of which protographs were used. When creating the acts in 1566, the offices of the tsar and the appanage prince used the letters of 1547 and 1548, the form of which was reproduced without significant changes. It is hypothesized that the acts of Prince Vladimir Andreevich and Ivan IV indicate a kind of competition in piety between the autocratic monarch and the prince of the blood

    Efroimson, Vladimir Pavlovich

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    EFROIMSON, VLADIMIR PAVLOVICH ( 1908-1989). Geneticist, seminal figure in the development of population and medical genetics, author of works on sociobiology and the genetics of human ethical and aesthetic behavior

    Russian Revolution, Vladimir Lenin

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    An image scanned from a black and white photograph of Vladimir Lenin walking down the street and a woman behind him. Within a series of photographs saved by author Arnold Rubenstein of Trotsky and Lenin.https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/spec_photos/3507/thumbnail.jp

    Vladimir Burtsev and the Russian revolutionary emigration: surveillance of foreign political refugees in London, 1891-1905.

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    PhDThe thesis describes the early life in emigration of the Russian revolutionary, historian and radical journalist Vladimir L'vovich Burtsev (17/29 November 1862 - 21 August 1942). Particular emphasis is placed on the nature and extent of the police surveillance of Burtsev and the émigré community in Europe during the period. The relationship between the Criminal Investigation Department of London's Metropolitan Police and their Russian counterparts in Europe - the Zagranichnaia agentura, ('Foreign Agency') - is examined in detail. Burtsev's biography has great contemporary relevance, unfolding, as it does, in an atmosphere of increasing anxiety in Britain (both governmental and non-official) about growing numbers of foreign anarchists, terrorists, and `aliens' in general (which would lead, in due course, to the passing of the 1905 Aliens Act) and the increasingly interventionist police methods of the era. The thesis describes Burtsev's relationship with the émigré community and its British supporters, examines his (at times extreme) political views and reviews the radical journalism which led to his trial and imprisonment in 1898. This, the `Burtsev affair', signalled a major shift in British government policy towards political refugees on the one hand and to international counter-terrorist co-operation on the other and it is one of the aims of this thesis to detail the reasons for these changes

    'Christian Faith' by Prince Vladimir the Great: Fluctuations of abstract lexemes

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    According to Russian chronicles, Prince Vladimir the Great, being baptized in Chersones in 986, pronounced in Slavonic two confessions of faith – the well-known Credo Niceo-Constantinopolitanum and the second confession, which has been unknown until the recent time and highly enigmatic. It is obvious that the second “faith” was translated from Greek, but the Byzantine text was found only in the middle of the 19th century. Prince Vladimir professed the sc. li,belloj (Lat. deminutivum libellus – knizhitsa (книжица 'little book')) written (about 835) by Michael the Synkellos, the prominent 'great confessor', (o` me,gaj o`mologhth,j). The Slavonic translation is very interesting as a linguistic source and, nevertheless, rather neglected by specialists. The Slavonic versions of Michael's “Libellus” represent five separate translations undertaken in different historical periods (in the span of six centuries) and at different territories – both South- and East-Slavic. Common for all five versions is the great variability of abstract lexemes. The linguistic nature of intensive variability cannot be reduced to the known mechanisms. So, the author of the investigation has introduced a new terminus technicus (fluctuation) to designate the observed phenomenon of theological termination (=creation and competition of termini as a part of language-building activity). A long comparative list of lexical variants (being items in the process of mentioned fluctuation) has been added to the theoretical argumentation

    Fast and Accurate Semi-Supervised Protein Homology Detection with Large Uncurated Sequence Databases

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    Establishing structural and functional relationship between sequences in the presence of only the primary sequence information is a key task in biological sequence analysis. This ability is critical for tasks such as inferring the superfamily membership of unannotated proteins (remote homology detection) when no secondary or tertiary structure is available. Recent methods such as profile kernels and mismatch neighborhood kernels have shown promising results by leveraging unlabeled data and explicit modeling mutations using mutational neighborhood. However, the size of such neighborhood exhibit exponential dependency on the cardinality of the alphabet set which incurs expensive cost for kernel evaluation and hence hinders the use of such powerful tools. Moreover, another missing component in previous studies for large-scale semi-supervised protein homology detection is a systematic and biologically motivated approach for leveraging the unlabeled data set. In this study, we propose a systematic and biologically motivated approach for extracting relevant information from unlabeled sequence databases. We also propose a method to remove the bias caused by overly represented sequences which are commonly seen in the unlabeled sequence databases. Combining these approaches with a class of kernels (sparse spatial sampling kernels, SSSK) that effectively model mutation, insertion, and deletion, we achieve fast and accurate semisupervised protein homology detection on three large unlabeled databases. The resulting classifiers based on our proposed methods significantly outperform previously published state-of-the-art methods in performance accuracy and exhibit order-of-magnitude differences in experimental running time.Technical report DCS-TR-63

    Russian Revolution, Vladimir Lenin

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    An image scanned from a black and white photograph of Vladimir Lenin dressed in a heavy coat standing on the street while several others pass by. The handwritten date on the back of the photograph is 1918. Within a series of photographs saved by author Arnold Rubenstein of Trotsky and Lenin.https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/spec_photos/3506/thumbnail.jp
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