Academic literature on the topic 'North American Indigenous Studies'

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Journal articles on the topic "North American Indigenous Studies"

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Reynolds, Austin W., Jaime Mata-Míguez, Aida Miró-Herrans, Marcus Briggs-Cloud, Ana Sylestine, Francisco Barajas-Olmos, Humberto Garcia-Ortiz, et al. "Comparing signals of natural selection between three Indigenous North American populations." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 116, no. 19 (April 15, 2019): 9312–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1819467116.

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While many studies have highlighted human adaptations to diverse environments worldwide, genomic studies of natural selection in Indigenous populations in the Americas have been absent from this literature until very recently. Since humans first entered the Americas some 20,000 years ago, they have settled in many new environments across the continent. This diversity of environments has placed variable selective pressures on the populations living in each region, but the effects of these pressures have not been extensively studied to date. To help fill this gap, we collected genome-wide data from three Indigenous North American populations from different geographic regions of the continent (Alaska, southeastern United States, and central Mexico). We identified signals of natural selection in each population and compared signals across populations to explore the differences in selective pressures among the three regions sampled. We find evidence of adaptation to cold and high-latitude environments in Alaska, while in the southeastern United States and central Mexico, pathogenic environments seem to have created important selective pressures. This study lays the foundation for additional functional and phenotypic work on possible adaptations to varied environments during the history of population diversification in the Americas.
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Strong, Pauline Turner. "RECENT ETHNOGRAPHIC RESEARCH ON NORTH AMERICAN INDIGENOUS PEOPLES." Annual Review of Anthropology 34, no. 1 (October 2005): 253–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1146/annurev.anthro.34.081804.120446.

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Hale, Tiffany. "Centering Indigenous People in the Study of Religion in America." Numen 67, no. 2-3 (April 20, 2020): 303–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15685276-12341579.

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Abstract This essay considers Jennifer Graber’s The Gods of Indian Country and Pamela Klassen’s The Story of Radio Mind together in considering new developments in the field of Native American and Indigenous studies. Hale examines how these books discuss the role of religion in shaping settler colonialism in North America in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. She concludes that both works raise pressing methodological questions about how historians of religion can center the lives of Native American people in their work.
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Zeiler, Kaitlin J., and Frederick A. Zeiler. "Social Determinants of Traumatic Brain Injury in the North American Indigenous Population: A Review." Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences / Journal Canadien des Sciences Neurologiques 44, no. 5 (May 24, 2017): 525–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cjn.2017.49.

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AbstractObjective:Given the difficult to navigate literature on social determinants in Indigenous traumatic brain injury (TBI) we wished to identify all available literature on the social determinants of health linked to TBI in the North American Indigenous populations.Methods:We performed a systematically conducted review. We searched MEDLINE, BIOSIS, EMBASE, Global Health, SCOPUS, and Cochrane Library from inception to January 2016. A two-step review process of the search results was performed, applying defined inclusion/exclusion criteria. The final group of articles had the data extracted and summarized.Results:Ten manuscripts were identified to discuss some social determinant linked to TBI in the North American Indigenous populations. Two studies were focused on Canadian populations, with the remaining 8 studies focused on populations within the United States. Six social health determinants were identified within the studies, including: Rural location (Physical Environment) in seven studies, Male gender in five studies and Female gender in one study (in the setting of interpersonal violence) (Gender), Substance use in four studies and failure to utilize personal protective equipment in one study (Personal Health Practices and Coping Skills), Interpersonal Violence in one study (Social Environment), availability of rehabilitation services in one study (Health Services), and lack of family and friend presence during meetings with healthcare professionals in one study (Social Support Network).Conclusions:To date, little literature is available on the social determinants that impact TBI in the North American Indigenous population. Further research is warranted to better determine the incidence and social determinants associated.
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Murchison, Claire C., Avery Ironside, Lila M. A. Hedayat, and Heather J. A. Foulds. "A Systematic Review of Musculoskeletal Fitness Among Indigenous Populations in North America and Circumpolar Inuit Populations." Journal of Physical Activity and Health 17, no. 3 (March 1, 2020): 384–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1123/jpah.2018-0702.

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Background: North American indigenous populations experience higher rates of obesity and chronic disease compared with nonindigenous populations. Improvements in musculoskeletal fitness can mitigate negative health outcomes, but is not well understood among indigenous populations. This review examines musculoskeletal fitness measures among North American indigenous populations. Methods: A total of 1632 citations were evaluated and 18 studies were included. Results: Comparisons of musculoskeletal fitness measures between North American indigenous men and boys and women and girls were generally not reported. The greatest left and right combined maximal grip strength and maximal leg strength among Inuit boys and men and girls and women were observed among 20–29 years age group. Maximal combined right and left grip strength declined from 1970 to 1990, by an average of 15% among adults and 10% among youth. Maximal leg extension among Inuit has declined even further, averaging 38% among adults and 27% among youth from 1970 to 1990. Inuit men demonstrate greater grip strength and lower leg strength than Russian indigenous men, whereas Inuit women demonstrate greater leg strength. Conclusions: Further research is needed to better understand physical fitness among indigenous peoples and the potential for improving health and reducing chronic disease risk for indigenous peoples through physical fitness.
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Morrissey, Robert Michael. "Climate, Ecology and History in North America’s Tallgrass Prairie Borderlands*." Past & Present 245, no. 1 (July 29, 2019): 39–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/pastj/gtz018.

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Abstract In the late 1600s, one of the largest population centres in North America — the so‐called Grand Village of the Kaskaskias in the upper Illinois River Valley — suddenly dissolved as various factions among its indigenous inhabitants split apart. While historians have often explained the resulting migrations as a response to the beginnings of colonial history in this region, this article argues that a greater factor may have been climate change. The region of the Illinois Valley was one of the most important ecological transition zones in North America, a biome-scale ecotone between the grasslands of the West and the woodlands of the East. New studies suggest that a major drought in this period had a drastic effect on the special ecological mosaic here, causing interruptions in dynamic ecosystem processes which likely impacted indigenous ways of life. This article provides not only a better understanding for one of the most consequential turning points in late seventeenth-century North American indigenous history, but also a model of the potential benefits of bringing ethnohistory, deep history, climate history and ecology together in a single cross-disciplinary narrative.
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Hermann, Adrian. "Relating North American Indigenous History and the Study of Religion: Introducing a Review Symposium on Jennifer Graber’s The Gods of Indian Country and Pamela Klassen’s The Story of Radio Mind." Numen 67, no. 2-3 (April 20, 2020): 281–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15685276-12341576.

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Abstract This article introduces a combined review symposium on Jennifer Graber’s The Gods of Indian Country: Religion and the Struggle for the American West (Oxford University Press, 2018) and Pamela Klassen’s The Story of Radio Mind: A Missionary’s Journey on Indigenous Land (University of Chicago Press, 2018). It presents the four contributions to the review symposium as well as Graber and Klassen’s response and relates the discussion of the book to broader questions of studying North American Indigenous history as a central part of the study of religion.
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Senior, Nancy. ""Sathans inventions and worships": Two 17th-century clergymen on Native American religions." Studies in Religion/Sciences Religieuses 35, no. 2 (June 2006): 271–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/000842980603500205.

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Roger Williams (1603-1683) and Louis Nicolas (1634-1682?) discuss the native people and religions of North America in different ways. Each wrote a book about an indigenous language; both describe Native customs and religious practices. Both of them believe that any non-Christian is lost, but their references to indigenous religions are different in tone, and reflect their positions in 17th-century controversies. In an apparent paradox based on theological grounds, the man who found New England Puritans not pure enough speaks more tolerantly of non-Christian religions than does the more broadly educated Jesuit.
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Dudeck, Stephan. "Dialogical Relationships and the Bear in Indigenous Poetry." Sibirica 17, no. 2 (June 1, 2018): 114–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/sib.2018.170208.

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The essay provides a review of a small but remarkable book on the work of two important Native American and Siberian poets, Meditations after the Bear Feast by Navarre Scott Momaday and Yuri Vella, published in 2016 by Shanti Arts in Brunswick, Maine. Their poetic dialogue revolves around the well-known role of the bear as a sociocultural keystone species in the boreal forest zone of Eurasia and North America. The essay analyzes the understanding of dialogicity as shaping the intersubjectivity of the poets emerging from human relationships with the environment. It tries to unpack the complex and prophetic bear dream in one of Vella’s poems in which he links indigenous ontologies with urgent sociopolitical problems.
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Salaita, Steven. "The Ethics of Intercultural Approaches to Indigenous Studies." International Journal of Critical Indigenous Studies 1, no. 1 (January 1, 2008): 12. http://dx.doi.org/10.5204/ijcis.v1i1.18.

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Salaita argues that the project of Indigenous Studies is inherently comparative, citing numerous examples of productive intercultural scholarship, he explores historical, cultural, and politicalrelationships among Native North Americans and Palestinian Arabs to illuminate some of the ways that comparison offers the potential for new directions in both scholarly and activist communities. He contextualizes this analysis with a broader discussion of the ethics of scholarship in Indigenous Studies, paying special attention to the relationship of nationalistic commitment to intercultural methodologies.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "North American Indigenous Studies"

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Thibodeau, Anthony. "Anti-colonial Resistance and Indigenous Identity in North American Heavy Metal." Bowling Green State University / OhioLINK, 2014. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=bgsu1395606419.

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Abdoo, Jayma Ann. "The Scourge of "Discovery": A Case Study of the Genocide of Native Americans in English North America." W&M ScholarWorks, 1992. https://scholarworks.wm.edu/etd/1539625768.

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Bryant, James Allen. "Between the River and the Flood: The Cherokee Nation and the Battle for European Supremacy in North America." W&M ScholarWorks, 1999. https://scholarworks.wm.edu/etd/1539626230.

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Duong-Tran, Quang. "Predictors of depression in American Indian adolescents." PDXScholar, 1989. https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/open_access_etds/3847.

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Discriminant analysis was conducted to examine the empirical use of psychosocial variables and stressful life events scales in classifying depressed and non-depressed American Indian adolescents using a standardized criterion measure. Subjects attending a Bureau of Indian Affair boarding school were administered a mental health screening survey and were interviewed within four weeks using the Diagnostic Interview Schedule f or Children-Revised (DISC-R). Three models of discriminant analysis were used to determine the overall and incremental variance contributed by the stressful life events scales and the related psychosocial variables (i.e., gender, perceived social support from family and from friends, self-esteem, and depressive symptoms) to the criterion variable of depression. Results indicated that none of the models contributed significantly to the overall and unique variance in the classification of the groups. It is recommended that psychosocial correlates other than those that had been identified in this study (e.g. substance abuse, suicide behaviors, etc.) need to be examined and considered in future examination of American Indian adolescent depression.
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Jones, Jennifer Agee. "To Make Them Like Us: European-Indian Intermarriage in Seventeenth-Century North America." W&M ScholarWorks, 1994. https://scholarworks.wm.edu/etd/1539625916.

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Eckman, Wayne Miles. "Brigham Young's Indian Superintendency (1851-58): A Significant Microcosm of the American Indian Experience." Diss., CLICK HERE for online access, 1989. http://patriot.lib.byu.edu/u?/MTAF,34205.

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Anderson, Joshua Tyler. "Dams, Roads, and Bridges: (Re)defining Work and Masculinity in American Indian Literature of the Great Plains, 1968-Present." DigitalCommons@USU, 2013. https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/etd/1768.

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This master's thesis explores the intersections of labor, socioeconomic class, and constructed American Indian masculinities in the literature of indigenous writers of the Great Plains published after the Native American Renaissance of the late 1960s. By engaging scholars and theorists from multiple disciplines--including Native labor historians such as Colleen O'Neill and Alexandra Harmon, (trans)indigenous studies scholars such as Chadwick Allen and Philip Deloria, and Native literary and cultural critics such as Gerald Vizenor and Louis Owens--this thesis offers an American Studies approach to definitions and expressions of work, wealth, and masculinity in American Indian literature of the Great Plains. With chapters on D'Arcy McNickle's posthumous Wind From an Enemy Sky (1978), Carter Revard's poetry and mixed-genre memoirs, and Thomas King's Truth and Bright Water (1999), this thesis emphasizes the roles of cross-cultural apprenticeships for young Native protagonists whose socioeconomic opportunities are often obstructed, threatened, or complicated by dams, roads, and bridges, both literal and metaphorical, as they seek ways to engage (or circumvent) the capitalist marketplace on their own terms. In highlighting each protagonist's relationship to blood (family and community), land, and memory, the chapters reveal how the respective Native authors challenge and reimagine stereotypes regarding Native workers and offer more complicated and nuanced discussions of Native "traditions" in modernity. (173 pages)
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Squibb, Catherine. "Tobacco and Tar Babies: The Trickster as a Cultural Hero in Winnebago and African American Myth." Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University, 2015. https://dc.etsu.edu/honors/313.

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This thesis explores the trickster character through the lens of his role as a cultural hero. The two characters that I chose to examine are from North American myth, specifically Winnebago Hare and Brer Rabbit. These two characters represent the duality of the trickster while simultaneously embodying the lauded abilities of the hero. Through their actions these two characters shape culture through the very action of disrupting societal norms.
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Hiraldo, Danielle Vedette. "Indigenous Self-Government under State Recognition: Comparing Strategies in Two Cases." Diss., The University of Arizona, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/605217.

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Contemporary events frequently call into question the status of state-recognized Native nations. For example, the National Congress of American Indians (NCAI) failed to pass a resolution dissolving state-recognized membership; and the Government Accountability Office (GAO) has reported on the reality of federal funding being awarded to non-federally recognized Native nations. Although state-recognized Native nations are handicapped in their strategies and the availability of resources to assert their right to self-determine, some have persevered despite the inability to establish a direct relationship with the national government. Reconsidering federalism as it pertains to Native nations reveals opportunities for non-federally recognized Native nations to access resources and assert self-governing authority in alternative arenas outside the exclusive tribal-national government-to-government relationship. My research analyzes how two state-recognized Native nations, the Lumbee Tribe of North Carolina and the Waccamaw Indian People of South Carolina, have operated as political actors; have maintained their communities; have organized politically and socially; and have asserted their right to self-determine by engaging state—and at certain times federal—politics to address needs within their communities. I used a qualitative case study approach to examine the strategies these two state-recognized Native nations have developed to engage state relationships. I argue that state-recognized Native nations are developing significant political relationships with their home states and other entities, such as federal, state, and local agencies, and nonprofits, to address issues in their communities.
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Bailey-Shimizu, Pamelalee. "First Nations Tribal Library and Social Research Center." CSUSB ScholarWorks, 2000. https://scholarworks.lib.csusb.edu/etd-project/1952.

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Books on the topic "North American Indigenous Studies"

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Twenty-first century perspectives on indigenous studies: Native North America in (trans)motion. New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, 2015.

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Neuburger, Martina, and H. Peter Dörrenbächer. Nationalisms and identities among indigenous peoples: Case studies from North America. Oxford: Peter Lang, 2014.

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Susskind, Lawrence. Addressing the land claims of indigenous peoples. Cambridge, MA: MIT Program on Human Rights & Justice, 2008.

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Ontario Institute for Studies in Education. Indigenous Education Task Force. Report of the Indigenous Education Task Force, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education. [Toronto]: The Task Force, 1991.

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Queer indigenous studies: Critical interventions in theory, politics, and literature. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2011.

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C, Longfish George, ed. Native American art. China: Hugh Lauter Levin Associates, 1994.

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Driskill, Qwo-Li. Queer indigenous studies: Critical interventions in theory, politics, and literature. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2011.

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Indigenous dance and dancing Indian: Contested representation in the global era. Boulder, Colo: University of Press of Colorado, 2012.

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Voyageur, Cora Jane, Laura Brearley, and Brian Calliou. Restorying Indigenous leadership: Wise practices in community development. Banff, Alberta, Canada: Banff Centre Press, 2014.

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missing], [name. Trading gazes: Euro-American women photographers and Native North Americans, 1880-1940. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2002.

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Book chapters on the topic "North American Indigenous Studies"

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Andersen, Chris. "The institutional and intellectual trajectories of Indigenous Studies in North America." In Routledge Handbook of Critical Indigenous Studies, 9–22. Abingdon, Oxon; New York, NY: Routledge, 2021.: Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429440229-3.

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Watkins, Joe, and George P. Nicholas. "Indigenous Archaeologies: North American Perspective." In Encyclopedia of Global Archaeology, 1–11. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-51726-1_1011-2.

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Watkins, Joe, and George P. Nicholas. "Indigenous Archaeologies: North American Perspective." In Encyclopedia of Global Archaeology, 3794–803. New York, NY: Springer New York, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4419-0465-2_1011.

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Watkins, Joe, and George P. Nicholas. "Indigenous Archaeologies: North American Perspective." In Encyclopedia of Global Archaeology, 5665–74. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-30018-0_1011.

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Fabricant, Nicole, and Nancy Postero. "The Indigenous Studies Turn." In New Approaches to Latin American Studies, 128–44. New York, NY: Routledge, 2018.: Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315158365-9.

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Nischik, Reingard M. "Introduction." In Comparative North American Studies, 1–6. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137559654_1.

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Nischik, Reingard M. "Comparative North American Studies and Its Contexts." In Comparative North American Studies, 7–26. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137559654_2.

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Nischik, Reingard M. "Modernism in the United States and Canada: The Example of Poetry and of the Short Story." In Comparative North American Studies, 27–59. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137559654_3.

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Nischik, Reingard M. "Border Studies, Borderlines, and Liminal Spaces: Crossing the Canada-US Border in North American Border Narratives." In Comparative North American Studies, 61–91. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137559654_4.

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Nischik, Reingard M. "On Imagology, Canadian-US Relations, and Popular Culture: National Images and Border Crossings in Margaret Atwood’s Works." In Comparative North American Studies, 93–120. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137559654_5.

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Conference papers on the topic "North American Indigenous Studies"

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Imang, Ndan, Martinus Nanang, and Rujehan. "Impact of Migration to Livelihood and Agricultural Land of Indigenous Forest-Dependent Communities in North Kalimantan, Indonesia." In Joint Symposium on Tropical Studies (JSTS-19). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/absr.k.210408.043.

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Gonzalez, Juan Miguel, and Juan M. Ramirez. "AC/AC series converter in transient stability studies." In 2007 39th North American Power Symposium. IEEE, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/naps.2007.4402311.

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Gadde, Phani Harsha, and Sukumar Brahma. "Realistic Microgrid Test Bed for Protection and Resiliency Studies." In 2019 North American Power Symposium (NAPS). IEEE, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/naps46351.2019.9000214.

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Bo, Rui, and Fangxing Li. "Power flow studies using principal component analysis." In 2008 40th North American Power Symposium (NAPS). IEEE, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/naps.2008.5307323.

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Campbell, Ryan C. "A Circuit-based Photovoltaic Array Model for Power System Studies." In 2007 39th North American Power Symposium. IEEE, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/naps.2007.4402293.

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Hill, Jesse, and Chika Nwankpa. "Single bus studies of split, multiple battery energy storage systems." In 2015 North American Power Symposium (NAPS). IEEE, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/naps.2015.7335236.

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Zhang, Xiaping, Jason Ausmus, Pankaj K. Sen, and Joseph Mercer. "Remedial Action Scheme Utilization in Western Interconnection Operational Planning Studies." In 2019 North American Power Symposium (NAPS). IEEE, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/naps46351.2019.9000212.

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Paran, S., C. S. Edrington, and B. Vural. "Investigation of HIL interfaces in nonlinear load studies." In 2012 North American Power Symposium (NAPS 2012). IEEE, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/naps.2012.6336360.

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Wang, Siqi, Evangelos Farantatos, and Kevin Tomsovic. "Wind turbine generator modeling considerations for stability studies of weak systems." In 2017 North American Power Symposium (NAPS). IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/naps.2017.8107399.

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Chassin, Forrest S., Ebony T. Mayhorn, Marcelo A. Elizondo, and Shuai Lu. "Load modeling and calibration techniques for power system studies." In 2011 North American Power Symposium (NAPS 2011). IEEE, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/naps.2011.6024878.

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Reports on the topic "North American Indigenous Studies"

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Huntington, H. G. North American Natural Gas Markets: Selected technical studies. Edited by G. E. Schuler. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), April 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/6883924.

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Huntington, H. G., and G. E. Schuler. North American Natural Gas Markets: Selected technical studies. Volume 3. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), April 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/10113488.

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Conviviality-Inequality in Latin America, Maria Sibylla Merian Centre. Conviviality in Unequal Societies: Perspectives from Latin America Thematic Scope and Preliminary Research Programme. Maria Sibylla Merian International Centre for Advanced Studies in the Humanities and Social Sciences Conviviality-Inequality in Latin America, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.46877/mecila.2017.01.

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The Maria Sibylla Merian International Centre for Advanced Studies in the Humanities and Social Sciences Conviviality-Inequality in Latin America (Mecila) will study past and present forms of social, political, religious and cultural conviviality, above all in Latin America and the Caribbean while also considering comparisons and interdependencies between this region and other parts of the world. Conviviality, for the purpose of Mecila, is an analytical concept to circumscribe ways of living together in concrete contexts. Therefore, conviviality admits gradations – from more horizontal forms to highly asymmetrical convivial models. By linking studies about interclass, interethnic, intercultural, interreligious and gender relations in Latin America and the Caribbean with international studies about conviviality, Mecila strives to establish an innovative exchange with benefits for both European and Latin American research. The focus on convivial contexts in Latin America and the Caribbean broadens the horizon of conviviality research, which is often limited to the contemporary European context. By establishing a link to research on conviviality, studies related to Latin America gain visibility, influence and impact given the political and analytical urgency that accompanies discussions about coexistence with differences in European and North American societies, which are currently confronted with increasing socioeconomic and power inequalities and intercultural and interreligious conflicts.
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Sabogal-Cardona, Orlando, Lynn Scholl, Daniel Oviedo, Amado Crotte, and Felipe Bedoya. Not My Usual Trip: Ride-hailing Characterization in Mexico City. Inter-American Development Bank, August 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0003516.

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With a few exceptions, research on ride-hailing has focused on North American cities. Previous studies have identified the characteristics and preferences of ride-hailing adopters in a handful of cities. However, given their marked geographical focus, the relevance and applicability of such work to the practice of transport planning and regulation in cities in the Global South is minimal. In developing cities, the entrance of new transport services follows very different trajectories to those in North America and Europe, facing additional social, economic, and cultural challenges, and involving different strategies. Moreover, the determinants of mode choice might be mediated by social issues such as the perception of crime and the risk of sexual harassment in public transportation, which is often experienced by women in large cities such as Mexico. This paper examines ride-hailing in the Metropolitan Area of Mexico City, unpacking the characteristics of its users, the ways they differ from users of other transport modes, and the implications for urban mobility. Building on the household travel survey from 2017, our analytical approach is based on a set of categorical models. Findings suggest that gender, age, education, and being more mobile are determinants of ride-hailing adoption. The analysis shows that ride-hailing is used for occasional trips, and it is usually done for leisure and health trips as well as for night trips. The study also reflects on ride-hailings implications for the way women access the city.
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Henderson, Tim, Mincent Santucci, Tim Connors, and Justin Tweet. National Park Service geologic type section inventory: Chihuahuan Desert Inventory & Monitoring Network. National Park Service, April 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.36967/nrr-2285306.

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A fundamental responsibility of the National Park Service is to ensure that park resources are preserved, protected, and managed in consideration of the resources themselves and for the benefit and enjoyment by the public. Through the inventory, monitoring, and study of park resources, we gain a greater understanding of the scope, significance, distribution, and management issues associated with these resources and their use. This baseline of natural resource information is available to inform park managers, scientists, stakeholders, and the public about the conditions of these resources and the factors or activities which may threaten or influence their stability. There are several different categories of geologic or stratigraphic units (supergroup, group, formation, member, bed) which represent a hierarchical system of classification. The mapping of stratigraphic units involves the evaluation of lithologies, bedding properties, thickness, geographic distribution, and other factors. If a new mappable geologic unit is identified, it may be described and named through a rigorously defined process that is standardized and codified by the professional geologic community (North American Commission on Stratigraphic Nomenclature 2005). In most instances when a new geologic unit such as a formation is described and named in the scientific literature, a specific and well-exposed section of the unit is designated as the type section or type locality (see Definitions). The type section is an important reference section for a named geologic unit which presents a relatively complete and representative profile for this unit. The type or reference section is important both historically and scientifically, and should be recorded such that other researchers may evaluate it in the future. Therefore, this inventory of geologic type sections in NPS areas is an important effort in documenting these locations in order that NPS staff recognize and protect these areas for future studies. The documentation of all geologic type sections throughout the 423 units of the NPS is an ambitious undertaking. The strategy for this project is to select a subset of parks to begin research for the occurrence of geologic type sections within particular parks. The focus adopted for completing the baseline inventories throughout the NPS was centered on the 32 inventory and monitoring networks (I&M) established during the late 1990s. The I&M networks are clusters of parks within a defined geographic area based on the ecoregions of North America (Fenneman 1946; Bailey 1976; Omernik 1987). These networks share similar physical resources (geology, hydrology, climate), biological resources (flora, fauna), and ecological characteristics. Specialists familiar with the resources and ecological parameters of the network, and associated parks, work with park staff to support network level activities (inventory, monitoring, research, data management). Adopting a network-based approach to inventories worked well when the NPS undertook paleontological resource inventories for the 32 I&M networks. The network approach is also being applied to the inventory for the geologic type sections in the NPS. The planning team from the NPS Geologic Resources Division who proposed and designed this inventory selected the Greater Yellowstone Inventory and Monitoring Network (GRYN) as the pilot network for initiating this project. Through the research undertaken to identify the geologic type sections within the parks of the GRYN, methodologies for data mining and reporting on these resources was established. Methodologies and reporting adopted for the GRYN have been used in the development of this type section inventory for the Chihuahuan Desert Inventory & Monitoring Network. The goal of this project is to consolidate information pertaining to geologic type sections which occur within NPS-administered areas, in order that this information is available throughout the NPS...
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6

Henderson, Tim, Vincent Santucci, Tim Connors, and Justin Tweet. National Park Service geologic type section inventory: Northern Colorado Plateau Inventory & Monitoring Network. National Park Service, April 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.36967/nrr-2285337.

Full text
Abstract:
A fundamental responsibility of the National Park Service (NPS) is to ensure that park resources are preserved, protected, and managed in consideration of the resources themselves and for the benefit and enjoyment by the public. Through the inventory, monitoring, and study of park resources, we gain a greater understanding of the scope, significance, distribution, and management issues associated with these resources and their use. This baseline of natural resource information is available to inform park managers, scientists, stakeholders, and the public about the conditions of these resources and the factors or activities which may threaten or influence their stability. There are several different categories of geologic or stratigraphic units (supergroup, group, formation, member, bed) which represent a hierarchical system of classification. The mapping of stratigraphic units involves the evaluation of lithologies, bedding properties, thickness, geographic distribution, and other factors. If a new mappable geologic unit is identified, it may be described and named through a rigorously defined process that is standardized and codified by the professional geologic community (North American Commission on Stratigraphic Nomenclature 2005). In most instances when a new geologic unit such as a formation is described and named in the scientific literature, a specific and well-exposed section of the unit is designated as the type section or type locality (see Definitions). The type section is an important reference section for a named geologic unit which presents a relatively complete and representative profile. The type or reference section is important both historically and scientifically, and should be available for other researchers to evaluate in the future. Therefore, this inventory of geologic type sections in NPS areas is an important effort in documenting these locations in order that NPS staff recognize and protect these areas for future studies. The documentation of all geologic type sections throughout the 423 units of the NPS is an ambitious undertaking. The strategy for this project is to select a subset of parks to begin research for the occurrence of geologic type sections within particular parks. The focus adopted for completing the baseline inventories throughout the NPS was centered on the 32 inventory and monitoring networks (I&M) established during the late 1990s. The I&M networks are clusters of parks within a defined geographic area based on the ecoregions of North America (Fenneman 1946; Bailey 1976; Omernik 1987). These networks share similar physical resources (geology, hydrology, climate), biological resources (flora, fauna), and ecological characteristics. Specialists familiar with the resources and ecological parameters of the network, and associated parks, work with park staff to support network level activities (inventory, monitoring, research, data management). Adopting a network-based approach to inventories worked well when the NPS undertook paleontological resource inventories for the 32 I&M networks. The network approach is also being applied to the inventory for the geologic type sections in the NPS. The planning team from the NPS Geologic Resources Division who proposed and designed this inventory selected the Greater Yellowstone Inventory and Monitoring Network (GRYN) as the pilot network for initiating this project. Through the research undertaken to identify the geologic type sections within the parks of the GRYN methodologies for data mining and reporting on these resources was established. Methodologies and reporting adopted for the GRYN have been used in the development of this type section inventory for the Northern Colorado Plateau Inventory & Monitoring Network. The goal of this project is to consolidate information pertaining to geologic type sections which occur within NPS-administered areas, in order that this information is available throughout the NPS...
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7

Henderson, Tim, Vincent Santucci, Tim Connors, and Justin Tweet. National Park Service geologic type section inventory: Klamath Inventory & Monitoring Network. National Park Service, July 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.36967/nrr-2286915.

Full text
Abstract:
A fundamental responsibility of the National Park Service (NPS) is to ensure that park resources are preserved, protected, and managed in consideration of the resources themselves and for the benefit and enjoyment by the public. Through the inventory, monitoring, and study of park resources, we gain a greater understanding of the scope, significance, distribution, and management issues associated with these resources and their use. This baseline of natural resource information is available to inform park managers, scientists, stakeholders, and the public about the conditions of these resources and the factors or activities which may threaten or influence their stability. There are several different categories of geologic or stratigraphic units (supergroup, group, formation, member, bed) which represent a hierarchical system of classification. The mapping of stratigraphic units involves the evaluation of lithologies, bedding properties, thickness, geographic distribution, and other factors. If a new mappable geologic unit is identified, it may be described and named through a rigorously defined process that is standardized and codified by the professional geologic community (North American Commission on Stratigraphic Nomenclature 2005). In most instances when a new geologic unit such as a formation is described and named in the scientific literature, a specific and well-exposed section of the unit is designated as the type section or type locality (see Definitions). The type section is an important reference section for a named geologic unit which presents a relatively complete and representative profile. The type or reference section is important both historically and scientifically, and should be protected and conserved for researchers to study and evaluate in the future. Therefore, this inventory of geologic type sections in NPS areas is an important effort in documenting these locations in order that NPS staff recognize and protect these areas for future studies. The documentation of all geologic type sections throughout the 423 units of the NPS is an ambitious undertaking. The strategy for this project is to select a subset of parks to begin research for the occurrence of geologic type sections within particular parks. The focus adopted for completing the baseline inventories throughout the NPS was centered on the 32 inventory and monitoring networks (I&M) established during the late 1990s. The I&M networks are clusters of parks within a defined geographic area based on the ecoregions of North America (Fenneman 1946; Bailey 1976; Omernik 1987). These networks share similar physical resources (geology, hydrology, climate), biological resources (flora, fauna), and ecological characteristics. Specialists familiar with the resources and ecological parameters of the network, and associated parks, work with park staff to support network level activities (inventory, monitoring, research, data management). Adopting a network-based approach to inventories worked well when the NPS undertook paleontological resource inventories for the 32 I&M networks. The network approach is also being applied to the inventory for the geologic type sections in the NPS. The planning team from the NPS Geologic Resources Division who proposed and designed this inventory selected the Greater Yellowstone Inventory and Monitoring Network (GRYN) as the pilot network for initiating this project. Through the research undertaken to identify the geologic type sections within the parks of the GRYN methodologies for data mining and reporting on these resources were established. Methodologies and reporting adopted for the GRYN have been used in the development of this type section inventory for the Klamath Inventory & Monitoring Network. The goal of this project is to consolidate information pertaining to geologic type sections which occur within NPS-administered areas, in order that this information is available throughout the NPS to inform park managers...
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