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Journal articles on the topic "969 movement"

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Pérez-Castilla, Alejandro, Daniel Jerez-Mayorga, Dario Martínez-García, Ángela Rodríguez-Perea, Luis J. Chirosa-Ríos, and Amador García-Ramos. "Influence of Grip Width and Anthropometric Characteristics on the Bench-Press Load–Velocity Relationship." International Journal of Sports Physiology and Performance 15, no. 7 (2020): 949–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1123/ijspp.2019-0549.

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Purpose: To compare the load–velocity (L-V) relationship between bench-press exercises performed using 4 different grip widths, to determine the association between the anthropometric characteristics and L-V profile, and to explore whether a multiple linear-regression model with movement velocity and subjects’ anthropometric characteristics as predictor variables could increase the goodness of fit of the individualized L-V relationship. Methods: The individual L-V relationship of 20 men was evaluated by means of an incremental loading test during the bench-press exercise performed on a Smith machine using narrow, medium, wide, and self-selected grip widths. Simple and multiple linear-regression models were performed. Results: The mean velocity associated with each relative load did not differ among the 4 grip widths (P ≥ .130). Only body height and total arm length were correlated with the mean velocity associated with light and medium loads (r ≥ .464). A slightly higher variance of the velocity attained at each relative load was explained when some anthropometric characteristics were used as predictor variables along with the movement velocity (r2 = .969 [.965–.973]) in comparison with the movement velocity alone (r2 = .966 [.955–.968]). However, the amount of variance explained by the individual L-V relationships was always higher than with the multiple linear-regression models (r2 = .995 [.985–1.000]). Conclusions: These results indicate that the individual determination of the L-V relationship using a self-selected grip width could be recommended to monitor relative loads in the Smith machine bench-press exercise.
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Zhang, Xiangping, and Xiuqi Fang. "Temporal and spatial variation of catastrophic river floodings in the Lower Yellow River from AD 960 to 1938." Holocene 27, no. 9 (2017): 1359–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0959683617690590.

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This study is intended to investigate the patterns for the temporal and spatial changes of catastrophic river floodings which took place in the Lower Yellow River, based on the available records collected from historical documents, and rearranged in a GIS database. A series of catastrophic river floodings from AD 960 to 1938 was reconstructed, and their temporal and spatial variations were analyzed, which leads to the conclusions, among others. (1) The increasing trend of frequency of catastrophic river floodings in the Lower Yellow River is not so significant in the past 1000 years. (2) Most dike breachings and overtoppings occurred near the apex of the Yellow River Alluvial Fan, and the number of dike breaching and overtopping was gradually reduced as the elevation decreased. (3) Under different spatio-temporal backgrounds, dike breaching and overtopping developed either downstream or upstream, which is evidenced by both the downstream movement for large temporal and spatial scales in dike breaching and overtopping places in AD 1128–1344 and 1391–1447 and the upstream movement for small temporal and spatial scales in AD 960–969, 1730–1761, and 1807–1819.
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Leszka, Mirosław J. "Rola cara Piotra (927-969) w życiu bułgarskiego Kościoła. Kilka uwag." Vox Patrum 66 (December 1, 2018): 429–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.31743/vp.3468.

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Tsar Peter was a ruler who was active in the sphere of church policy, and is pictured to have been a deep believer himself. He is credited with the fact of granting the title of patriarch to the Bulgarian archbishop, which most probably occurred under the framework of the agreement of 927 (?933/934). The act sym­bolically completed the process of acquiring full maturity and independence by the Church of Bulgaria. Peter, as the first Bulgarian ruler, had to face a serious problem of heresy. Be­ing fully aware of responsibility for orthodoxy of his subjects’ creed, he was de­termined enough to take precautions in order to stifle the development of the Bo­gomil heresy. However, his actual actions (except for his consulting the patriarch) and their results are impossible to pinpoint. On the other hand, it should be stressed that, during the rule of tsar Peter, the Bulgarian monasticism lived through a period of considerable development. The tsar contributed to that progress, though, unfortunately, details of the phenomenon are impossible to determine. Peter himself became a monk before his death, and subsequently his personal worship evolved around his involvement in the monas­tic movement.
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Simões, Rosa Maria Araújo. "CAPOEIRA E ESCRAVIDÃO: MOVIMENTO DE RESISTÊNCIA VERSUS SUBMISSÃO." Movimento (ESEFID/UFRGS) 6, no. 13 (2000): 26–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.22456/1982-8918.11779.

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O presente estudo, baseado na metodologia da sociologia histórica, faz uma análise comparativa entre os autores GENOVESE ( 1988) e REGO (1 968). O primeiro se refere à escravidão negra nos Estados Unidos da América, o segundo, ao jogo de luta dançada denominado capoeira, o qual teve suas origens num Brasil — Colônia, cujo regime era escravocrata. A partir desta análise percebo que há, tanto num como noutro, no que diz respeito ao negro, situações de vida similares que desencadeiam semelhantes formas de luta e de submissão. No caso específico do Brasil, há a origem da capoeira, um movimento corporal de resistência negra. The present study, based in the methodology of historical sociology, makes a comparative analysis between GENOVESE (1988) and REGO (1 969). The first one refers to the black slavery in the United States of America, the second one, he refers to the play of flight danced denominated Capoeira, which had its origins in a Colony Brazil. Starting from that analysis I notice that there is, so much in an as in other, in what it says respect to the black, similar life situations that unchain fellow creatures flight forms and submission. In the case of Brazil, there is the origin of Capoeira's play, a corporal movement of black resistance.
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Howe, Adam E. "Discourses of Exclusion: The Societal Securitization of Burma’s Rohingya (2012–2018)." Journal of Asian Security and International Affairs 5, no. 3 (2018): 245–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2347797018799000.

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The contemporary persecution of Burma’s Rohingya has rapidly evolved from isolated episodes of communal violence into a global humanitarian crisis. The article analyses the evolution of the recent violence in Rakhine State from 2012 to the present. Specifically, I argue that Buddhist nationalist monks, including members of the ‘969’ Movement and Ma Ba Tha, in concert with the Burmese government, have acted as authoritative voices in society, depicting the Rohingya ethno-religious group as an existential threat to the country’s majority Buddhist population. As such, hate-filled rhetoric has provided a politically unstable Burmese regime with an ideological justification for human rights abuses committed in Rakhine State. This phenomenon is analysed through Barry Buzan and Ole Waever’s securitization thesis as a means of better understanding the discursive relationship among Buddhist nationalist monks, the Burmese government and the Burmese Buddhists. Ontologically, this article focuses on anti-Rohingya discourse and major episodes of violence in western Burma’s Rakhine State from 2012 to 2018. As a discursive process, securitization has not merely amplified Islamophobia within Burma, but significantly endangers future generations of Rohingya civilians.
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Mariani, Daniela B., Bruno J. M. Almeida, Andrei D. M. Febrônio, Jociery E. Vergara-Parente, Francisco A. L. Souza, and Fábio S. Mendonça. "Causes of mortality of seabirds stranded at the Northeastern coast of Brazil." Pesquisa Veterinária Brasileira 39, no. 7 (2019): 523–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1678-5150-pvb-5812.

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ABSTRACT: The aim of this work was to determine the main species of stranded seabirds at the Northeastern coast of Brazil in addition to the most frequent causes of stranding and mortality. The study was conducted in a monitored area for three years (2012-2014), from the coastline of south Alagoas through north coast of Bahia encompassing 254km of coast. The seabirds found alive during the monitoring were sent to rehabilitation, clinically examined and the carcasses were removed, necropsied and histopathologically analyzed. A total of 1.347 seabirds were found stranded. Of these, 378 were found alive and sent to rehabilitation. From the 969 dead seabirds 806 were unsuitable for necropsy, being only 163 submitted to necropsy and histopathological analysis. Calonectris borealis, Puffinus gravis and Puffinus puffinus were the main seabirds stranded in the studied area. Most stranding occurred from March to June with an increase during April and May for the most species of seabirds. The main clinical signs of stranded seabirds consisted of inappetence, apathy, low body score, hypothermia, flying or movement difficulty and prolonged recumbency. Natural causes followed by infectious diseases and anthropogenic environmental factors were the main causes of death of seabirds stranded on the Northeastern coast of Brazil.
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Huang, C. S., M. A. Sirisko, H. Hiraba, G. M. Murray, and B. J. Sessle. "Organization of the primate face motor cortex as revealed by intracortical microstimulation and electrophysiological identification of afferent inputs and corticobulbar projections." Journal of Neurophysiology 59, no. 3 (1988): 796–818. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/jn.1988.59.3.796.

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1. The technique of intracortical microstimulation (ICMS), supplemented by single-neuron recording, was used to carry out an extensive mapping of the face primary motor cortex. The ICMS study involved a total of 969 microelectrode penetrations carried out in 10 unanesthetized monkeys (Macaca fascicularis). 2. Monitoring of ICMS-evoked movements and associated electromyographic (EMG) activity revealed a general pattern of motor cortical organization. This was characterized by a representation of the facial musculature, which partially enclosed and overlapped the rostral, medial, and caudal borders of the more laterally located cortical regions representing the jaw and tongue musculatures. Responses were evoked at ICMS thresholds as low as 1 microA, and the latency of the suprathreshold EMG responses ranged from 10 to 45 ms. 3. Although contralateral movements predominated, a representation of ipsilateral movements was found, which was much more extensive than previously reported and which was intermingled with the contralateral representations in the anterior face motor cortex. 4. In examining the fine organizational pattern of the representations, we found clear evidence for multiple representation of a particular muscle, thus supporting other investigations of the motor cortex, which indicate that multiple, yet discrete, efferent microzones represent an essential organizational principle of the motor cortex. 5. The close interrelationship of the representations of all three muscle groups, as well as the presence of a considerable ipsilateral representation, may allow for the necessary integration of unilateral or bilateral activities of the numerous face, jaw, and tongue muscles, which is a feature of many of the movement patterns in which these various muscles participate. 6. In six of these same animals, plus an additional two animals, single-neuron recordings were made in the motor and adjacent sensory cortices in the anesthetized state. These neurons were electrophysiologically identified as corticobulbar projection neurons or as nonprojection neurons responsive to superficial or deep orofacial afferent inputs. The rostral, medial, lateral, and caudal borders of the face motor cortex were delineated with greater definition by ICMS and these electrophysiological procedures than by cytoarchitectonic features alone. We noted that there was an approximate fit in area 4 between the extent of projection neurons and field potentials anti-dromically evoked from the brain stem and the extent of positive ICMS sites.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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Callan, Torrington, and Stephen Woodcock. "Stochastic modelling of chlamydial infections." ANZIAM Journal 61 (July 6, 2020): C89—C103. http://dx.doi.org/10.21914/anziamj.v61i0.15159.

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Chlamydia trachomatis is a bacterial pathogen that can cause serious reproductive harm. We describe a class of stochastic branching processes and their application in modelling the growth of an infection by Chlamydia. Using simulations we show that the model can reproduce biological phenomena of interest, and we show the variability in outcomes of infections under the same parameter conditions. We further speculate how this model might be used to explain long-term adverse reproductive sequelae. References Y. M. AbdelRahman and R. J. Belland. The chlamydial developmental cycle. FEMS Microbio. Rev., 29(5):949–959, 2005. doi:10.1016/j.femsre.2005.03.002. T. E. Harris. Branching processes. Ann. Math. Stat., 19(4):474–494, 12 1948. doi:10.1214/aoms/1177730146. C. Jacob. Branching processes: Their role in epidemiology. Int. J. Env. Res. Public Health, 7(3):1186–1204, 2019. doi:10.3390/ijerph7031204. N. Low, M. Egger, J. A. C. Sterne, R. M. Harbord, F. Ibrahim, B. Lindblom, and B. Herrmann. Incidence of severe reproductive tract complications associated with diagnosed genital chlamydial infection: The Uppsala women's cohort study. Sexually Trans. Infect., 82(3):212–218, 2006. doi:10.1136/sti.2005.017186. D. Mallet, M. Bagher-Oskouei, A. Farr, D. Simpson, and K. Sutton. A mathematical model of chlamydial infection incorporating movement of chlamydial particles. Bull. Math. Bio., 75:2257–2270, 10 2013. doi:10.1007/s11538-013-9891-9. H. K. Maxion, W. Liu, M.-H. Chang, and K. A. Kelly. The infecting dose of chlamydia muridarum modulates the innate immune response and ascending infection. Infect. Immun., 72(11):6330–6340, 2004. doi:10.1128/IAI.72.11.6330-6340.2004. S. Menon, P. Timms, J. A. Allan, K. Alexander, L. Rombauts, P. Horner, M. Keltz, J. Hocking, and W. M. Huston. Human and pathogen factors associated with chlamydia trachomatis-related infertility in women. Clinic. Microbio. Rev., 28(4):969–985, 2015. doi:10.1128/CMR.00035-15. D. P. Wilson. Mathematical modelling of chlamydia. In J. Crawford and A. J. Roberts, editors, Proc. of 11th Computational Techniques and Applications Conference CTAC-2003, ANZIAM J., volume 45, pages C201–C214, 2004. doi:10.21914/anziamj.v45i0.883. D. P. Wilson and D. L. S. McElwain. A model of neutralization of chlamydia trachomatis based on antibody and host cell aggregation on the elementary body surface. J. Theor. Bio., 226(3):321–330, 2004. doi:10.1016/j.jtbi.2003.09.010. D. P. Wilson, P. Timms, and D. L. S. McElwain. A mathematical model for the investigation of the Th1 immune response to chlamydia trachomatis. Math. Biosci., 182(1):27–44, 2003. doi:10.1016/S0025-5564(02)00180-3.
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Amodeo, Chiara, Vishad Nabili, Gregory Keller, and Jordan Sand. "Deep Plane Facelift: An Evaluation of the High-SMAS versus Standard Incision Points." Facial Plastic Surgery 34, no. 06 (2018): 646–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0038-1675634.

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AbstractIn surgery of the aging face, operative adjustments of the superficial musculoaponeurotic system (SMAS) enhance facial contours. The senior author has observed that the standard deep plane face lift entry points on the SMAS do not provide as much tissue movement in a vertical direction as high-SMAS deep plane face lift entry points. In this study, tissue movement was measured comparing the conventional SMAS entry point with a high-SMAS entry point for deep plane face lifts. Institutional review board approval was obtained. Fourteen facelift patients were enrolled, 10 female and 4 male. Average age was 63.4 (50–81) years. Tissue movement at three points along the jaw line was measured intraoperatively. Standard SMAS entry point suspension resulted in average vertical movements of 6.4, 10.3, and 13.8 mm and average horizontal movements of 3.5, 5.7, and 6.5 mm. High-SMAS entry point resulted in average vertical movements of 11.8, 17.9, and 24.1 mm and average horizontal movements of 5.8, 9.8, and 9.9 mm. This resulted in a 77.3% increase (p = 0.03) in vertical movement and a 61.4% increase (p = 0.02) in horizontal movement with a high-SMAS entry compared with standard SMAS entry. The high-SMAS entry point for a deep plane facelift resulted in a significant increase in lift for both the horizontal and vertical vector on the facial skin flap when compared with the conventional entry.
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Hasegawa, S. "Evaluation of rainfall infiltration characteristics in a volcanic ash soil by time domain reflectometry method." Hydrology and Earth System Sciences 1, no. 2 (1997): 303–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/hess-1-303-1997.

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Abstract. Time domain reflectometry (TDR) was used to monitor soil water conditions and to evaluate infiltration characteristics associated with rainfall into a volcanic-ash soil (Hydric Hapludand) with a low bulk density. Four 1 m TDR probes were installed vertically along a 6 m line in a bare field. Three 30 cm and one 60 cm probes were installed between the 1 m probes. Soil water content was measured every half or every hour throughout the year. TDR enabled prediction of the soil water content precisely even though the empirical equation developed by Topp et al. (1980) underestimated the water content. Field capacity, defined as the amount of water stored to a depth of 1 m on the day following heavy rainfall, was 640 mm. There was approximately 100 mm difference in the amount of water stored between field capacity and the driest period. Infiltration characteristics of rainfall were investigated for 36 rainfall events exceeding 10 mm with a total amount of rain of 969 mm out of an annual rainfall of 1192 mm. In the case of 25 low intensity rainfall events with less than 10 mm h-1 on to dry soils, the increase in the amount of water stored to a depth of 1 m was equal to the cumulative rainfall. For rain intensity in excess of 10 mm h-1, non-uniform infiltration occurred. The increase in the amount of water stored at lower elevation locations was 1.4 to 1.6 times larger than at higher elevation locations even though the difference in ground height among the 1 m probes was 6 cm. In the two instances when rainfall exceeded 100 mm, including the amount of rain in a previous rainfall event, the increase in the amount of water stored to a depth of 1 m was 65 mm lower than the total quantity of rain on the two occasions (220 mm); this indicated that 65 mm of water or 5.5% of the annual rainfall had flowed away either by surface runoff or bypass flow. Hence, approximately 95% of the annual rainfall was absorbed by the soil matrix but it is not possible to simulate soil water movement by Darcy's law over a long period at farm level due to the local differences in rainfall intensity.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "969 movement"

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d'Elena, Grisel. "The Gender Problem of Buddhist Nationalism in Myanmar: The 969 Movement and Theravada Nuns." FIU Digital Commons, 2016. http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/etd/2463.

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This thesis uses transnational and Black feminist frameworks to analyze Buddhist nationalist discourses of gender and violence against religious and ethnic minorities in Myanmar. Burmese Buddhist nationalists’ marginalization of the Muslim Rohingya ethnic minority is inextricably linked to their attempts to control Buddhist women. Research includes interviews with U Ashin Wirathu, the leader of the monastic-led nationalist group, the 969 Movement, and with other monks of the organization, as well as with non-nationalist monks, nuns and laywomen. I also analyze Theravada textual discourse as read by my subjects in light of the history of Myanmar to understand the ways the local Theravada tradition has marginalized women and non-Buddhists. By connecting the lack of bhikkhuni ordination and laws hindering Buddhist women from marrying non-Buddhist men with the portrayal of the Rohingya as a threat to the nation, I show how Buddhist nationalists attempt to consolidate power and forestall the democratization process.
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Bredin, Cecilia G. "Studies of cell migration and matrix protease production in human lung cancer cell lines /." Stockholm, 2004. http://diss.kib.ki.se/2004/91-7349-969-2/.

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Björkelid, Joakim. "Buddhismens Beskyddare : Burmesisk nationalism, antimuslimska munkar och deras amerikanska sympatisörer." Thesis, Uppsala universitet, Teologiska institutionen, 2017. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-323869.

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The violent uprisings in Myanmar between 2012-2014 sparked a big interest in the media around the world. The uprisings which resulted in many casualties and the destruction of muslim owned shops and mosques left around 140.000 IDPs. In an interview with Time Magazine’s Hannah Beech, the leader of the group claimed to be responsible for instigating the violence, Ashin Wirathu likened muslims to animals and encouraged burmese buddhists to shun muslims. Since the article was released an independent american organization which sympathizes with Wirathu and his ‘golden burmese’ 969 movement created a web page dedicated to portray a nuanced image of the movement and to clear up what they have claimed to be a number of false reports propagated by western media. This essay investigates the american support movement by analysing their english web page through the method of content analysis and by applying a propaganda theoretical framework to the final discussion. The aim of the essay is to identify what kind of image of Buddhism and Ashin Wirathus 969 movement the support group wants to portray and to explain this in the context of Myanmars colonial and postcolonial history.
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Pfeiffer, Fabian. "Buddhismen i greppet av nationalism, islamofobi och våld : En analys av den burmesiska theravadamunken Ashin Wirathus uttalanden." Thesis, Uppsala universitet, Religionshistoria, 2015. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-255133.

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In the years between 2012 and 2014, Burma has been shaken by waves of violence against Muslims which has resulted in destroyed mosques and shops, at least 140 000 displaced and 200 killed persons. The person who is said to lay behind this violence is the Burmese Theravada monk Ashin Wirathu. Being the founder and leader of the radical Buddhist movement 969, he has been accused of indirectly motivating violence against Muslims and has been portrayed with titles such as “The face of buddhist terror”. This essay investigates the relation between Wirathu and the anti-Muslim violence by applying the method of content analysis on a speech of him. Identifying an emphasis on subjects concerning politics, nationalism and anti-Muslim statements, these factors are contextualized to colonial and postcolonial Burma for the purpose of finding causes for the recent struggles. Recognizing the appearing of these factors in the context of Burma, which has undergone a tense 20th century comprising colonization and military dictatorship, offer some explanation of the rhetoric found in the analyzed speech. Using the context of the identified subjects and a theory which explains the rise of religious conflict in postmodern states, this study concludes that the content in Ashin Wirathu’s speech motivate for anti-Muslim violence through the use of political, ethnic nationalistic and islamophobic statements.
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Tavassoli, Gholam-Abbas. "Islamic movements in Iran." Universität Potsdam, 2004. http://opus.kobv.de/ubp/volltexte/2006/969/.

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The modernist Islamic Movement sought to reconcile modern values and Islamic faith and attempted to express these values through an Islamic discourse and to reform political, religious and educational institutions along modernist lines. However, such a movement in the Islamic Republic of Iran raised controversy among the traditional leadership and secular intellectual groups. <br>The aim of this paper is to discuss how far modernist Islam could progress in an islamic republic with an old tradition.
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Gibson, Beatrice. "Between script and score : notation and movement in the work of Cornelius Cardew." Thesis, Goldsmiths College (University of London), 2013. http://research.gold.ac.uk/9696/.

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This practice based PhD explores experimental notation within the work of Cornelius Cardew. This exploration is undertaken, not only through historical theoretical research, but also through my practice as a film maker: the score is employed as a model for moving image production, and the potential relation between the score and the script investigated at the level of practice. Using a methodology that collapses the binary between theory and paractice and argues for practice as an equally valid form of knowledge production, this research is constituted by an introductory essay, three films, a publication and a screenplay. These works are presented as in conversation with Cardew, a testing out of his methods within the landscape of the contemporary. The title of this thesis points to its deployment of Cardew as a biographical character - a trope Giles Deleuze might term a conceptual persona - whose own compositional trajectory fundamentally encapsulates the issues at the heart of this PhD: its investigation of the relationship between theory and practice, form and content, aesthetics and politics. Cardew’s work is thus used as narrative device to navigate the terrain of experimental notation, and to tease out a set of strategies inherent to post war composition that are then subsequently applied to film making. Two scores in particular are addressed: Treatise and The Tiger’s Mind. Cardew’s assertion, in his accompnaying handbook to Treatise, that ‘notation is a way of making people move’ is key to the trajectory of the research. The term movement is explored on several levels, from the literal - the gathering together of bodies - to the more abstract - the interpretive shifts triggered by the indeterminancies of notation as a linguistic system. Finally movement is considered in relation to emotion, and with that a more speculative direction for future research proposed.
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Whitehead, Jerrell Brandon. "The UK food movement, c. 1976-96." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 2012. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.610504.

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Fletcher, S. M. G. "'It's not a protest, it's a process' : a critical analysis of state power, class struggle, and the Occupy movement." Thesis, Liverpool John Moores University, 2018. http://researchonline.ljmu.ac.uk/9695/.

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In September 2011, over 2000 people set up a protest camp in Zuccotti Park, New York, to contest the increasing inequality and social injustices, they argued to have been brought about by the few, at the expense of the many. This camp along with thousands of other camps worldwide, that would emerge thereafter, would come to be known as the Occupy movement. This thesis offers an examination of the Occupy movement by way of considering this phenomenon through a neo-Marxist framework, concerning, in particular the matter of class struggle. The research contained within, offers a series of elucidations regarding key theoretical and conceptual concerns, pertaining to matters of state power, in the context of the war of position in the advanced capitalist state and the neoliberal conjuncture. Presented within this specific depiction of the convoluted process that is class struggle, there is also a consideration of potential strategies for alliance. These strategies for alliance are by way of seeking to realise the making of a social class force of 'the people', on the terms of the exploited classes, that would bring with it, a material change within the state, and to that end, greater forms of equality and social justice.
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Everill, Bronwen. "Abolition and empire : West African colonization and the transatlantic anti-slavery movement, 1822-1860." Thesis, King's College London (University of London), 2010. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.521519.

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This dissertation examines the colonies of Sierra Leone and Liberia, settlements established by British and American anti-slavery societies respectively. It looks at cultural institutions, settler identification, commercial networks, and missionary activity between Liberia's founding in the 1820s and the beginning of the American Civil War and British annexation of Lagos in 1861. This dissertation argues that the development of settler society in Sierra Leone and Liberia led to the formation of certain types of relationships between the colonies and between the colonies and the metropoles that contributed to the perception of the viability of colonization as an anti-slavery intervention tool in the metropolitan context. The settlers were crucial in developing the concept of `civilization, commerce, and Christianity' as a set of measures for abolishing the slave trade, but their ability to pursue these measures was also affected by the changing state of anti-slavery activism in the metropoles. This dissertation uses a comparative approach to the colonies in order to fill gaps in the current literature, which neglects the interactive nature of the colonial relationships, and therefore misses a crucial factor in explaining the divisions in and between the antislavery societies. Despite the British and American anti-slavery colonization organizations' similar goals, they were frequently unable to cooperate or share resources, particularly in slave trade suppression, or in support of West African anti-slavery colonization. This was in part because of commercial, territorial, and anti-slavery `humanitarian expansion' by settlers in Sierra Leone and Liberia which fostered rivalry between the two settler societies and their metropolitan supporters
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Oncan, Mehmet Onur. "Neoliberalism And The Alternative Globalization Movement." Master's thesis, METU, 2009. http://etd.lib.metu.edu.tr/upload/12610743/index.pdf.

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This thesis aims to analyze the social reactions against neoliberalism by using the Polanyian concept of double movement. The goal is to first to understand the nature of alternative globalization movement and provide a better framework of analysis for theorizing these social reactions. The criticisms of the alternative globalization movement against the World Trade Organization will be analyzed in order to provide a specific case example for the concerns and goals of the movement regarding the global political economy. It has been found out that the alternative globalization movement, which signalled a growing concern over the implications of the efforts to form a global free market on the state-society-market relations since the 1980s, forms the second counter-movement that resists the expansion of contemporary self-regulating market.
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Books on the topic "969 movement"

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Klenner, Fritz. Die österreichische Gewerkschaftsbewegung: Von den Anfängen bis 1999. 2nd ed. Verlag des Österreichischen Gewerkschaftsbundes, 1999.

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Die 999er: Von der Brigade "Z" zur Afrika-Division 999 : die Bewährungsbataillone und ihr Anteil am antifaschistischen Widerstand. Röderberg-Verlag, 1986.

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Klausch, Hans-Peter. Die Geschichte der Bewährungsbataillone 999 unter besonderer Berücksichtigung des antifaschistischen Widerstandes. Pahl-Rugenstein, 1987.

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Watkins, Raymond. Late Bresson and the Visual Arts. Amsterdam University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789462983649.

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The color films of French film director Robert Bresson (1901-99) have largely been neglected, despite the fact that Bresson himself considered them to be more fully realized reflections of his aspirations for the cinema. This study presents a revised and revitalized Bresson, comparing his late style to painterly innovations in color, light, and iconography from the Middle Ages to the present, to abstract painting in France after World War II, and to affinities with the avant-garde movements of Surrealism, Constructivism, and Minimalism. Drawing on media archeology, this study views Bresson's work through such allied visual arts practices as painting, photography, sculpture, theater, and dance.
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Pollard, J. F. Fascism and Catholicism. Edited by R. J. B. Bosworth. Oxford University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199594788.013.0010.

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The first fascist movement to come to power, Italian fascism, did so in a country that was 99 per cent Catholic and the seat of the papacy, and ‘clerical fascist’ movements came to power in another two overwhelmingly Catholic countries, the first Slovak Republic and the Croatian Independent State. Fascist movements and regimes in other European countries also entered into relations with the Roman Catholic Church, and in broader terms, many Catholics, individually and collectively, were closely involved with fascist movements and regimes in the inter-war years. This article analyses the complex relationships between fascism, the institutional church, and Catholics more generally. It examines the initial attitudes of fascist movements to Catholicism/the Catholic Church, the encounter between fascism and Catholicism, and the interests and common enemies that brought them together in this encounter.
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Time, Internal Clocks and Movement. Elsevier, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0166-4115(96)x8047-6.

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In the Spirit of Crazy Horse: The Story of Leonard Peltier and the FBI's War on the American Indian Movement. Penguin, 1992.

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Asadullah, M. Niaz, Nudrat Faria Shreya, and Zaki Wahhaj. Access to microfinance and female labour force participation. 30th ed. UNU-WIDER, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.35188/unu-wider/2021/968-6.

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Although microfinance started as a movement to improve women’s economic well-being through increased female entrepreneurship in particular, its impact on women’s attitudes toward and participation in the labour market is not fully understood. We fill this gap by combining data on branch locations of the major microfinance institutions in Bangladesh with household survey data and implement a spatial regression discontinuity design. Our estimates suggest significant effects of access to credit on women’s work; attitudes towards gender, social and employment norms; and psychosocial well-being. Access to credit increases labour force participation in terms of paid employment and traditional economic participation. Relatedly, respondents are more likely to be prevented from working by their husbands or other household members. They are also more likely to express traditional beliefs in relation to gender, social, and employment norms. Finally, access to credit leads to a loss in life satisfaction, financial satisfaction, health satisfaction, and overall happiness.
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Egger, Eva-Maria, Cecilia Poggi, and Héctor Rufrancos. Welfare and the depth of informality: Evidence from five African countries. 25th ed. UNU-WIDER, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.35188/unu-wider/2021/963-1.

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This study explores the relationship between household poverty and depth of informality by proposing a new measure of informality at the household level. It is defined as the share of activities (hours worked or income earned) without social insurance for wage workers in the household. We apply cross-sectional regressions to five urban sub-Saharan African countries, showing that a household head informality dummy obscures a non-linear relationship between the depth of household informality and welfare outcomes. In some countries, a small share of income from formal jobs is associated with at least the same welfare as a fully formal portfolio. By assessing transitions between household portfolios with panel data for urban Nigeria, we also show that most welfare differences are explained by selection and that movements in and out of formality cannot sufficiently change welfare trajectories. The results call for better inclusion of informal profiles to social insurance programmes.
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Mills, M. G. L., and M. E. J. Mills. Socio-spatial organization and spatial ecology. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198712145.003.0010.

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Home ranges of males (1204 km2) and females (1510 km2) were similar. Female home range size was positively related to the dispersion of prey and generally, but not exclusively, they displayed home range fidelity. Overlap between female home ranges was extensive, although they rarely met up. Male home ranges overlapped extensively and there was no difference in size between coalition and single males. Males overcame the problem of scent marking a large home range by concentrating scent marks in core areas. Generally female cheetah home range size is affected by resource productivity, although where prey are migratory, or in fenced reserves where movements are constricted, and areas where disturbance is severe, this may be different. Southern Kalahari males apparently need large home ranges to increase the likelihood of locating wide-ranging and sporadically receptive females. Mean dispersal distance for subadult males (96 km) was further than for females (39 km).
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Book chapters on the topic "969 movement"

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Higashi, Hiroshi, Tomasz M. Rutkowski, Yoshikazu Washizawa, Toshihisa Tanaka, and Andrzej Cichocki. "Imagery Movement Paradigm User Adaptation Improvement with Quasi-movements Phenomenon." In Advances in Cognitive Neurodynamics (II). Springer Netherlands, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-90-481-9695-1_101.

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Clover, Darlene E. "Aesthetics, Society and Social Movement Learning." In Learnning and Educationfor a Bettter World. SensePublishers, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-6091-979-4_6.

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Endo, H., T. Takeda, T. Kizuka, T. Masuda, and T. Kumagai. "Analysis of Movement-Related Brain Activities Elicited by External Instructions." In Biomag 96. Springer New York, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4612-1260-7_181.

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Wang, Jiaole, and Masazumi Katayama. "Optimal Model for Selecting Human Arm Posture During Reaching Movement." In Advances in Cognitive Neurodynamics (II). Springer Netherlands, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-90-481-9695-1_72.

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Dong, Wei, Rubin Wang, Zhikang Zhang, and Jianting Cao. "Discussion on Rhythmic Gait Movement Affected by Cerebral Cortex Signal." In Advances in Cognitive Neurodynamics (II). Springer Netherlands, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-90-481-9695-1_74.

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Wu, Jiong, Rubin Wang, Zhikang Zhang, and Jianting Cao. "Periodic Motion Control of Human Arm Movement Based on CPG model." In Advances in Cognitive Neurodynamics (II). Springer Netherlands, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-90-481-9695-1_78.

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Huttunen, J., H. Wikström, A. Korvenoja, H. Aronen, and R. J. Ilmoniemi. "Somatosensory Evoked Fields from SMI and SII During ’Interfering’ Finger Movements and Tactile Stimulation." In Biomag 96. Springer New York, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4612-1260-7_193.

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Takemura, Naohiro, and Toshio Inui. "A Developmental Model of Infant Reaching Movement: Acquisition of Internal Visuomotor Transformations." In Advances in Cognitive Neurodynamics (II). Springer Netherlands, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-90-481-9695-1_21.

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Kroc, Jiří. "Influence of Lattice Anisotropy on Models Formulated by Cellular Automata in Presence of Grain Boundary Movement: A Case Study." In Materials Science Forum. Trans Tech Publications Ltd., 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/0-87849-964-4.195.

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Chandrasekhar, S., and N. N. Mhala. "Improving Robustness of Shoulder Gesture Recognition Using Kinect V2 Method for Real-Time Movements." In Smart Intelligent Computing and Applications. Springer Singapore, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-32-9690-9_4.

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Conference papers on the topic "969 movement"

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Carey, Stephanie L., M. Jason Highsmith, and Rajiv Dubey. "Range of Motion of Upper Limb Joint Angles During Two Tasks for Transradial Prosthetic Design." In ASME 2007 International Design Engineering Technical Conferences and Computers and Information in Engineering Conference. ASMEDC, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/detc2007-35349.

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During wartime, the numbers of amputees will likely increase adding to the need for progress in upper limb prosthetic design. Improvement of prostheses often requires knowledge of how the body adapts. Added weight and fatigue are complaints of upper limb prostheses users. Current improvements in the design of a transradial prosthesis include advanced technology in control systems and electronics that improve its functions. However, these improvements often require excess mass distally along the prosthesis. A transradial prosthesis without a dynamic wrist component may cause awkward compensatory motion in the shoulder and elbow. This work analyzes the ranges of joint movement of shoulder and elbow during two tasks: drinking from a cup and lifting a box. The main purpose of this study was to determine if simulating a basic transradial prosthesis by limiting motion of the forearm and wrist using a brace, would cause significant changes in the compensatory motion of the shoulder and elbow during the tasks. The second purpose of the study was to determine if the location of added mass of 96 g (mass of an electrical wrist rotator) would affect shoulder and elbow angles during these same tasks. A group of able-bodied participants were asked to complete the tasks during the following conditions: (1) no intervention (2) while wearing a brace that restricted forearm and wrist motion of their dominant arm (right) (3) wearing the same brace with a 96 g mass added near the elbow, (4) with the same brace and a 96 g mass added near the wrist. Subject movements were captured using a motion capture system and ranges of movement of shoulder and elbow, as well as degree of asymmetry (DoA) during the box lift were calculated for each subject. Three trials were collected for each test condition and were averaged as a representative for each subject. Statistical analysis of the results concluded that during drinking elbow flexion was significantly different in case 1 from the other 3 levels. Statistical analysis of lifting found significant differences in the dominant (right) shoulder and elbow flexion between all 4 levels, while their relative degree of symmetry was found to be statistically different between level 1 and 3–4. The study concludes that bracing limits forearm and wrist affects shoulder and elbow flexion and their relative DoA. The position of a 96g mass did not cause any statistical differences in the movements observed or in their DoA. Further testing will examine the transradial amputee population as well as the effects of position of added mass on joint torques during common tasks.
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Valič, Veronika, Tadeja Volmut, and Nataša Dolenc Orbanić. "Effective Learning of Science through Movement." In Developing Effective Learning. University of Primorska Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.26493/978-961-293-002-8.55.

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Blackmon, Theodore T., Yeuk F. Ho, Dimitri A. Chernyak, Michela Azzariti, and Lawrence W. Stark. "Dynamic scanpaths: eye movement analysis methods." In Electronic Imaging '99, edited by Bernice E. Rogowitz and Thrasyvoulos N. Pappas. SPIE, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.348471.

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Wooding, David S., Geraint M. Roberts, and Jane Phillips-Hughes. "Development of the eye-movement response in the trainee radiologist." In Medical Imaging '99, edited by Elizabeth A. Krupinski. SPIE, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.349634.

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Ardebilian Fard, Mohsen, and Liming Chen. "Object and camera movement tracking based on 2D hint extraction." In Photonics East '99, edited by Sethuraman Panchanathan, Shih-Fu Chang, and C. C. Jay Kuo. SPIE, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.360425.

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Yano, Fumihiko, and Yoshiaki Toyoda. "Preferable movement of a multijoint robot arm using a genetic algorithm." In Photonics East '99, edited by David P. Casasent. SPIE, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.360286.

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Schill, Kerstin, Elisabeth Umkehrer, Stephan Beinlich, Gerhard Krieger, and Christoph Zetzsche. "Knowledge-based scene analysis with saccadic eye movements." In Electronic Imaging '99, edited by Bernice E. Rogowitz and Thrasyvoulos N. Pappas. SPIE, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.348483.

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Yuen, Koji, Manabu Maeta, Hirofumi Akagi, Kazunori Nishizaki, and Yu Masuda. "Dynamic observation of facial movements by moire topography video." In BiOS Europe '96, edited by Hans-Jochen Foth, Renato Marchesini, and Halina Podbielska. SPIE, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.260650.

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Arshak, Arousian, Thomas J. Kinsella, and Declan McDonagh. "Photoresist silylation and "swelling": simulation using finite element analysis and physical boundary movement algorithms." In Microlithography '99, edited by Will Conley. SPIE, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.350229.

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Zaikin, A. A. "Modeling cognitive control in simple movements." In Third international conference on computing anticipatory systems (CASYS'99). AIP, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1291275.

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