Academic literature on the topic 'Libye – Derna (Libye)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Libye – Derna (Libye)"

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Al-Behadili, S. H., and W. B. El-Osta. "Life Cycle Assessment of Dernah (Libya) wind farm." Renewable Energy 83 (November 2015): 1227–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.renene.2015.05.041.

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Said, Alaa, Massoud Godeh, and Fathalla El-Menifi. "MARINE ALGAL SURVEY OF DERNA, SUSA AND TOLMETA AT LIBYA COASTS." Egyptian Journal of Phycology 11, no. 1 (December 1, 2010): 1–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.21608/egyjs.2010.114873.

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Tashani, Amel, and Sarah Aggag. "DNA Barcoding Identifies Juniperus oxycedrus subsp. macrocarpa in Derna Region, East Libya." Journal of Agricultural Chemistry and Biotechnology 11, no. 1 (January 1, 2020): 17–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.21608/jacb.2020.76658.

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Elzahaf, RagaA, and OasmaA Tashani. "Screening of probable neuropathic pain in patients with diabetes in Derna, Libya." Libyan Journal of Medical Sciences 3, no. 2 (2019): 57. http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/ljms.ljms_6_19.

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Thorn, Dorothy. "Under sail from Tripoli to Derna, 1821–1822." Libyan Studies 37 (2006): 45–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0263718900004003.

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AbstractWhen the Beechey brothers sailed to Tripoli in 1821 in HMS Adventure to begin their survey work along the coast of Libya, a young midshipman, William Robinson, was aboard on his first voyage. He sent home letters describing shipboard life and the Libyan coast as he saw it, reportedly strewn with wrecks, Tripoli and the castle, the ‘Basha’ and Colonel Warrington, Leptis Magna and the ruins which he sketched, Benghazi where the sea had recently eroded the land, leaving Berenice ‘open to view’, Bomba, Derna and the Gulf of Syrtis, the desertification and the wildlife.
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Mathkor, Ratha Z., Brian Agnew, Mohammed A. Al-Weshahi, and Saleh Etaig. "Thermal Analysis of a Solar Powered ORC in Libya." Applied Mechanics and Materials 789-790 (September 2015): 391–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amm.789-790.391.

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The paper presents a study of a thermal assessment of an Organic Rankine Cycle (ORC) energized by heat absorbed from a parabolic trough collector (PTC) located in Derna, Libya. Both the ORC and PTC are modeled using the IPSEpro software. The simulation results are used to evaluate the system performance using energy and exergy analysis. The study showed the PTC collector was the main contributor of the energy and exergy losses within the PTC system and the evaporator within in the ORC. At this specific weather conditions, the ORC was able to produce about 3 MW electrical powers from the powered PTC heat. Moreover, exergy efficiency of the PTC was 47.7 %, the heat engine was 23.3 % and for the overall system (PTC and ORC) was 11.1 %.
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Wright, J. "Colonial and Early Post-Colonial Libya." Libyan Studies 20 (January 1989): 221–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0263718900006725.

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Libya at the beginning of this century had little to offer the would-be imperialist and coloniser. The true value of Turkey's last remaining African possessions was not — despite the insistence of the Italian nationalist lobby — as a settler-colony or as a gateway to the largely illusory wealth of central Africa, but as a strategic base on the central Mediterranean. The general poverty of Ottoman Tripolitania and Cyrenaica was reflected indeed in the poverty of the literature in any language on contemporary Libya.But growing Italian interest in these territories, by 1900 almost the last parts of Africa unclaimed by any European power, generated a series of books and articles by an imperialist-nationalist lobby eager to prove the case that Italy's political, strategic, economic and social wellbeing depended on the immediate possession of Turkish North Africa. Such writings naturally generated a rather less voluminous counter-flow of material, mainly from socialist sources, putting the opposite and (as events were to prove) essentially more realistic case.The outbreak of the Italo-Turkish war in September 1911 and the subsequent Italian occupation of bridgeheads at Tripoli, Horns, Benghazi, Derna and Tobruk first brought Libya to the notice of the international press. The British correspondents who reported one or other side of the conflict subsequently produced a number of surprisingly partisan books about the war and their own adventures in it, but had very much less to say about the little-understood country and its people. With the sudden end of the war in 1912 and the outbreak of more serious fighting in the Balkans, interest in Libya quickly waned. For the next 30 years nearly all the relevant literature was to be provided by Italians, in Italian and written from a purely Italian point of view — some of it later to be destroyed in the antifascist and anti-imperialist reaction from 1943 onwards.
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Fabbricotti, Emanuela. "Thomas Ashby e la Libia." Libyan Studies 32 (2001): 115–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0263718900005811.

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AbstractThomas Ashby was a very well-known British archaeologist of the beginning of last century. He travelled a lot and left to the British School at Rome, of which he was the first student, many albums of photographs. Some of them have been recently published. This article deals with the trip to Libya by sea made in May 1910. He took photographs of Derna, Benghazi and Tripoli with general views of them. Of course, the panorama is now changed, but it is interesting to note some features which are nowadays lost, like the Turkish castle at Benghazi, or the arch of Marcus Aurelius at Tripoli still obstructed by later buildings, or the ‘modern’ technology of the radio masts at Derna.
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Elzahaf, RagaA, and Soad Ajroud. "Prevalence and indication of cesarean section in Al-Wahda Hospital, Derna, Libya: A retrospective study." Libyan Journal of Medical Sciences 2, no. 2 (2018): 68. http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/ljms.ljms_7_18.

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Elzahaf, RagaA, AshrafS Elzer, and Sakina Edwebi. "Oral health practices, knowledge, and attitudes among primary schoolchildren in Derna City, Libya: A cross-sectional survey." International Journal of Pedodontic Rehabilitation 4, no. 2 (2019): 41. http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/ijpr.ijpr_8_19.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Libye – Derna (Libye)"

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Eljarba, Elhusian. "Réalité et avenir des villes historiques face au processus d'urbanisation moderne : étude de cas de Derna et des villes littorales." Thesis, Tours, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017TOUR1801/document.

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Depuis les années 1960, les villes en Libye ont connu des changements politiques, spatiaux et économiques importants, notamment après la découverte du pétrole, qui a permis une grande opération de modernisation urbaine. De ce fait, de nouvelles structures urbaines ont été installées plus ou moins près des villes traditionnelles, menaçant ainsi leurs structures et fonctions fragiles. Après une longue période de dégradation et de mutation économique et socioculturelle dans la plupart des médinas en Libye, la situation actuelle se traduit par une rupture urbaine spectaculaire qui caractérise la majorité des centres-villes libyens, et par une menace pour l’existence des médinas. D’autre part, la notion de conservation et de sauvegarde du patrimoine des médinas est relativement nouvelle en Libye. En effet, ce n’est qu’au début des années 1990 que les autorités libyennes ont commencé à prendre certaines actions concrètes face à l'état dégradé des médinas. En dépit de ces actions différées et limitées dans le temps et l'espace, la situation dégradée des médinas a perduré. Dans ce contexte, le thème de cette thèse porte sur la question du patrimoine des médinas libyennes en général, et de la médina de Derna en particulier. L’objectif de cette recherche est de déterminer le contexte général du patrimoine, d’évaluer l’état réel des médinas et ensuite de formuler les conditions permettant l’émergence d’un processus de sauvegarde équilibré, approprié et durable pour la vieille ville de Derna
Since the 60s, cities in Libya have known political, spatial and economic changes, especially after the discovery of oil, which has enabled a large urban modernization operation. Therefore, new urban structures have been developed relatively close to the old cities, thus threatening their fragile structures and functions. After a long period of degradation and of economic, socio-cultural change in most of Libyan old cities, the current situation is reflected in a dramatic urban break which characterizes Libyan cities, and, in a threat to the existence of all the ancient quarters. On the other hand, the concept of conservation and safeguarding of the medina’s heritage is relatively new in Libya. Indeed, it was not until the early 90s that the Libyan authorities began to take some concrete actions against the degraded situation of the ancient cities. In spite of these actions delayed and limited in time and space, the deteriorated situation of the old cities has continued as such. In this context, the subject of this research focuses on the question of the heritage of Libyan old cities and, in particular, of the old city of Derna, in an attempt to identify the general context of urban heritage of the old cities, to assess the real situation, and then to formulate the aspects and the conditions for the emergence of a balanced, appropriate and sustainable process of conservation
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Elhisadi, Tawfeg A. A. "Nutrition, lifestyle and diabetes-risk of school children in Derna, Libya." Giessen VVB Laufersweiler, 2009. http://geb.uni-giessen.de/geb/volltexte/2010/7363/index.html.

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Elhisadi, Tawfeg A. A. [Verfasser]. "Nutrition, lifestyle and diabetes-risk of school children in Derna, Libya / eingereicht von Tawfeg A. A. Elhisadi." Giessen : VVB Laufersweiler, 2010. http://d-nb.info/1001133528/34.

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Books on the topic "Libye – Derna (Libye)"

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Ashour, Omar. How ISIS Fights. Edinburgh University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474438216.001.0001.

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How can a widely hated, massively outnumbered and ludicrously outgunned organisation expands to occupy over 120 cities, towns and villages from the Southern Philippines to Western Libya? How can it endure and survive a military coalition of over 150 armed state and nonstate actors? How did ISIS/IS and their predecessors fight? And how can we account for their combat effectiveness? This book describes and analyses how ISIS/IS fights in Iraq, Syria, Libya and Egypt. It analyses the military-making of ISIS/IS and their predecessors. The analysis focuses on 17 urban battles in Fallujah, Mosul, Ramadi, Raqqa (City and Governorate), Derna, Sirte and Northeastern Sinai. The book is based on fieldwork, dozens of interviews with soldiers and fighters who engaged ISIS/IS and their predecessors, and hundreds of ISIS/IS combat-relevant publications, audio- and video-releases. The findings contribute to our understanding of insurgencies’ combat effectiveness and offer insights on how ISIS/IS, like-minded organisations, and other armed nonstate actors may or will fight in the future.
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Reid, Chipp. To the Walls of Derne: William Eaton, the Tripoli Coup, and the End of the First Barbary War. Naval Institute Press, 2017.

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Book chapters on the topic "Libye – Derna (Libye)"

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Ashour, Omar. "Reloads, but Implodes: How the ‘Islamic State’ Fights in Libya." In How ISIS Fights, 126–59. Edinburgh University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474438216.003.0004.

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This chapter provides a historical overview of the birth of “Islamic State” in Libya, as of 22 June 2014. It aims to explain how the organisation was able to gradually develop their combat capacities in Libya since then. As a result of this, ISIS was able to take control of parts of Derna in October 2014, and the whole of Sirte by the end of May 2015. The occupations happened despite a lack of local support, state sponsorship or supportive geography. The chapter focuses on analysing the battlefronts of Derna and Sirte between June 2015 and December 2016, as a sample reflecting how IS fights in Libya. The chapter is partly based on interviews with soldiers and militiamen who fought against IS in the aforementioned battlefronts. It is also based on documents produced by ISIS in Libya, represented by two of its three former ‘provinces’: Cyrenaica and Tripolitania. The chapter also relies on official documents released by the US government, and on other open-source materials. The chapter is composed of six sections. First, it overviews the military build-up of IS in Libya since June 2014. Then, it outlines the details of the battlefronts of Derna and Sirte within specific timeframes. After that, it analyses how IS fights in Libya, using empirical data and observations from the two battlefronts and elsewhere in Libya. Finally, the concluding section reflects on the future of IS insurgency in Libya, after losing territory and shifting back to guerrilla and terrorism ways of warfare.
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Conference papers on the topic "Libye – Derna (Libye)"

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"The Poly Cyclic Hydrocarbons levels In Some Fishes Tissues Collected From Derna City ( LIBYA) Coast." In International Conference on Chemical, Agricultural and Medical Sciences. International Institute of Chemical, Biological & Environmental Engineering, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.15242/iicbe.c514080.

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Rajab, Zakariya, Mohamed Almaktar, Naser Al-Naily, Saad M. Saad, and Faisal A. Mohamed. "Modeling approach to evaluate wind turbine performance: Case study for a single wind turbine of 1.65 MW in Dernah Libya." In 2017 8th International Renewable Energy Congress (IREC). IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/irec.2017.7925990.

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