Academic literature on the topic 'Kentish Town'

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Journal articles on the topic "Kentish Town"

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Morris, Allford Hall Monaghan, and Colin Davies. "Jenga planning: Kentish Town integrated care centre." Architectural Research Quarterly 6, no. 4 (December 2002): 300–319. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1359135503001842.

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‘A beacon of excellence in healthcare design’… ‘a symbol of civic pride in our community’ … ‘a “state of the art” building’ … ‘a building which could be magnificently innovative and visionary in its time, location and conception’. These phrases, taken from the ‘Aspirational Statement’ that introduces the competition brief, should have left no one in any doubt that the clients for the proposed new integrated care centre in Kentish Town were looking for something new and different. With hindsight, it is easy to see why Allford Hall Monaghan Morris's (AHMM) unusual design [1a–c] won the competition.
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Dillon, Ruth. "Designing urban space for psychological comfort: the Kentish Town Road project." Journal of Public Mental Health 4, no. 4 (December 2005): 10–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/17465729200500027.

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WEIR, TONY. "SUICIDE IN CUSTODY." Cambridge Law Journal 57, no. 2 (July 1998): 235–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0008197398240013.

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Remanded in custody on charges of fraud and failure to answer to bail, Martin Lynch, 29 years old, was placed in a very bare cell at Kentish Town Police Station just before one o'clock on 23 March 1990. The doctor called by the police, who knew that he was a suicide risk and had consequently removed his belt, thought him quite sane. At 1.57 p.m. the police checked his well-being, but on the next visit only eight minutes later he was found irremediably unconscious: he had hanged himself by threading his shirt through the hatch in the door and the much smaller spy-hole above it. This was possible only because the glass lens was missing from the spy-hole and the flap of the hatch had been left open, contrary to standing orders.
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HIPPERSON, JULIE. "‘Come All and Bring Your Spades’: England and Arbor Day, c.1880 – 1914." Rural History 23, no. 1 (March 6, 2012): 59–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s095679331100015x.

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AbstractIn February 1897, villagers in the small Kentish town of Eynsford celebrated their first Arbor Day by planting a row of trees in acrostic form to spell out the proverb MY SON, BE WISE. By 1910 Arbor Day had featured in the discussions of a Parliamentary Select Committee and the House of Commons, and was enjoying national press coverage as the event spread under the auspices of the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds and the Garden City Movement. Proponents positioned the ceremony as a prism through which to address the pressing social and economic concerns of rural depopulation, unemployment and deforestation, and by promoting the event as part of the educational experience of children, offered it up as a contribution towards the amelioration of these ills. Although the establishment of the Forestry Commission in 1919 ushered in the increasingly inflexible belief that the state rather than individuals was the only competent custodian of English woodland, Arbor Day can tell us much about how humankind's affective response to nature was conditioned, shored up and survived this increasingly scientific approach from the late nineteenth century.
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Smith, John F. H. "A LITTLE-KNOWN COLLECTION OF STUKELEY DRAWINGS IN THE SPALDING GENTLEMEN’S SOCIETY." Antiquaries Journal 100 (June 16, 2020): 324–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003581520000141.

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Spalding Gentlemen’s Society holds, among its varied collections of William Stukeley papers, a virtually unknown set of forty-four important drawings dating from 1720–64. It is an intimate collection closely connected with Stukeley and his immediate family: portraits, his houses and gardens in Lincolnshire and Kentish Town, and a few miscellaneous family history papers. Originally, the collection was bound into an album which, as the latest drawing dates from the year before Stukeley’s death, was almost certainly compiled post mortem by a family member. For many years the collection was lost, but recent investigation has revealed that c 1866–7 it was purchased by Sir Thomas Phillipps, Bart., and sold at auction in 1910. It has been in Spalding ever since, arriving at the Spalding Gentlemen's Society possibly about 1950. Cataloguing the collection was recently undertaken by this author and the enhanced significance given by this and the revealed provenance enabled the Society to apply successfully to the Heritage Lottery Fund for a grant towards conservation and storage. The great value of the collection is that it hugely increases our knowledge of Stukeley’s houses and gardens, particularly his garden works, and illuminates the evolution of Stukeley’s thoughts on garden design.
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Desai, Shruti, and Harriet Smith. "Kinship across Species: Learning to Care for Nonhuman Others." Feminist Review 118, no. 1 (April 2018): 41–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/s41305-018-0104-0.

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This essay responds to Donna J. Haraway's (2016) provocation to ‘stay with the trouble’ of learning to live well with nonhumans as kin, through practice-based approaches to learning to care for nonhuman others. The cases examine the promotion of care for trees through mobile game apps for forest conservation, and kinship relations with city farm animals in Kentish Town, London. The cases are analysed with a view to how they articulate care practices as a means of making kin. Two concepts are proposed, ‘learning from’ and ‘facing’ the Other, which are thickened through discussions of how caring takes place in each case in relation to a particular category of nonhuman other: animated tree and urban farm animal. Thus while attendant to situations of care involving a specific nonhuman subject, the cases also broker thinking on learning from and facing (the) other kinds of trees and animals, and the interspecies dynamics of which they are a part. The intersectional implications of the practice sites and participants are elaborated, to complexify and affirm situated but also reflexive approaches to caring. In doing this, the authors attend to their own positionalities, seeking to diversify Western-based ecofeminist engagements with caring, while asking what their research can do for the nonhuman other. They formulate and apply a collaborative methodological approach to the case studies, developed through cultivating attentiveness to the nonhuman subject of research. The authors consider in particular how attentiveness to the nonhuman other can facilitate practices of knowing that further a non-anthropocentric and non-innocent ethic of caring. By further interconnecting situations of caring for nonhuman animals and plants, the authors advocate for practices of care that antagonise how species boundaries are drawn and explore the implications for learning to care for nonhumans as kin.
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Tronrud, Thorold J. "Dispelling the Gloom. The Extent of Poverty in Tudor and Early Stuart Towns: Some Kentish Evidence." Canadian Journal of History 20, no. 1 (April 1985): 1–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/cjh.20.1.1.

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Levy B.Sc, Vernon. "Cartoons CD‐ROM9713Cartoons CD‐ROM. Context Limited, Grand Union House, 20 Kentish,Town Road, London, NW1 9NR. Tel: +44 171 267 8989 Fax: +44 171 267 1133 e‐mail: sales@context.co.uk helpdesk@context.co.uk: Centre for the Study of Cartoons and Caricature, University of Kent/Context limited 1996. , ISBN: 0 9523692 3 0 £450 no concessions for multiple copies or site licenses." Electronic Resources Review 1, no. 2 (February 1997): 15–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/err.1997.1.2.15.13.

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Forse, James H. "Touring in Kent: Some Observations from Records Published to Date." Early Theatre 22, no. 2 (December 28, 2019). http://dx.doi.org/10.12745/et.22.2.3802.

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To date, published dramatic records from England reveal that County Kent saw more touring activity than any other English county. Some reasons for this activity include Kent’s local, pre-Reformation drama, its several towns as playing venues, and political and economic factors.
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Books on the topic "Kentish Town"

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King, James Frederick. The Kentish Town panorama. [London]: London Topograhical Society in conjunction with the London Borough of Camden, Libraries and Arts Dept., 1986.

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2

North Middlesex Family History Society. Index and monumental inscriptions, St. Pancras Old Church, St. Pancras New Chruch, St. John the Baptist, Kentish Town. (London): The Society, 1988.

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Emsley, Ian. Local authority dissemination of environmental information: A case study of the London Borough of Camden's practices in Kentish Town. (London): Polytechnic of Central London, Faculty of the Environment, School of Planning, 1985.

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Herbert, Cicely. 87 Holmes Road: The story of one building's contribution to the life of Kentish Town: London Board School to Camden Institute. (London: Camden Borough Council, 1989.

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5

Kentli hakları bağlamında kenti yeniden düşünmek. İskitler, Ankara: Alter, 2013.

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19. yüzyılda Anadolu kenti ve konut dokusu: Ayaş ve Beypazarı. Ankara: Nobel Yayın Dağıtım, 2010.

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Arû, Kemal Ahmet. Türk kenti: Türk kent dokularının incelenmesine ve bugünkü koşullar içinde değerlendirilmesine ilişkin yöntem araştırması. Harbiye, İstanbul: Yapı-Endüstri Merkezi Yayınları, 1998.

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Aktüre, Sevgi. Tarih içinde Anadolu kenti II: Pazar ekonomisine geçiş sürecinde Anadolu'da demir çagı kentleri. Istanbul: Tarih Vakfı Yurt Yayınları, 2003.

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Richardson, John. Kentish Town Past. Phillimore Co Ltd, 1997.

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Marshall, Lesley. Kentish Town: Its Past in Pictures. London Borough of Camden, Leisure & Community Services, 1993.

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Book chapters on the topic "Kentish Town"

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"A Local Thunderstorm: The Kentish Town Situation." In Elsie Chamberlain, 197–207. Routledge, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315728759-22.

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Dickens, Charles. "To the Kentish Town Literary Institution, [?Early January 1850]." In The British Academy/The Pilgrim Edition of the Letters of Charles Dickens, Vol. 6: 1850–1852, edited by Kathleen Mary Tillotson, Graham Storey, and Nina Burgis. Oxford University Press, 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oseo/instance.00112261.

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"271 From William and Sarah Duke in Kentish Town [St Pancras], London, to the overseers of Chelmsford, 20 April 1829." In Records of Social and Economic History: New Series, Vol. 30: Essex Pauper Letters: 1731–1837, edited by Thomas Sokoll, 284. British Academy, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oseo/instance.00167191.

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"The migrant in Kentish towns 1580-1640." In Crisis and Order in English Towns 1500-1700, 131–77. Routledge, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203716441-8.

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Conference papers on the topic "Kentish Town"

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West, R. "Kentish Town project." In IEE Seminar on Cables in Tunnels. IEE, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1049/ic:20000357.

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Chen, Chih-Hung, and Chun-Ya Chuang. "Urban form in special geographical conditions: a case study in Kenting National Park." In 24th ISUF 2017 - City and Territory in the Globalization Age. Valencia: Universitat Politècnica València, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/isuf2017.2017.6186.

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Urban form in special geographical conditions: a case study in Kenting National Park. Chih-Hung Chen¹, Chun-Ya Chuang¹ ¹Department of Urban Planning, National Cheng Kung University E-mail: chihhungchen@mail.ncku.edu.tw Keywords: Kenting National Park, special geographical conditions, Historico-Geographical approach, morphotope Conference topics and scale: City transformations Since the land surface is heterogeneous, the natural landscape as an essential element in contemporary morphological studies becomes the initial factor in the formation of a settlement. Moreover, the interaction with natural landscape, built form and the boundary matrix can illuminate ecological perspective on the form of the city. (Scheer, 2016) To understand the urban form under special geographical conditions, a case study is conducted in Kenting National Park, which is a tropical area with rich landscape such as moutains, lakes and rivers, plains, basins, and surrounded by seas. An analytical approach based on Historico-Geographical approach (Kropf, 2009; Oliveira, 2016) is applied in this paper. After identifying the scope of 42 settlements, there are three outer shape types such as compact, scattered, linear. Then, three kinds of morphotopes (Conzen, 1988) can mainly be figured out by comparing the combination between streets, buildings and plots: i) Detached, duplex houses on small plots along the access road; ii) Attached buildings on small plots along the main road; iii) Villas or hotels on large plots along the main road. Finally, the relationship between the larger plan units (Conzen, 1960) and the geographical conditions shows that the homogeneous configuration of plan units corresponds to the certain landscape. On the other hand, this article seeks to find out the impacts and changes caused by special geographical conditions in consequence of the landscape affects not only the formation of urban form but the evolution because its influence on socio-economic conditions. References Conzen, M. R. G. (1960) Alnwick, Northumberland: A study in Town-plan Analysis (Institute of British Geographers, London). Conzen, M.R.G. (1988) ‘Morphogenesis, morphological regions, and secular human agency in the historic townscape, as exemplified by Ludlow’, in Urban Historical Geography. Recent progress in Britain and Germany, 253-272. Kropf, K. (2009) ‘Aspects of urban form’, Urban morphology 13(2), 105-20. Oliveira, V. (2016) Urban Morphology (Springer International Publishing, Switzerland), 102-111. Scheer, B. C. (2016) ‘The epistemology of urban morphology’, Urban Morphology 20, 5-17.
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