Academic literature on the topic 'New South Meeting House'

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Journal articles on the topic "New South Meeting House"

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Kelly, Clare. "The Vanishing Acheron House of Refuge. A Case of "Frontier Chaos"?" Architectural History Aotearoa 7 (October 30, 2010): 28–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.26686/aha.v7i.6788.

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The Acheron House of Refuge built between 1863 and 1864 near the junction of the Guide River with the Acheron River in the South Island high country was one of a chain of accommodation houses on the Inland Stock Route between Nelson and Canterbury. In 1865 the Nelson Provincial Engineer John Blackett wrote to the Nelson Provincial Government that he feared "the entire destruction of the house without the possibility of it being prevented" and blamed "the character of some of the travellers who pass this road." By the end of 1865, it was destroyed without trace. This paper considers incidents of lawlessness at the accommodation houses in the mid 1860s and the brief existence of the Acheron House of Refuge. It questions whether its demise was the result of "frontier chaos," a term which was first used by historian Miles Fairburn in 1989 to describe how rapid frontier expansion in New Zealand had scattered settlers and engendered transience, loneliness and lawlessness. Using settler diaries, letters and manuscripts this paper considers Fairburn's "frontier chaos" theory. It examines his assertions that in the New Zealand settler world prior to 1890 "seldom ... were goods and services exchanged," and that an atomised New Zealand settler society had "no institutions ... to facilitate mixing and meeting" (Fairburn "Local Community or Atomised Society?" pp 169-170,192,195,206,217). This paper concludes that incidents of lawlessness at the accommodation houses were linked to the South Island gold rushes, were short term and often the result of ill-prepared men desperate to survive in an unforgiving climate. At the accommodation houses on the Nelson to Canterbury Inland Stock Route travellers, keepers and neighbours shared an unwritten code of reciprocity. These accommodation houses formed the unofficial nuclei of small, loose-knit high country communities.
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Jones, Clyve. "The new opposition in the house of lords, 1720–3." Historical Journal 36, no. 2 (June 1993): 309–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x00019257.

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ABSTRACTThis article looks at the membership and organization of the opposition that emerged in the house of lords between 1720 and 1723 under the leadership of William, 1st Earl Cowper. The origin of this new opposition lay in the political reaction to the extensive corruption exposed by the bursting of the South Sea Bubble, which brought together a coalition of dissident whigs and tones (both Hanoverian tories and Jacobites) who proceeded to attack the ministries of the earl of Sunderland and of Viscount Townshend and Robert Walpole for their supposed corrupt administration. The hallmark of the new opposition was the extensive campaign of protests against the opposition's defeat in votes, protests which were entered (with reasons) into the Journals of the House, and which were then published in the form of broadsheets, pamphlets, and newsletters as propaganda in an appeal to public opinion. This was the first time an opposition had indulged in an extensive and sustained campaign of influencing the public outside Westminster. This campaign required a high level of organization. This Cowper provided in imitation of some of the new management techniques being developed by the ministry to control the house of lords, plus a new feature – the daily pre-sitting meetings of the leadership to concert tactics. The legacy of the new opposition was the preservation of the concept of a loyal opposition as an acceptable part of British political life.
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Isnaini Varidah Uswanas. "Government Communication Strategy in The Establisment of New Aotonomous Regoin in The Papua." PERSPEKTIF 12, no. 1 (January 10, 2023): 46–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.31289/perspektif.v12i1.8098.

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The government and the house of representatives of the Republic of Indonesia have approved the establishment of new autonomous regions namely South Papua Province, Central Papua Province, and Papua Mountains Province. The plenary meeting of parliament was set up on 30 July 2022. This establishment of 3 (three) provinces is accommodated in Law Number 2 of 2021 concerning special autonomy for Papua. Before the law was revised, the authority to form a new autonomous region was proposed by The Papuan People’s Assembly or Majelis Rakyat Papua and The Papuan People’s Representative Council or Dewan Perwakilan Rakyat Papua. This research aims to study the government’s communication strategy in conveying the goals of establishing the new autonomous regions in Papua. This study uses a descriptive analysis approach. Data was collected through interviews with informants involved in the formation of new autonomous regions and Papua community leaders. Secondary data was collected from media publication, official government websites, scientific publication, and reports. Laswell’s communication model is used for the evaluation of the government’s communication strategy. The study recommends that the government’s communication strategy should be more intensive through the ministry of home affairs to local government affected by the establishment new provinces, group communication between government and indigenous group, and interpersonal communication among Papuan’s elites who can influence public perception
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Flanagan, Brian, and Sinéad Ahern. "JUDICIAL DECISION-MAKING AND TRANSNATIONAL LAW: A SURVEY OF COMMON LAW SUPREME COURT JUDGES." International and Comparative Law Quarterly 60, no. 1 (January 2011): 1–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0020589310000655.

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AbstractThis is a survey study of 43 judges from the British House of Lords, the Caribbean Court of Justice, the High Court of Australia, the Constitutional Court of South Africa, and the Supreme Courts of Ireland, India, Israel, Canada, New Zealand and the United States on the use of foreign law in constitutional rights cases. We find that the conception of apex judges citing foreign law as a source of persuasive authority (associated with Anne-Marie Slaughter, Vicki Jackson and Chris McCrudden) is of limited application. Citational opportunism and the aspiration to membership of an emerging international ‘guild’ appear to be equally important strands in judicial attitudes towards foreign law. We argue that their presence is at odds with Ronald Dworkin's theory of legal objectivity, and is revealed in a manner meeting his own methodological standard for attitudinal research.Wordsworth's words, written about the French Revolution, will, I hope, still ring true: Bliss was it in that dawn to be alive. But to be young was very heaven.– Justice Stephen Breyer's assessment of ‘the global legal enterprise now upon us’ before the American Society of International Law (2003)
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Savila, Fa’asisila, Paea Leakehe, Warwick Bagg, Matire Harwood, Dave Letele, Anele Bamber, Boyd Swinburn, and Felicity Goodyear-Smith. "Understanding engagement with Brown Buttabean Motivation, an Auckland grassroots, Pacific-led holistic health programme: a qualitative study." BMJ Open 12, no. 4 (April 2022): e059854. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2021-059854.

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ObjectivesThe aim was to understand how participants engage with Brown Buttabean Motivation (BBM) a grassroots, Pacific-led holistic health programme and the meaning it has in their lives. The objectives were to explore the impact BBM had on all aspects of their health and well-being, what attracted them, why they stayed, identify possible enablers and barriers to engagement, and understand impact of COVID-19 restrictions.DesignQualitative study with thematic analysis of semi-structured interviews of BBM participants, followed by theoretical deductive analysis of coded data guided by Pacific Fonofale and Māori Te Whare Tapa Whā health models. In this meeting-house metaphor, floor is family, roof is culture, house-posts represent physical, mental, spiritual and sociodemographic health and well-being, with surroundings of environment, time and context.SettingInterviews of BBM members conducted in South Auckland, New Zealand, 2020.Participants22 interviewees (50% female) aged 24–60 years of mixed Pacific and Māori ethnicities with a mixture of regular members, attendees of the programme for those morbidly obese and trainers.ResultsTwo researchers independently coded data with adjudication and kappa=0.61 between coders. Participants identified the interactive holistic nature of health and well-being. As well as physical, mental and spiritual benefits, BBM helped many reconnect with both their family and their culture.ConclusionsBBM’s primary aim is weight-loss motivation. Many weight loss studies provide programmes to improve physical exercise and nutrition, but seldom address sustainability and other core factors such as mental health. Programmes are often designed by researchers or authorities. BBM is a community-embedded intervention, with no reliance external authorities for its ongoing implementation. It addresses many factors impacting participants’ lives and social determinants of health as well as its core business of exercise and diet change. Our results indicate that BBM’s holistic approach and responsiveness to perceived community needs may contribute to its sustained success.
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Tyler, Linda. ""The hours and times of your desire": Sholto Smith's romantic vision for Colwyn (1925)." Architectural History Aotearoa 8 (January 1, 2011): 58–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.26686/aha.v8i.7101.

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Early in 1920, French-born architect Sholto Smith (1881-1936) decided to abandon his Moose Jaw practice, and his Canadian wife and family, and emigrate to New Zealand. His decision seems to have been precipitated by a memorable encounter with a woman who would later become a celebrated pianist for the Auckland radio station 1YA, Phyllis Mary Hams (1895-1974). Sholto Smith had met Hams during World War I while he was on leave from the Canadian Expeditionary Force and visiting Colwyn Bay, North Wales. Sholto Smith's major contribution to Arts and Crafts Auckland, the house he designed as a gift for Phyllis Hams on the occasion of their marriage on 3 March 1925, was named Colwyn to memorialise their Welsh meeting place. Despite only living in New Zealand for his last 16 years, Sholto Smith left a legacy of over 100 buildings. Colwyn was a well-placed advertisement for his domestic architecture, and his Arts and Crafts and Tudor house designs were soon in great demand throughout the building boom of the 1920s. Smith had arrived in Auckland on 17 March 1920 and immediately joined the practice of Thomas Coulthard Mullions (1878-1957) and C Fleming McDonald. The latter had been the architect of the original Masonic Hotel in Napier (1897), and the firm originally specialised in hotels and commercial architecture using modern materials including reinforced concrete, but dressing the modernist structure with historicist references. Several of their inner-city Auckland buildings such as the Waitemata and Manukau Council building on the corner of Shortland and Princes Street, Chancery Chambers in O'Connell Street and the Lister building on the corner of Victoria and Lorne Streets, still survive. After McDonald's death, Sholto Smith became a partner in the firm and encouraged Thomas Mullions to move into residential property development in central Auckland: Shortland Flats (1922) was a commercial venture where the architects formed a company owning shares in the building which comprised 24 flats designed to generate rental income. But detached suburban domestic architecture was Sholto Smith's real passion. Before leaving Canada for fresh beginnings in New Zealand, he drew an architectural perspective for his ideal home. He titled this drawing Dreamwold, and his vision for this ideal house was to be realised in Auckland at 187 St Heliers Bay Road. For this house design, Sholto Smith drew inspiration from Canadian colleagues such as British Columbian architect Samuel Maclure (1860-1929) and from the British masters of the Arts and Crafts Movement including CFA Voysey (1857-1951) and MH Baillie Scott (1865-1945). Colwyn is reminiscent of the latter's Corrie Wood (1908) in Letchworth Garden City, Hertfordshire in its adventurous open planning. A little bit of Olde Englande recreated in the South Pacific for his homesick new wife, Colwyn was Sholto Smith's perfect Dreamwold, right down to the text on the wooden mantelpiece over the fireplace. The quote inscribed there is taken from the beginning of Shakespeare's sonnet 57, and seems addressed by Smith to his 30-year-old bride: "Being your slave, what should I do but tend upon the hours and times of your desire?" Epitomising the romantic archetype, Colwyn remains a fine example of the type of Arts and Crafts dwelling that well-to-do Aucklanders aspired to inhabit in the 1920s.
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Cavanaugh, William J., and Christopher Storch. "Old South Meeting House, Boston, MA." Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 119, no. 5 (May 2006): 3371. http://dx.doi.org/10.1121/1.4786561.

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Shepard, Roy. "New England Meeting House." Theology Today 61, no. 4 (January 2005): 540–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/004057360506100412.

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Franco, Barbara, Cynthia Stone, Jeff Kennedy Associates, and Paul Weinbaum. ""In Prayer & Protest: Old South Meeting House Remembers,"." Journal of American History 76, no. 1 (June 1989): 196. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1908363.

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Low, Iain. "House/Home: Dwelling in the New South Africa." Architectural Design 75, no. 5 (September 2005): 38–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ad.134.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "New South Meeting House"

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April, Tandeka. "Assessing the 'breaking new ground in housing' policy of South Africa in meeting the objectives of community participation." Thesis, Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/10948/d1008400.

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Community participation is an important aspect of South African government policies that deal with integrated development planning and sustainable development. This report presents aspects of community participation in infrastructure delivery and in particular housing in Reeston which is part of the Duncan Village Redevelopment Initiative in East London area of the Buffalo City Metropolitan Municipality. The importance of community participation is acknowledged as it enhances the ability of the community members to demonstrate and use their own views to deal with specific issues and to address the needs and problems that emerge and prevail in their societies. The two emerging paradigms of community participation suggest that the participating communities should be involved in the ‘selection, design, planning and implementation’ of projects that will have an effect on them and from which they are going to benefit ; and that continuous feedback to communities forms a fundamental part of any development activity. This report explores how the “Breaking New Ground in Housing” (BNG) policy of the South African Government meets its objectives in the context of community participation.
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Anderson, Jennifer K. "Dogtrots in New Orleans: An Urban Adaptation to a Rural House Type." ScholarWorks@UNO, 2013. http://scholarworks.uno.edu/td/1604.

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The dogtrot house type is an important type of vernacular architecture in the American landscape, particularly in rural areas of the southern United States. Little is formally written or known about the dogtrot type houses in New Orleans, which appear to be a unique evolution of the rural dogtrot form specifically adapted for the urban environment. This thesis examines the existing literature regarding the dogtrot house type and analyzes the architectural history of the remaining dogtrot type homes in New Orleans in order to establish that they are correctly classified, and also to investigate any possible links with rural dogtrots. The findings promotes awareness of the dogtrot house type in the urban setting, and contribute to the larger picture of vernacular architectural adaptation in the United States. Further, this thesis lays the foundation for landmarking the 16 remaining dogtrots in New Orleans.
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Lofthouse, Pamela. "THE HISTORY AND HERITAGE OF SEMI-DETACHED DWELLINGS IN NEW SOUTH WALES 1788-1980." Thesis, The University of Sydney, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/15797.

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The semi-detached house (colloquially known as a semi) is a common, yet ordinary dwelling type in New South Wales. Buildings containing a pair of dwellings attached by a party wall have generally been overlooked by Australian architectural historians, and semis are poorly represented in the statutory heritage registers within New South Wales. Many semis which are listed appear to have heritage significance arising only from their aesthetics – their resemblance to two attached Victorian terraced houses. This study seeks to show that semis are a dwelling type which is distinct from both terraced houses and detached dwellings. It traces the development of the semi from its roots as a rural double cottage in Britain to its place within the colonial dwelling hierarchy. By analysing the social, economic and political factors which have influenced the development of housing in New South Wales, the study shows how the semi became the ideal vehicle for the speculative builders who provided private rental housing for lower middle class tenants in the suburbs and towns of the state after Federation. The form fell from favour during the interwar period, but during the latter part of the twentieth century semis once again became a pragmatic use of residential land, and a popular dwelling type. The role of architects in this development is examined, and the way in which the garden city movement facilitated the transition of the semi down the social scale into working class public housing. The attitudes towards semis and terraced houses between the wars are compared, with new evidence provided for why no new terraces were constructed in New South Wales after the First World War. The post-Second World War regulatory framework, including rent control and de facto subdivision, is shown to have transformed the stock of semis from being respectable investments for widows and spinsters into a way for lower middle class tenants to participate in the Great Australian Dream of home ownership. Based on the evidence of the social and historical factors underpinning the development of semis in New South Wales, the study challenges the view that semis have no heritage or cultural value other than some limited aesthetic value. An assessment of significance gives rise to a discussion about how the community and heritage professionals perceive the heritage value of modest, suburban buildings. The vexed question of whether semis are worthy of conservation is considered, as well as the threats posed by unsympathetic alterations and additions. While change is inevitable, it is hoped that if the history and heritage of their semis is better understood, owners may make more appropriate choices when implementing those changes.
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Jefferson, Miranda. "Film learning as aesthetic experience: Dwelling in the house of possibility." Thesis, The University of Sydney, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/8587.

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Abstract Drama is an ancient art form and progressive pedagogy in education. It is the collective act of imagining and seeing ourselves in action, in the moment, towards a destiny. Film is a modern art form and an evolving pedagogy in schools. Narratives in moving pictures are a dramatic form of mediated communication. This research concerns drama teachers’ experiences with screen drama and filmmaking pedagogy. In a rapidly digitised world, mediated forms of communication through technology are a vital source of social connectivity, information and storytelling. Information and Communication Technology (ICT) integration in education is a response to the digital culture but the integration has been likened to the ‘hammer in search of a nail’. ICT in education is demanding the development of pedagogies that connect a deep understanding of technology, curriculum outcomes and teacher professional learning. This research is concerned with exploring and developing best practice in a creative and critical pedagogy for moving pictures as aesthetic learning in schools. Drama teachers as teachers of aesthetic, embodied, collaborative and narrative learning are uniquely placed to respond to and critique the development of an authentic and effective pedagogy for film narrative. The school and curriculum structures and resources to support film learning are also examined through the drama teachers’ experiences. The research is praxis-oriented and uses a montage of interpretive practices in a collective case study to explore in depth six teachers’ experience with film learning. The study’s design involves the facilitation of film learning workshops and explores the participants’ aspirations, expectations and realisations for film learning in their schools. The participants’ experiences highlight the problems, possibilities and opportunities of film learning as aesthetic learning and raise issues about the role of and tensions with arts pedagogy as a learning paradigm in schools and the curriculum. The teachers’ stories reflect an educational culture, leadership and curriculum structure that does not necessarily allow, support or develop on-going professional learning and teacher innovation for authentic student learning.
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Bařinová, Anna. "Nová Jižní čtvrť a její propojení s řekou Svratkou." Master's thesis, Vysoké učení technické v Brně. Fakulta stavební, 2019. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-402987.

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Despite a few decades of discussion and the existence of all the studies on the transfer of the Brno Main Station to the river and the subsequent construction of the new Trnitá district, it has not been decided on the exact architectural form of these major urban interventions. In my pre-diploma thesis, I worked out an urban study of a new southern district - Trnitá, which gave above all a functional and mass form of the territory. This location will be extremely interesting for both the city's visitors, who will be moving from the station to the center, and of course for the potential new residents of the district. The district offers a unique combination of city life and recreation in the immediate vicinity of the natural river and park features. For a more detailed elaboration, I chose a building within a walk-through block by a river consisting of two buildings. My goal was to create a new scenery for what's happening in the neighborhood, to design new scenarios for how we can look at blocks. Given the contact with the waterfront and the river, I decided to propose both private and public functions. An important role is played by the courtyard, which defines a private space (a raised platform intended only for the residents of the house) and a public space - a creative center courtyard using a raised part as a residence bench. The mass of the house is horizontally divided into two parts. The first and second floors belong to the creative center, which is transparent with distinctive stone columns. An important goal was to show the life and movement of the center and its openness to new people and ideas - access from the yard. From the third floor there are apartments that are terraced and offer views of the river and roof terraces of deluxe apartments.
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Books on the topic "New South Meeting House"

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Maisy, Stapleton, ed. Australia's first parliament, Parliament House, New South Wales. [Sydney, N.S.W.]: Parliament NSW, 1987.

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Te whare rūnanga =: The Māori meeting house. Auckland [N.Z.]: Reed, 1997.

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The US-South Korea alliance: Meeting new security challenges. Boulder, Colo: Lynne Rienner Publishers, 2012.

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Richard, Holmes. A view from Meeting House Hill: A history of Sandown, New Hampshire. Portsmouth, N.H: P.E. Randall, 1988.

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Broadbent, James. The Australian colonial house: Architecture and society in New South Wales, 1788-1842. Potts Point, N.S.W: Hordern House in association with the Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, and supported by the Friends of the Historic Houses Trust, 1997.

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E, McDonough Susan, Williamson Ashley D, and National Risk Management Research Laboratory (U.S.), eds. Effectiveness of radon control features in new house construction [in] south central Florida. Washington, DC: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Research and Development, 1996.

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Nadine, Gordimer. The house gun. New York: Picador, 2012.

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New Jersey. Legislature. Senate. Special New Jersey Highway Authority Investigation Committee. and New Jersey. Office of Legislative Services. Public Information Office. Hearing Unit., eds. Committee meeting before Senate Special New Jersey Highway Authority Investigation Committee: Organizational meeting, January 28, 1988, Room 334, State House Annex, Trenton, New Jersey. Trenton, N.J. (State House Annex, CN 068, Trenton 08625): The Committee, 1988.

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South Pacific Regional Environment Programme., ed. Report of the meeting of officials, Noumea, New Caledonia, 3-5 July 1991. Noumea, New Caledonia: South Pacific Regional Environment Programme, 1991.

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New Jersey. Citizens' Clean Elections Commission. Commission meeting of New Jersey Citizens' Clean Elections Commission: Initial organizational meeting : Prospect House, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey, March 2, 2005, 3:00 p.m. Trenton, N.J: Office of Legislative Services, Public Information Office, Hearing Unit, 2005.

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Book chapters on the topic "New South Meeting House"

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Hamill, James. "The ANC Perspective: Meeting Expectations?" In The New South Africa, 59–102. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-26660-9_4.

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Sitto, Karabo. "The Role of Interpersonal Communication in Re-identity of Voluntary Economic Migrants Living in South Africa." In IMISCOE Research Series, 185–200. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-92114-9_13.

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AbstractThis chapter highlights the growth of voluntary movement of labour force through globalisations and resultant pressure on economies to compete with one another. In this global economic environment, demand to acquire access to those individuals with critical professional skills has grown, thus opening up opportunities for individuals to move to recruiting countries and employer organisations across the globe. This has been evidenced by the exponential rise of degreed migrants in comparison to low-skilled migrants. These voluntary economic migrants, are individuals with some university education, with special professional skills who choose to move to a destination country for professional opportunities. Adapting to a new social context or setting involves overcoming social representation barriers arising from acculturation schismogenesis and the discussion highlights the similarities of such individuals to other migrants. The challenge for individual migrants is in working to reconstruct their identities in their transnational context to build themselves a new social reality through stabilising schism arising from their transnational social representations meeting. Eleven voluntary economic migrants’ interpersonal online and offline communication was analysed using three sets of data and arranged into themes related to their process of re-identity. The chapter concludes with a discussion on the implications of such skilled individuals being unable to reconstruct and stabilise their identity in their new context on recruiting countries, namely financial cost and loss of critical skills.
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Graham, Maryemma. "Get Her Out of the South." In The House Where My Soul Lives, 65—C4.F5. Oxford University PressNew York, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195341232.003.0004.

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Abstract This chapter focuses on Margaret Walker’s years at New Orleans University. For Walker, writing poetry was something she did, but the idea of writing poetry as a career evolved slowly. By the time Margaret turned sixteen, her parents had come to understand three things: their daughter was exceptionally bright; she was determined to have her way; and, finally, whatever career path she chose, it would have something to do with her writing. Walker had begun her college studies just as NOU launched a successful campaign to bring in the best Negro students from throughout Louisiana. NOU was an important experiment in interracial cooperation. The chapter then looks at the meeting between Walker and Langston Hughes, who advised her to “get out of the South.” This turning point in her life reveals much about the importance she placed on literary influence as she began to define her place in the world of art and imagination. Later, Walker was asked to write something for the Colored Juvenile Delinquent Rescue Association of New Orleans. Entitled “What Is to Become of Us?,” the essay was aimed at the students who were graduating. Walker seems to be saying that too much of the wrong kind of education is a bad thing for the race; she then makes the connection to Black business and economic growth, and secondarily to individual achievement.
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Graham, Maryemma. "Colleagues and Comrades." In The House Where My Soul Lives, 130—C8.F2. Oxford University PressNew York, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195341232.003.0008.

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Abstract This chapter illustrates how, almost two months after she had begun working at the Writers’ Project, Margaret Walker received a postcard inviting her to the organizing meeting for a group of Negro writers. The card was signed “Richard Wright.” Although they were now coworkers, most of what she knew about Wright came from conversations with others rather than with him. She doubted if he had remembered her from the American Writers Congress meeting where Langston Hughes had introduced them, but she was nonetheless pleased to be identified as part of a group who would soon have its own moniker, “South Side Writers.” Walker connected immediately to Wright’s ideas, after having discovered the power in his prose. In his view, the network of Black intellectuals at the Writers’ Project had an opportunity to envision a different context in which Negro writing could develop. The John Reed Club was the model for the South Side Writers Group, and, in Wright’s view, the ideal of communism did not necessarily have to be unifying factor among them. What communism did for him in part was to demonstrate the importance of collective work.
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"Old South Meeting House 1729." In Boston's Oldest Buildings and Where to Find Them, 65–68. Brandeis University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv1h7zmn7.21.

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West, E. James. "A Meeting Place for All the People." In A House for the Struggle, 115–46. University of Illinois Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.5622/illinois/9780252044328.003.0005.

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This chapter explores how, following their respective moves to South Michigan Avenue, the offices of the Chicago Defender and Johnson Publishing Company became key sites in the urban geography of Black America. As community centers, art galleries, meeting spaces, and tourist hotspots, these buildings welcomed all manner of people, ranging from local schoolchildren to African heads of state. In doing so, they expanded the goal of Defender founder Robert Abbott for his publication’s offices to become “the meeting place of all the people.”
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"Huizhou House Firms." In The Making of a New Rural Order in South China, 308–83. Cambridge University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/9781107261471.007.

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Graham, Maryemma. "Brave New World." In The House Where My Soul Lives, 109—C7.F1. Oxford University PressNew York, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195341232.003.0007.

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Abstract This chapter talks about Margaret Walker’s decision to stay in Chicago. Perhaps because she had come to know the South through her symbolic imagination as a child and through the imaginary world her grandmother created for her, Walker came to understand the Black experience in two ways: both tragic and romantic, a sacred spirituality and a secular humanism, filled with anguish and exultation. Or perhaps because she was seldom witness to the severe degradation that so often described life in the South, she could more easily transmute those feelings. In any case, coming to Northwestern University as a child and leaving as a young poet opened up new possibilities. She began to think of herself as a “struggling artist.” Not for an instant did she regret her decision to stay in Chicago, even when she found it impossible to get work. She found a dynamic Black culture, with Negro artists, writers, actors, painters, dancers, sculptors, and musicians who, like her, were young and filled with a sense of limitless possibilities, talking endlessly about a future of fame and fortune.
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Goswami, Amrita. "‘New Bollywood’ and the emergence of a ‘Production House’ culture." In South Asian Creative and Cultural Industries, 51–63. Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003008002-5.

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Lloyd, Jane F. "A New Reconstruction of the South House at Knossos." In Amilla, 103–34. INSTAP Academic Press (Institute for Aegean Prehistory), 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctt5vj90s.16.

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Conference papers on the topic "New South Meeting House"

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Stielau, Karl. "An Investigation into the Performance of First Year Students in Mathematics and Statistics as a South African University." In Proceedings of the First Scientific Meeting of the IASE. International Association for Statistical Education, 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.52041/srap.93208.

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Statistics departments, and indeed universities, in South Africa are at present in a considerable state of flux. If one examines the state of tertiary education in South Africa (S.A. henceforth) ten years ago the changes are evident to even a casual observer. Although for many years the traditionally liberal campuses have defied apartheid legislation in formulating admission policies, it is a fairly recent phenomenon that universities such as Natal, Cape Town, Rhodes and Witwatersrand have clearly stated their intention (often as a Mission Statement) to make both the student body and the staff correspond as closely as possible to the community in which each university finds itself. This has resulted in a long overdue change in the type of applicants for entrance, and in particular to Statistics courses, that these bodies receive. In Natal the position is exacerbated by the large number of school education departments that issue matriculation certificates to school leavers; these are meant to allow the individual to enter a university without further examination. The proliferation of such departments is a glaring legacy of apartheid and their incorporation into a single education department appears certain under a new political dispensation. During 1991 and 1992 the Statistics & Biometry Dept. at the University of Natal admitted students from: Natal Education Dept.; Department of Education and Training; KwaZulu Education Dept.; Joint Matriculation Board; House of Representatives; House of Delegates; Cape, Transvaal and Orange Free State Education Dept.'s; as well as a large number of "homeland" departments, such as Ciskei, Transkei, Venda, Bophutatswana and adjoining states, in particular Zimbabwe.
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Elliott, Lilly, Isabel Martinez, Engil Pereira, Robin Choudhury, and Hannah Penn. "HOUSE HUNTING: HARVESTER ANT (POGONOMYRMEX BARBATUS) COLONIES IN AN URBAN GRADIENT." In South-Central Section - 56th Annual Meeting - 2022. Geological Society of America, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2022sc-374497.

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Diehl, Brian C. "STRATIGRAPHY AND DEPOSITIONAL ENVIRONMENT OF SAUROPOD DINOSAUR TRACK SITES, LOWER CRETACEOUS GLEN ROSE FORMATION, COW HOUSE CREEK CENTRAL TEXAS." In 50th Annual GSA South-Central Section Meeting. Geological Society of America, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2016sc-273227.

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Spielmann, Justin A., Justin A. Spielmann, and Spencer G. Lucas. "TRIASSIC STRATIGRAPHY SOUTH OF LAMY, NEW MEXICO." In 2008 New Mexico Geological Society Annual Spring Meeting. Socorro, NM: New Mexico Geological Society, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.56577/sm-2008.906.

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Bunker, Catherine, Lydia Schiavo Tackett, Annaka Clement, and Emily Jackson. "LATE TRIASSIC FORAMINIFERA FROM SOUTH ISLAND AOTEAROA (NEW ZEALAND)." In GSA Connects 2022 meeting in Denver, Colorado. Geological Society of America, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2022am-383200.

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Benson, A. L., and R. Gervason. "Ground water geochemistry of the south Taos Valley." In 2011 New Mexico Geological Society Annual Spring Meeting. Socorro, NM: New Mexico Geological Society, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.56577/sm-2011.583.

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Schneider, Robert V., Subbarao Yelisetti, and Thomas McGehee. "INITIATION OF A NEW GEOPHYSICS DEGREE IN SOUTH TEXAS." In 52nd Annual GSA South-Central Section Meeting - 2018. Geological Society of America, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2018sc-310238.

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Johnson, Sally C. "CAMPANIAN (LATE CRETACEOUS) SELACHIAN FAUNA FROM THE CLIFF HOUSE SANDSTONE NEAR CUBA, NEW MEXICO." In 2004 New Mexico Geological Society Annual Spring Meeting. Socorro, NM: New Mexico Geological Society, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.56577/sm-2004.692.

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Shields, Jessica, and Kevin W. Stafford. "EVAPORITE KARST SPELEOGENESIS OF EDDY COUNTY, NEW MEXICO." In 51st Annual GSA South-Central Section Meeting - 2017. Geological Society of America, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2017sc-289129.

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Kent, Joshua D. "QUANTIFYING DIFFERENTIAL SUBSIDENCE RATES FROM CONTINUOUS GPS IN NEW ORLEANS EAST, LOUISIANA." In 50th Annual GSA South-Central Section Meeting. Geological Society of America, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2016sc-273861.

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Reports on the topic "New South Meeting House"

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L. Stephen Melzer. EVALUATION OF THE FLOOD POTENTIAL OF THE SOUTH HOUSE (BLINEBRY) FIELD, LEA COUNTY, NEW MEXICO. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), December 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/823668.

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Stanley, R. G., P. J. Haeussler, J. A. Benowitz, D. K. Goodman, R. L. Ravn, D. P. Shellenbaum, R. W. Saltus, K. A. Lewis, and C. J. Potter. New stratigraphic revelations in the subsurface Susitna basin, south-central Alaska, from geochronology and biostratigraphy [poster]: GSA Cordilleran Section Meeting, Fresno, CA, May 22, 2013. Alaska Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys, May 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.14509/26887.

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Microbiology in the 21st Century: Where Are We and Where Are We Going? American Society for Microbiology, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/aamcol.5sept.2003.

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The American Academy of Microbiology convened a colloquium September 5–7, 2003, in Charleston, South Carolina to discuss the central importance of microbes to life on earth, directions microbiology research will take in the 21st century, and ways to foster public literacy in this important field. Discussions centered on: the impact of microbes on the health of the planet and its inhabitants; the fundamental significance of microbiology to the study of all life forms; research challenges faced by microbiologists and the barriers to meeting those challenges; the need to integrate microbiology into school and university curricula; and public microbial literacy. This is an exciting time for microbiology. We are becoming increasingly aware that microbes are the basis of the biosphere. They are the ancestors of all living things and the support system for all other forms of life. Paradoxically, certain microbes pose a threat to human health and to the health of plants and animals. As the foundation of the biosphere and major determinants of human health, microbes claim a primary, fundamental role in life on earth. Hence, the study of microbes is pivotal to the study of all living things, and microbiology is essential for the study and understanding of all life on this planet. Microbiology research is changing rapidly. The field has been impacted by events that shape public perceptions of microbes, such as the emergence of globally significant diseases, threats of bioterrorism, increasing failure of formerly effective antibiotics and therapies to treat microbial diseases, and events that contaminate food on a large scale. Microbial research is taking advantage of the technological advancements that have opened new fields of inquiry, particularly in genomics. Basic areas of biological complexity, such as infectious diseases and the engineering of designer microbes for the benefit of society, are especially ripe areas for significant advancement. Overall, emphasis has increased in recent years on the evolution and ecology of microorganisms. Studies are focusing on the linkages between microbes and their phylogenetic origins and between microbes and their habitats. Increasingly, researchers are striving to join together the results of their work, moving to an integration of biological phenomena at all levels. While many areas of the microbiological sciences are ripe for exploration, microbiology must overcome a number of technological hurdles before it can fully accomplish its potential. We are at a unique time when the confluence of technological advances and the explosion of knowledge of microbial diversity will enable significant advances in microbiology, and in biology in general, over the next decade. To make the best progress, microbiology must reach across traditional departmental boundaries and integrate the expertise of scientists in other disciplines. Microbiologists are becoming increasingly aware of the need to harness the vast computing power available and apply it to better advantage in research. Current methods for curating research materials and data should be rethought and revamped. Finally, new facilities should be developed to house powerful research equipment and make it available, on a regional basis, to scientists who might otherwise lack access to the expensive tools of modern biology. It is not enough to accomplish cutting-edge research. We must also educate the children and college students of today, as they will be the researchers of tomorrow. Since microbiology provides exceptional teaching tools and is of pivotal importance to understanding biology, science education in schools should be refocused to include microbiology lessons and lab exercises. At the undergraduate level, a thorough knowledge of microbiology should be made a part of the core curriculum for life science majors. Since issues that deal with microbes have a direct bearing on the human condition, it is critical that the public-at-large become better grounded in the basics of microbiology. Public literacy campaigns must identify the issues to be conveyed and the best avenues for communicating those messages. Decision-makers at federal, state, local, and community levels should be made more aware of the ways that microbiology impacts human life and the ways school curricula could be improved to include valuable lessons in microbial science.
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Savings Bank of New South Wales - Sydney (Head Office) - Secretarial - Trustee Business Papers (Agenda) - Record of matters for discussion at meeting of Trustees with subsequent comments showing action taken - 1914. Reserve Bank of Australia, March 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.47688/rba_archives_2007/10567.

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Savings Bank of New South Wales - Sydney (Head Office) - Secretarial - Trustee Business Papers (Agenda) - Record of matters for discussion at meeting of Trustees with subsequent comments showing action taken - 1853 - 1858. Reserve Bank of Australia, March 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.47688/rba_archives_2007/10566.

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Exploring the Prospects of Using 3D Printing Technology in the South African Human Settlements. Academy of Science of South Africa (ASSAf), 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.17159/assaf.2021/0074.

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South Africa is a country with significant socio-economic development challenges, with the majority of South Africans having limited or non-existent access to basic infrastructure, services, housing and socio-economic opportunities etc. The urban housing backlog currently exceeds 2.4 million houses, with many families living in informal settlements. The Breaking New Grounds Policy, 2014 for the creation of sustainable human settlements, acknowledges the challenges facing human settlements, such as, decreasing human settlements grants allocation, increasing housing backlog, mushrooming of informal settlements and urbanisation. The White Paper on Science, Technology and Innovation (STI), 2019 notes that South Africa has not yet fully benefited from the potential of STI in addressing the socio-economic challenges and seeks to support the circular economy principles which entail a systematic change of moving to a zero or low waste resource-efficient society. Further to this, the Science and Technology Roadmap’s intention is to unlock the potential of South Africa’s human settlements for a decent standard of living through the smart uptake of science, technology and innovation. One such novel technology is the Three-Dimensional (3D) printing technology, which has produced numerous incredible structures around the world. 3D printing is a computer-controlled industrial manufacturing process which encompasses additive means of production to create 3D shapes. The effects of such a technology have a potential to change the world we live in and could subsequently pave the roadmap to improve on housing delivery and reduce the negative effects of conventional construction methods on the environment. To this end, the Academy of Science of South Africa (ASSAf), in partnership with the Department of Science and Innovation (DSI) and the University of Johannesburg (UJ) hosted the second virtual IID seminar titled: Exploring the Prospects of Using 3D Printing Technology in the South African Human Settlements, on 01 March 2021 to explore the potential use of 3D printing technology in human settlements. The webinar presented preliminary findings from a study conducted by UJ, addressing the following topics: 1. The viability of 3D printing technology 2. Cost comparison of 3D printed house to conventional construction 3. Preliminary perceptions on 3D printing of houses Speakers included: Dr Jennifer Mirembe (NDoHS), Dr Jeffrey Mahachi, Mr Refilwe Lediga, Mr Khululekani Ntakana and Dr Luxien Ariyan, all from UJ. There was a unanimous consensus that collaborative efforts from all stakeholders are key to take advantage of this niche technology. @ASSAf_Official; @dsigovza; @go2uj; @The_DHS; #SA 3D_Printing; #3D Print_Housing; #IID
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Sexual coercion: Young men's experiences as victims and perpetrators. Population Council, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.31899/pgy22.1008.

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Available evidence suggests that a considerable number of young people experience nonconsensual sex across the world, however research has mainly concentrated on the experiences of young girls and their perspectives of perpetrators of violence. Little is known about coercion among young males as victims or perpetrators. Case studies presented at an international consultative meeting in September 2003 in New Delhi, India, challenged the common assumption that only women are victims of violence, and shed light on the experiences of young males as victims of sexual coercion. These case studies also discussed the perspectives of young males as perpetrators of violence against young women. The evidence comes from small-scale studies from Goa, India; Ibadan, Nigeria; Leon, Nicaragua; Mexico City, Mexico; Phnom Penh, Cambodia, and selected settings in Peru and South Africa. The findings therefore are instructive but not representative. Common themes drawn from these diverse studies and key issues are discussed in this brief.
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YRG CARE base model report: Integrated prevention, care, and support services. Population Council, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.31899/hiv2003.1015.

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In September 1999, YRG CARE embarked on a research project in collaboration with the Horizons Program and the International HIV/AIDS Alliance entitled “Scaling Up Affordable and Appropriate Care and Support Services for People Living with HIV/AIDS in South India.” The study aims to better understand the affordability and appropriateness of an integrated care and support model in an emerging epidemic situation to meet the needs of people living with HIV/AIDS (PLHA) and improve their quality of life. A second aim is to examine the process and costs of scaling up this model. A critical step toward achieving both goals is to document the conceptual and operational model of integrated prevention, care, and support used by YRG CARE (the “base model”). The task of completing documentation of the YRG CARE base model has been facilitated by the publications produced by the organization since its inception. However, there is a need to synthesize the data from these sources into one concise reference document. This report states that results of the research should provide new insights and lessons that can be used by YRG CARE to refine and improve its efficiency in meeting the needs of increasing numbers of PLHA.
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