Academic literature on the topic 'Cardiff University College'

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Journal articles on the topic "Cardiff University College"

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Dresser, Quentin. "University College Cardiff Radiocarbon Dates I." Radiocarbon 27, no. 2B (1985): 338–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0033822200007128.

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The laboratory was established by University College, Cardiff, in 1974 primarily for research in vegetation history and archaeology in Britain. The laboratory has been supported yearly since 1978 by the Conservation and Land Division of the Welsh Office, Cardiff, which submits archaeologic samples from rescue excavations in Wales which are carried out by the Clwyd-Powys Archaeological Trust Ltd (CPAT), the Dyfed Archaeological Trust Ltd (DAT), the Glamorgan Gwent Archaeological Trust Ltd (GGAT), and the Gwynedd Archaeological Trust Ltd (GAT).
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Shattock, Michael. "FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT IN UNIVERSITIES: THE LESSONS FROM UNIVERSITY COLLEGE, CARDIFF." Financial Accountability and Management 4, no. 2 (1988): 99–112. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0408.1988.tb00063.x.

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Dresser, P. Q. "Radiocarbon dates from Llwyn Bryn-dinas." Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 58, S1 (1992): 24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0079497x00078993.

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The following radiocarbon determinations were measured in the Radiocarbon Dating laboratory of the Department of Geology, University of Wales College of Cardiff. Calibrations are derived from the University of Washington, Quaternary Isotope Lab., Radiocarbon Calibration Program 1987, Rev. 2.O.
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Boddy, Lynne. "Fungal ecology research in Britain: Decomposition ecology at university college, Cardiff." Mycologist 1, no. 4 (1987): 168—IN8. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0269-915x(87)80115-5.

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Ellis, Joyce, John Walton, and M. J. Daunton. "Anthony M. Johnson, Scott of the Antarctic and Cardiff. Cardiff: University College Cardiff Press, 1984. vi + 70 pp. Paperback: £2.50." Urban History 13 (May 1986): 204–5. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0963926800008373.

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Mellows, Richard. "LIBERTAS implementation and networking at the University of Wales College of Cardiff." VINE 19, no. 3 (1989): 19–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/eb040419.

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Jones, Jeffrey R. "The role of the clinical tutor – a personal experience." Psychiatric Bulletin 14, no. 3 (1990): 164–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/pb.14.3.164.

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The role of the clinical tutor may differ from that set out in the helpful guidelines given by the Royal College of Psychiatrists. It may differ depending on the setting of the training for instance. I was made clinical tutor some three and a half years ago for a large, mainly rural area – North Wales. The area does not have its own medical school, but is associated with the University of Wales College of Medicine, at Cardiff, some 150 miles away.
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King, H. G. R. "Cardiff's Influence on Antarctic Exploration - Scott of the Antarctic and Cardiff. Anthony M. Johnson 1984. Cardiff, University College Cardiff Press. 70p, illustrated, soft cover. ISBN 0-906449-76-6. £2.95." Polar Record 22, no. 140 (1985): 544–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0032247400006082.

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Wood, Keith V., Anthony K. Campbell, Guy A. Rutter, et al. "Current Applications in Bioluminescence—21 September 1995, University of Wales College of Medicine, Cardiff, UK." Journal of Bioluminescence and Chemiluminescence 11, no. 1 (1996): 49–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/(sici)1099-1271(199601)11:1<49::aid-bio403>3.0.co;2-i.

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Barber, Paul. "The Fall and Rise of Doctors' Commons?" Ecclesiastical Law Journal 4, no. 18 (1996): 462–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0956618x00002350.

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The historic new LLM degree in Canon Law from the University of Wales College of Cardiff means that there now exists a body of Canon Law graduates, the first ‘home-grown’ canonists in this country since the King's Vicar-General. Thomas Cromwell, suppressed the faculties of Canon Law at Cambridge and Oxford in 1535. It was for a gathering of the first such graduates that the original version of this paper was prepared.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Cardiff University College"

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Jones, David Kenneth. "The music of Jeffrey Lewis." Thesis, University of Manchester, 2011. https://www.research.manchester.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/the-music-of-jeffrey-lewis(b712684d-e7c0-4194-9932-e484dd60a2e0).html.

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The present thesis investigates the music and career of Jeffrey Lewis (born 1942). The thesis is broadly divided into three sections. First is an account of the composer’s life, told mainly through an overview of his works, but also through a sketch of his early years in South Wales, his studies in Cardiff, Darmstadt, Kraków and Paris, his academic career in Leeds and Bangor, and his subsequent early retirement from academia. There follows a more detailed study of six works from the period 1978 – 1985, during which certain features of Lewis’s musical language came to the fore, perhaps most notably a very individual and instantly recognisable use of modal language. After an Epilogue, the thesis concludes with an Appendix in the form of a Catalogue in which all Lewis’s known compositions are listed, together with details of performances, broadcasts and recordings. Lewis’s music often plays with our temporal expectations; the close interrelationship between texture, structure, harmony and melody, and its effect upon our perception of the passage of time, are explored in the main analyses. These are conducted partly by means of comparison with other works by Lewis or his contemporaries. Memoria is examined in relation to a similarly tranquil score, Naaotwá Lalá, by Giles Swayne. The following chapter discusses the extra-musical inspiration for Epitaph for Abelard and Heloise, whose relationship to Tableau is then explored in the next. The difficulties of creating a large-scale structure that unifies the work’s various harmonic elements are also investigated. The analysis of Carmen Paschale considers it in relation to Lewis’s other choral music, whilst the final analytical chapter compares and contrasts two three-movement works, the Piano Trio and the Fantasy for solo piano. Lewis’s melodic writing in the Piano Trio is discussed in relation to that of James MacMillan, and the origins of the first movement of Fantasy in Oliver Knussen’s Sonya’s Lullaby are explored. In the Epilogue, the possible reasons for Lewis’s current neglect are explored, various influences on Lewis’s musical thinking are laid out, and his achievements are assessed.
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Books on the topic "Cardiff University College"

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Cardiff, University College. Undergraduate prospectus. The College., 1992.

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Higher Education Quality Council. Division of Quality Audit. University of Wales College of Cardiff: Quality audit report. Higher Education Quality Council, 1993.

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Bullet, D. W. Proceedings of the 7th Interdisciplinary Surface Science Conference (ISSC-7), 14-17 September 1987, University College, Cardiff. Pergamon, 1988.

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Quality Assurance Agency for Higher Education. Institutional Review Directorate. Overseas partnership audit report: University of Wales Institute, Cardiff and Fundación San Valero. Quality Assurance Agency for Higher Education, 2000.

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Gorard, Stephen. What can we learn from educational research?: The implications of work from the Cardiff University School of Social Sciences. School of Social Sciences, 2002.

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Quality Assurance Agency for Higher Education. Institutional Review Directorate. Overseas partnership audit report: Henley Management College and InterCollege Cyprus. Quality Assurance Agency for Higher Education, 2001.

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Kenneth S. Dodgson Memorial Symposium (1987 Cardiff). Amphiphiles in biology: Proceedings of a meeting held on 31 March - 1 April, 1987 at University College Cardiff, to honour the memory of Professor Kenneth S. Dodgson. Biochemical Society, 1987.

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National Hydrology Symposium (4th 1993 Cardiff, Wales). Rainfall-runoff modeling as a problem in artificial intelligence: experience with a neural network. Fourth National Hydrology Symposium: (held at) University of Wales College of Cardiff 13-16th September 1993. British Hydrological Society, 1993.

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Quality Assurance Agency for Higher Education. Institutional Review Directorate. Overseas partnership audit report: The University of Wales and the Know How Group of Colleges. Quality Assurance Agency for Higher Education, 2000.

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Directorate, Quality Assurance Agency for Higher Education Institutional Review. Overseas partnership audit report: Lancaster University and the Universidad Pontificias Comillas. Quality Assurance Agency for Higher Education, 2000.

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Book chapters on the topic "Cardiff University College"

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Hollman, Arthur. "Early life · Family · Education · Medical School at University College Cardiff and University College London." In Sir Thomas Lewis. Springer London, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4471-0927-3_1.

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Pennington, Donald. "John Edward Christopher Hill 1912–2003." In Proceedings of the British Academy Volume 130, Biographical Memoirs of Fellows, IV. British Academy, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.5871/bacad/9780197263501.003.0002.

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John Edward Christopher Hill (1912–2003), a Fellow of the British Academy, was a great historian. Nearly all his huge output was on the seventeenth-century ‘English Revolution’ and its origins. It was claimed that his Marxism, even when mellowed, led him to ignore evidence that did not support it. In 1936, Hill became an assistant lecturer at Cardiff University. Two years later, he returned to Balliol College at the University of Oxford as fellow and tutor in history. In 1956, he released his first major book, Economic Problems of the Church: from Archbishop Whitgift to the Long Parliament. Hill also found himself at the centre of communist politics in Britain, when the Historians’ Group led the movement to end the Communist Party’s obedience to Moscow. Besides the disputes with historians, Hill’s devotion to poetry had brought him into conflict with literary critics. Hill is cautious in his assessments of John Milton’s relations with radicalism. Hill’s sympathy for the downtrodden and unsuccessful was an unchanging part of his historical and his practical beliefs.
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Conference papers on the topic "Cardiff University College"

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Biggs, Simon, Michael Fairweather, James Young, Robin W. Grimes, Neil Milestone, and Francis Livens. "The KNOO Research Consortium: Work Package 3—An Integrated Approach to Waste Immobilisation and Management." In ASME 2009 12th International Conference on Environmental Remediation and Radioactive Waste Management. ASMEDC, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/icem2009-16375.

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The Keeping the Nuclear Option Open (KNOO) research consortium is a four-year research council funded initiative addressing the challenges related to increasing the safety, reliability and sustainability of nuclear power in the UK. Through collaboration between key industrial and governmental stakeholders, and with international partners, KNOO was established to maintain and develop skills relevant to nuclear power generation. Funded by a research grant of £6.1M from the “Towards a Sustainable Energy Economy Programme” of the UK Research Councils, it represents the single largest university-based nuclear research programme in the UK for more than 30 years. The programme is led by Imperial College London, in collaboration with the universities of Manchester, Sheffield, Leeds, Bristol, Cardiff and the Open University. These universities are working with the UK nuclear industry, who contributed a further £0.4M in funding. The industry/government stakeholders include AWE, British Energy, the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, the Environment Agency, the Health and Safety Executive, Doosan Babcock, the Ministry of Defence, Nirex, AMEC NNC, Rolls-Royce PLC and the UK Atomic Energy Authority. Work Package 3 of this consortium, led by the University of Leeds, concerns “An Integrated Approach to Waste Immobilisation and Management”, and involves Imperial College London, and the Universities of Manchester and Sheffield. The aims of this work package are: to study the re-mobilisation, transport, solid-liquid separation and immobilisation of particulate wastes; to develop predictive models for particle behaviour based on atomic scale, thermodynamic and process scale simulations; to develop a fundamental understanding of selective adsorption of nuclides onto filter systems and their immobilisation; and to consider mechanisms of nuclide leaving and transport. The paper describes highlights from this work in the key areas of multi-scale modeling (using atomic scale, thermodynamic and process scale models), the engineering properties of waste (linking microscopic and macroscopic behaviour, and transport and rheology), and waste reactivity (considering waste hosts and wasteforms, generation IV wastes, and waste interactions).
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