Academic literature on the topic 'Transitional spaces'

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Journal articles on the topic "Transitional spaces"

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Szauter, Daniella. "Transition Spaces." Műszaki Tudományos Közlemények 9, no. 1 (October 1, 2018): 223–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.33894/mtk-2018.09.51.

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Abstract In order to understand transitional spaces I would like to create an in-depth study that includeshow they evolve, reviews their evolution and hierarchy, and analyses their role and importance. There are several types of transition spaces that can be distinguished, in my study I examine more specifically the transitions between the natural and built environment. In my study I wanted to put emphasis on the relationship between man and nature, furthermore the relationship between nature and architecture, this knowledge is necessary to understand these spaces.
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Sprake, Juliet, and Helen Thomas. "Transitional Spaces: Mapping Physical Change." International Journal of Art & Design Education 26, no. 2 (June 2007): 167–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1476-8070.2007.00526.x.

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Chun, Chungyoon, and Akihiro Tamura. "Thermal comfort in urban transitional spaces." Building and Environment 40, no. 5 (May 2005): 633–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.buildenv.2004.08.001.

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Kudriavtseva, Valentina Ivanovna, and Diana Kairatovna Satybaldina. "Liminal and Transitional Spaces in Mobile Practices." Manuskript, no. 12 (December 2021): 2717–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.30853/mns20210472.

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Brandtstädter, Susanne. "Transitional Spaces: Postsocialism as a Cultural Process." Critique of Anthropology 27, no. 2 (June 2007): 131–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0308275x07076801.

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HIRSCH, PHILIP. "Revisiting frontiers as transitional spaces in Thailand." Geographical Journal 175, no. 2 (June 2009): 124–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-4959.2009.00321.x.

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Murphy, Joanne, and Sara McDowell. "Transitional optics: Exploring liminal spaces after conflict." Urban Studies 56, no. 12 (October 2018): 2499–514. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0042098018788988.

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The purpose of this article is to engage in a new conceptualisation of liminality, as it applies to space and place in societies emerging from conflict but not yet at peace. We adopt a case study approach of two urban environments: Derry/Londonderry, a city that experienced acute levels of violence during the Northern Ireland conflict, and Bilbao, the largest city in the Basque Country, which has been at the crux of the cultural and economic struggle for Basque independence. The visual, built environment has been significantly reconfigured in both cities to communicate the transition from conflict. Yet the optics of peacebuilding does not necessarily reflect the experiences of communities as they move through complex processes. A more nuanced and critical reading of the urban environment often reveals stagnation within peace processes and the existence of liminal, inbetween spaces. This paper suggests that ‘transitional optics’ in societies moving out of conflict can physically illuminate the complex nature of building peace, and argues that the idea of permanent liminality can offer new ways of understanding the ways in which transitional processes can become trapped. An ‘end-point’ is not always achievable, or perhaps, for some, desirable. The characteristics of permanent liminality can be identified in three main areas: political imagery, physical regeneration and public space as a conflict arena.
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Araji, Mohamad T., Mohamed Boubekri, and Nader V. Chalfoun. "An Examination of Visual Comfort in Transitional Spaces." Architectural Science Review 50, no. 4 (December 2007): 349–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.3763/asre.2007.5042.

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Gržinić, Marina. "From Transitional Postsocialist Spaces to Neoliberal Global Capitalism." Third Text 21, no. 5 (September 2007): 563–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09528820701599677.

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Sawhney, Nitin, Sean Wheeler, and Chris Schmandt. "Aware Community Portals: Shared Information Appliances for Transitional Spaces." Personal and Ubiquitous Computing 5, no. 1 (February 28, 2001): 66–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s007790170034.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Transitional spaces"

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Araji, Mohamad Tarek. "Visual Comfort in Transitional Spaces." Thesis, The University of Arizona, 2004. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/190396.

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The study emphasizes changing light conditions in architectural spaces as a major factor on human eye adaptation, which represents a potential case for a visual shock. This visual shock is experienced when occupants encounter a sudden field of light whose intensity is above or below the limit of human eye adaptable range. To examine this condition, a new methodology is developed and outlined. It identifies the visual shock within transitional spaces and allows architects to investigate strategies that influence visual comfort. The physiological field of vision analysis is used to first critique, then to adjust, and finally to interpret scenes within transitional spaces. The methodology begins by using a 180° angle fish-eye lens camera to capture 3-D photographs along a selected pedestrian pathway. The photographs are overlaid by a “field of view” diagram to deduct areas obstructed by human facial features (eyebrows, cheeks, and nose). Area weighted percentages of the net view profile is then calculated using an overlay hemispherical radial grid. These percentages represent the cut-off vision (0%), the one-eye vision (12.5%), the peripheral vision (25%), and the central vision (50%). Image metamorphosis is done by the aid of the Adobe Photoshop software to restrict the image to four monochromatic contrasts of shade. Parallel to photographs, actual light intensity readings are collected and calibrated to each assigned contrast on the images. To illustrate the methodology, a case of a person experiencing an extreme discomfort by walking in the direction of a blinding sunlight source has been chosen and investigated. 3-D Computer modeling is then adopted to investigate the different architectural daylight solutions as suggested by the modified design and predicts a visual comfort. This method provides a successful tool for investigating light in transitional spaces as well as contributes to enhancing pedestrian awareness of their surrounding environment and clarity of visual information.
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Ludwig, Thomas John. "In Transition: Creating Early Successional Avian Habitat in Transitional Urban Spaces." The Ohio State University, 2014. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1397740935.

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Vargas, Palma Gloria Angelica. "Short-term thermal history in transitional lobby spaces." Thesis, University of Sheffield, 2016. http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/12166/.

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The dramatic concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is provoking extreme temperatures, where 2°C increase represents a potential risk for humanity. Air conditioning (AC) demands up to 70% of total energy use in buildings, and is extending into moderate climates where it is not necessary. Thermal comfort research has demonstrated that extended exposure to AC environments can significantly modify people’s thermal tolerance and thermal preferences, reducing their ability of adaptation. There is limited research exploring people’s thermal comfort in short-term and dynamic contexts, which alter people’s long-term thermal history. The aim of this thesis is to evaluate people’s short-term thermal history and thermal comfort perception in a real situation in a moderate climate, exploring a dynamic and transient condition repeated in their daily routines. The lobby area where people move from the outdoor to the indoor environment is used as the case study, in order to evaluate how use of the lobby can modify people’s thermal perception. One year of fieldwork research (2013-2014) was conducted in three typical lobby units in Higher Educational Institutions in Sheffield, UK. Thermal comfort surveys and simultaneous climatic measurements were used in this study, involving 1,749 international participants. Findings revealed a seasonal thermal adaptation affecting people’s short-term thermal perception and very rapid changes in people’s thermal comfort perception and preferences when moving from one space to another. Participants’ short-term thermal history was strongly altered by three new identified thermal patterns (flat, sudden and irregular) and a range of temperature differences. The evaluation of 46 thermal patterns revealed a number of considerations that can help to understand people’s thermal perception in the short-term, and which can help to improve people’s thermal adaptation in the long-term. This research contributes with new parameters that support the implementation of energy related strategies, building design guidelines and international standards.
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Diebäcker, Tarek, and Meike Sigrid Wernecke. "Moments of Transition. Transitional Spaces as Agents for Social Change in Favour of Youths." Thesis, KTH, Stadsbyggnad, 2021. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-297397.

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This design thesis is situated in Stockholm’s northernmost suburbs of the Järva area. The area was mainly developed during the era of the Million Homes Programme (1965-1974) and is today commonly considered as one of the city’s socially most challenged areas. The idea of Moments of Transitions addresses possible transitions in three aspects: generational, social and spatial. The key protagonists of this project are local youths who – by growing up and into their urban environments – have a strong stake in the future of the Järva area. As of today, they are a social group with limited influence on decision-making processes and whose needs are rarely taken into account in urban development projects. Challenging the status quo, this thesis aims to present potentials for social change in the favour of youths. This project first presents an analysis of the historic development of Järva, ongoing planning projects and local contexts. Subsequently, a framework for Moments of Transition is established and developed in three instances. Each of those centers around one decisive theme for local youths: re_mediation, motion and imaginations. Together, they shall help in building a suburb where youths want to continue to live in.
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Avantaggiato, Marta. "Mixed-mode ventilation design and thermal comfort in transitional spaces." Doctoral thesis, Università degli studi di Padova, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/11577/3424559.

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Transitional spaces are pivotal in non-residential architecture. Depending on the building typology, the proportion of such areas may vary between 10% up to 40% of the total volume. Because of their features transitional spaces are independent dynamic spaces with various physical conditions and behaviour which may that have different thermal comfort requirements. Being integral part of the non-residential architecture, their HVAC design and controls follow however guidelines intended for indoor space. No current comfort guidelines that are specific for this peculiar building zones exists. Nevertheless, if designed with appropriate energy saving strategies as mixed-mode ventilation solution and flexible controls of HVAC, these peculiar building spaces can help achieve more energy efficient buildings. With the aim of a deeper understanding of these peculiar building zones, this PhD dissertation focuses on three aspects related to transitional spaces: mixed-mode ventilation design, thermal comfort and actual thermal performance. Information about 17 non-residential building, which integrate a transitional space in their architecture and mixed-mode ventilation strategy, were analysed and collected in a small databased. Within the building typologies considered, shopping centres resulted to be a very interesting one for the implementation of mixed-mode ventilation strategies. From the analysis of recent examples of shopping centres conversion from fully mechanical into mixed-mode operation, a design procedure was proposed. The conversion from fully mechanical into mixed-mode operation is further encouraged by the findings related to thermal comfort in shopping centers common areas. Within the studies about thermal comfort in transitional spaces, an investigation of human response within shopping centres common areas was missing. With the scope of understanding actual comfortable ranges in these spaces, around 700 customers were interviewed about their state of comfort while measuring environmental parameters. For this scope a specific questionnaire and a Mobile Environmental Monitoring cart (MEMO) were developed. The measurements were performed in spring and summer 2016 in three different Italian shopping centres, fully-mechanical operated. The results show a wider range of indoor thermal comfort conditions than in typical indoor spaces. The necessity of a tailor-made model to assess thermal comfort in transitional spaces is also disclosed. The model could correlate indoor comfort temperatures with outdoor temperatures on the basis of the direct observation of users’ thermal sensation. In order to expand the database of evidence and the creation of such model, further field studies are required, gathering together a conspicuous number of data which cover all the seasons. These findings unlock important energy use implication. If shopping centre HVAC systems are operated in a more flexible way and natural ventilation potentialities are exploited, the final goal of achieving more energy efficient buildings without sacrificing users’ comfort seems closer. With the objective of verifying the level of comfort provided by a mixed-mode solution in a transitional space, the thermal comfort and airflow performance of an atrium located in a warm temperate climate were investigated. The measurements campaign lasted over four-weeks in summer 2017. The thermal comfort evaluation of the atrium users’ was performed under different operational modes. The results showed that users’ state of comfort was independent from the way the atrium was conditioned. Specific to this case, the result opens possibilities for the use of just natural ventilation to provide comfortable conditions in summer. This would reflect in a consistent reduction of the operation costs for cooling. In the perspective of the reduction of building energy consumption without compromising thermal comfort, the results of this thesis confirm and booster the interest towards mixed-mode operated building. The potentialities of transitional spaces expressed in the thesis need to be taken into account in non-residential building design. The nature of the results for shopping centers transitional spaces can be extended to all those non-residential buildings that have transitional spaces with similar features.
L’architettura degli edifici non residenziali comprende per la maggiore degli spazi di transizione la cui destinazione d’uso non è quella prevalente cui l’edificio è destinato. La porzione di tali spazi varia dal 10% al 40% del volume totale dell’edificio a seconda della tipologia di edificio non residenziale. Molte volte l’utilizzo delle aree comuni (spazi di transizione) è indipendente rispetto al resto dell’edificio. Le condizioni di dinamicità che li caratterizzano potrebbero comportare diversi standard di comfort rispetto al resto dell’edificio ma essendone parte integrante, il modo e il grado di comfort garantito è lo stesso che per le zone prettamente indoor. Al momento infatti non esistono delle linee guida per il condizionamento specifico di queste zone. Tuttavia, se fossero progettate con adeguate strategie per il risparmio energetico, come ad esempio la ventilazione ibrida, o ad esempio ci fosse un controllo più flessibile dell’impianto di ventilazione e condizionamento, queste zone offrirebbero un grosso potenziale per l’ottenimento di edifici più efficienti. L’obiettivo di questo lavoro di dottorato è quello di approfondire la conoscenza di questi spazi in relazione a tre aree che sono: il design di soluzioni di ventilazione ibrida, il comfort termico e le reali prestazioni di soluzioni di ventilazione ibrida. Al fine di studiare diverse soluzioni di ventilazione ibrida per edifici non residenziali che integrano uno spazio di transizione nella loro architettura, le informazioni tecniche relative a 17 edifici non-residenziali sono state raccolte in un piccolo database. Tra le tipologie di edifici non-residenziali considerate, i centri commerciali sono risultati esserne di grande interesse per l’implementazione. Analizzando recenti esempi di conversione di centri commerciali da funzionamento totalmente attivo a soluzioni ibride, è stato possibile ricavare una procedura di design per il retrofit in tale direzione. L’utilizzo di soluzioni ibride di ventilazione negli spazi di transizione dei centri commerciali è ulteriormente incoraggiato dai risultati relativi al comfort termico in tali spazi. Da un’analisi della letteratura relativa agli studi di comfort negli spazi di transizione ne è risultata la mancanza di uno studio relativo ai centri commerciali. Con lo scopo quindi di colmare questa mancanza è stato condotto uno studio in tali zone intervistando più di 700 clienti in relazione al loro stato di comfort e misurandone al contempo i parametri ambientali sperimentati. Ai fini dello studio è stato infatti sviluppato uno specifico questionario e un carrellino per il monitoraggio ambientale (MEMO). Le misure sono state condotte nella primavera e nell’estate del 2016 in tre differenti centri commerciali locati in Italia. I risultati dimostrano come per questi spazi, i range di comfort siano più ampi rispetto ai tipici spazi indoor. E’ inoltre emersa la necessità di un modello specifico per la caratterizzazione del comfort termico in questi spazi. Il modello, attraverso l’osservazione diretta della sensazione termica degli utenti, potrebbe correlare le temperature comfort interne con le temperature esterne. Tuttavia al fine della creazione di tale modello sono necessari altri studi in modo da collezionare un cospicuo numero di dati che ricoprano tutte le stagioni. Questi risultati aprono a importanti implicazioni dal punto di vista energetico. Se gli impianti di ventilazione e condizionamento dei centri commerciali fossero gestiti in maniera più flessibile e le potenzialità della ventilazione naturale fossero sfruttate, l’obiettivo finale di avere edifici energeticamente efficienti senza inficiare sul comfort termico degli utenti sembrerebbe più vicino. Con l’obiettivo di verificare il livello di comfort che una soluzione di ventilazione ibrida può garantire sono state studiate le prestazioni termiche di un atrio locato in un clima caldo-temperato. Le misure sono state effettuate per un periodo di quattro settimane in estate e il comfort termico degli utenti è stato valutato sotto differenti strategie di condizionamento estivo. Lo stato di comfort degli utenti si è dimostrato indipendente dal modo in cui l’atrio veniva condizionato. In relazione a questo caso, tale risultato apre possibilità al solo utilizzo della ventilazione naturale per garantire condizioni di comfort in estate. Questa soluzione permetterebbe un consistente taglio dei costi di raffrescamento. Nella prospettiva di riduzione dei consumi energetici degli edifici senza comprometterne il comfort interno, i risultati di questo lavoro di tesi confermano e sostengono l’interesse verso edifici con sistemi di ventilazione ibrida. In tal senso, le potenzialità degli spazi di transizione espresse in questo lavoro, devono essere prese in considerazione nella progettazione degli edifici non-residenziali. I risultati relativi ai centri commerciali possono essere estesi a tutti gli edifici residenziali che hanno degli spazi di transizione con caratteristiche simili.
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Lascoutx, Ruiz Alfredo. "A Politico-Ecological Approach of Transitional Spaces In Social Ecological Systems." Thesis, Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa, 2021. http://hdl.handle.net/10393/41987.

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As spatial properties that systems theoretically have, Socio-Ecological Systems are characterized by dynamism and mobility, therefore, are subject to changes in the space they occupy in the biosphere. In land ecosystems, these changes are understood as processes of evolution over time, or the result of extreme natural events, or transformation of the natural space induced by human activities. These spatial changes produce effects on the land surface and groundwater of ecosystems colonized or penetrated by elements, individuals or populations belonging to other ecosystems. These are the so-called Transitional Spaces between ecosystems. Throughout the continuous geographical space, these spatial transitions affect human and not human ecosystems in different ways. Given their ambiguous characteristics and their indefinite temporal location between urban, rural or natural spaces, transition spaces deserve to be investigated in order to know their properties and functions within the cartography that represents complex socio-ecological systems. The research is conducted from a particular perspective of Political Ecology. For this I proceed to develop an epistemological exercise on the political ecology syntagma in order to approach its concept and object of study as a hybrid discipline between social sciences and natural sciences. Interdisciplinarity as a practice, a dialectic vision regarding anthropocentrism, environmental perception as a method for an ontology of human ecology, The ecosystem as a unit of spatial analysis. These would be some of the characteristics of my ecological-political perspective. But what does transitional space mean for political ecology and what does it add to its theory? The question led me to seek the integral concept of ecosystem and to support myself in the General Systems Theory to analyze the notions of boundary and external environment as part of the classic concept of system. At that point, the notion of transitional spaces emerges implicit when recognizing the dynamic spatiality of other existing systems. v Since the research is not linear but interdisciplinary and convergent, a brief anthology of geographic and socio-spatial political thought is presented in order to connect the issue of transitional spaces with the point of view of the social sciences. Various socio-geographical, deterministic, anthropocentric, Darwinian, Marxist, modernist theories give an overview of the issues related to space and nature. With the emergence of the spatial turn, new concerns for political sociology, geography and environmental sciences are explained by the phenomenon of urban growth at the global level. In the same way, I introduce the topic of ecological spaces, specifically the concept of Ecotone, the space of transition between diverse natural ecosystems. The use of the notion of ecotone is based precisely on the perspective of the concept of political ecology developed previously. This, in turn, will allow me to introduce the FLACAM methodology into the research, which among its components has the virtue of identifying and analyzing the spatial phenomenon of physical and social Interfaces, that is, spaces of transition within human ecosystems. Several graphics and charts show the potential properties and functions of different kind of existing interfaces and ecotones. My proposal converges in using these concepts as planning tools for transitional spaces identified as Rurban Regions and metropolitan areas. A final reflection on the need for spatial research on global urban expansion and the theoretical and pragmatic advantages of the concept of intermediate cities closes the main body of the investigation.
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Kwon, Choul Woong. "Transitional spaces : the role of sheltered semi-outdoor spaces as microclimatic modifiers for school buildings in the UK." Thesis, Open University, 2011. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.552794.

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This research project was undertaken to achieve a better understanding of the microclimatic characteristics of the outdoor and indoor environments of school buildings in the UK through the mediation of transitional spaces. Improvements in thermal comfort outdoors around buildings and reductions in energy demand for indoor spaces are two possible contributions of transitional outdoor spaces located adjacent to classrooms or other indoor spaces. The effects of these two functions must be considered jointly so that improved performance in one does not compromise performance of the other. The underlying hypothesis is that the transitional outdoor space can affect environmental conditions in ways that can enhance both the outdoor thermal comfort of occupants and their appreciation of the space and have the potential to reduce the energy demand (e.g. for lighting and space heating) of the building. Moreover, while interest in outdoor pedagogy has been growing in schools, outdoor spaces are rarely equipped to provide for such activity. The microclimate of the transitional outdoor space as an architecturally potential space is therefore central to the ways in which teachers and students can be encouraged to use the space frequently as an extended classroom without adversely affecting the indoor environment. The project focuses on the architectural elements of the transitional outdoor space and aims to reveal its environmental impact on both the outdoor and indoor spaces, and to propose design considerations. Transitional spaces are considered mainly as taking the form of a canopy. Understanding the dynamic environmental processes impinging on these spaces will assist in designing spaces that can support functional use throughout the year. Fieldwork conducted at Effra Nursery School, London focused on the environmental performance of an outdoor canopy and play area adjacent to the classroom. Based on the results of the fieldwork and using well established computer models, simulations were performed to identify the influence of different parameters: that of having a canopy; the effect of the transmissivity of the canopy material (three transparencies 0%, 50%, 90% were considered), the operability of the canopy, orientation (four orientations N,E,S,W were considered), and location (three cities: London, Manchester, Glasgow). The combined effects of canopy transparency and orientation were shown to be critical design considerations in affecting comfort conditions in both indoor and outdoor spaces. The exception was when the canopy was not fixed but operable. It was found that outdoor comfort conditions in the transitional outdoor space can be enhanced by 13.8% by choosing a canopy of 0% transparency compared with a reference case without a canopy, while it could be enhanced by 27.8% using a movable type of canopy in the case of a south facing classroom in London. Daylight and heating energy demand, however, can worsen by 40% and 50% respectively with a fixed canopy, while they could improve by between 23% and 45% using the movable canopy. The fixed canopy with a higher transparency can help to increase outdoor thermal comfort in Glasgow, while one with a lower transparency shows better performance if facinq south in London. The work clearly demonstrates that the architectural design of the transitional space plays an important part in the resulting environmental conditions indoors and outdoors. Using established simulation tools in new ways this research project has quantified the combined effects of external canopies on occupant thermal comfort and on classroom energy demand for space heating and lighting. These have been documented for different canopy characteristics and different UK locations thus providing design guidelines for the provision of such transitional space in school buildings.
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Cadima, Paula San Payo. "Transitional spaces : the potential of semi-outdoor spaces as a means for environmental control with special reference to Portugal." Thesis, Open University, 2000. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.326600.

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Baldwin, Adam David. "The motel in the heart of every man : the transitional spaces of Don DeLillo." Thesis, University of Sussex, 2015. http://sro.sussex.ac.uk/id/eprint/54444/.

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This work illustrates the spatial nature of Don DeLillo's writing. Through a reading of his work a network of societal spaces repeatedly occur and are utilised as locations within which to raise questions of the relationship between identity and mass society. The spaces that predominate produce the topography of his work. A network begins to develop, a series of nodal points joined by a connective tissue of pathways through which the discussion of society and identity pass. By focusing on both the nodal points themselves and the pathways that connect them the roles of motion, control and a potential counter-narrative appear. The individual spaces that DeLillo chooses as locations in his novels are relevant. Their placing in society, their means of construction and the materials of which they are constituted all illustrate the form of society which created them. In turn these spaces are observed to shape the characters that pass through them, in the process further expanding the network of societal associations. The particular spatial forms that DeLillo focuses on reflect a transitional impulse, a desire for motion and speed rooted in anti-historicism. The suburb, the motel, and the highway are all born of the period which followed the Second World War which had a profound sociological, psychological and technological impact on society. The need to face the future, reject the past and repress the traumatic experiences of war led an experience of space and society which is transitional. The spaces are selected for their association with anxiety, trauma, nostalgia and consumption. The duality of these spaces epitomises the complexities of modern social identity. Due to the reflexive nature of transitionality cultural shifts impact upon its form, altering the way in which it appears and functions. The alleyway influences the development of the highway, the motel influences the development of the suburb, and the railway station affects the airport. The airport is an example of the manner in which technological advance change the appearance of these spaces but the themes and issues that are explored in them reflect consistent interests. Similarly, moments of great social import such as the Kennedy assassination and the attacks of 9/11 leave traces on these transitional spaces.
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吴煜 and Yu Wu. "Development zones: the making of new industrial spaces in transitional China : a case of Suzhou." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 2008. http://hub.hku.hk/bib/B40687491.

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Books on the topic "Transitional spaces"

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Legrady, George. George Legrady: Transitional spaces. Munich: Siemens Kulturprogramm, 1999.

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L, Rudnytsky Peter, ed. Transitional objects and potential spaces: Literary uses of D.W. Winnicott. New York: Columbia University Press, 1993.

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Conan, Yuna. Passages: Espaces de transition pour la ville du 21e siecle = transitional spaces for the 21st-century city. Edited by Institut pour la ville en mouvement (Paris, France). New York: Actar Publishers, 2017.

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Baer, Monika. Women's spaces: Class, gender and the club : an anthropological study of the transitional process in Poland. Wrocław: Wydawn. Uniwersytetu Wrocławskiego, 2003.

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Irén, Annus, Barát Erzsébet, and Marinovich-Resch Sarolta 1943-, eds. Spaces in transition. Szeged: JATE Press, 2005.

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Irén, Annus, Barát Erzsébet, and Marinovich-Resch Sarolta 1943-, eds. Spaces in transition. Szeged: JATE Press, 2005.

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Lewis, Andrew. Transitional and non-space 1999. Leicester: De Montfort University, 1999.

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Barta, Györgyi. Hungarian spaces and places: Patterns of transition. Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2005.

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Carsten, Juel-Christiansen, and Hansen Gilbert, eds. Transitions: Space in the dispersed city. Copenhagen, Denmark: Arkiteturtidsskrift B/Architectural Magazine B, 2000.

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Kerala modernity: Ideas, spaces, and practices in transition. New Delhi: Orient Blackswan, 2015.

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Book chapters on the topic "Transitional spaces"

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Collier, Jessica, Rebecca Lockwood, and Frances Maclennan. "Transitional spaces." In Diversity and Marginalisation in Forensic Mental Health Care, 30–39. New York: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003184768-6.

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Johansson, Thomas, and Marcus Herz. "Subcultures and Transitional Spaces." In Youth Studies in Transition: Culture, Generation and New Learning Processes, 41–53. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-03089-6_4.

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Kray, Christian, Holger Fritze, Thore Fechner, Angela Schwering, Rui Li, and Vanessa Joy Anacta. "Transitional Spaces: Between Indoor and Outdoor Spaces." In Spatial Information Theory, 14–32. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-01790-7_2.

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Bens, Jonas. "Transitional justice atmospheres." In Normative Spaces and Legal Dynamics in Africa, 41–60. Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2020.: Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003015734-4.

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Del Negro, Gaia. "Transitional/Translational Spaces: Evocative Objects as Triggers for Self-Negotiation." In Translating across Sensory and Linguistic Borders, 311–34. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-97244-2_14.

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Siman, Yael, and Nancy Nicholls. "New Home and Transitional Spaces for Holocaust Survivors in Chile and Mexico." In Beyond Camps and Forced Labour, 207–29. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-56391-2_12.

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Gomes, Sharlene L. "Interventions to Strengthen Institutional Capacity for Peri-Urban Water Management in South Asia." In Water Security, Conflict and Cooperation in Peri-Urban South Asia, 147–69. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-79035-6_8.

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AbstractInstitutions, defined as social rules which guide decision-making, are an important feature of peri-urban water governance. Peri-urban institutions structure the access to and management of water resources during rural-to-urban transitions. However, peri-urban areas are dynamic in nature and heterogeneous in composition. This generates challenges for the effectiveness of institutional arrangements. Peri-urban spaces of South Asian cities like Pune, Hyderabad, Kolkata and Khulna demonstrate the various ways in which institutional arrangements influence issues of water insecurity, conflicts, and crises in the urbanisation process. This chapter explores this important dimension and demonstrates ways to intervene in the institutional context of water resources in such transitional settings. Two types of interventions to build institutional capacity are presented. First, the Approach for Participatory Institutional Analysis (APIA), is designed to help peri-urban actors frame problems through an institutional lens and offers skills to navigate the solution space. The second approach, Transformative Pathways, facilitates efforts to cope with the uncertain and dynamic nature of urban transitions. Based on the adaptation pathways approach, it helps peri-urban actors work from their existing situation and design pathways towards more sustainable and resilient futures. Practical applications of these approaches in South Asia offer insights on how to intervene institutionally in water problems during rural-urban transitions.
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Biffi, Elisabetta, and Chiara Carla Montà. "Documenting Children in Alternative Care Services: Transitional Spaces Between ‘Being Spoken for’ and ‘Speaking for Oneself’." In Documentation in Institutional Contexts of Early Childhood, 167–83. Wiesbaden: Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-28193-9_9.

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Nicastro, Clio. "Unintentional Reenactments." In Cultural Inquiry, 101–11. Berlin: ICI Berlin Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.37050/ci-21_11.

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What is the relationship between reenactment and repetition compulsion? By shedding light upon the different levels of reenactment at stake in Yella by Christian Petzold, I analyse the ‘transitional spaces’ where the German filmmaker places his wandering characters who have ‘slipped out of history’. In Yella Petzold mixes up past, present, future, and oneiric re-elaboration to question the memory of the past of GDR, which in his view has never really been constituted as history. The characters that populate this movie move in a setting constructed at the crossroad between a protected environment where the reenacted events are sheltered by the time and the space of the plot and a place weathered by the unpredictable atmospheric agents of the present. How and to which extent can the clash between different temporalities produce a minimal variation?
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van der Linden, Martin. "Transitional Space." In Advances in 21st Century Human Settlements, 143–69. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-33-4658-1_7.

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Conference papers on the topic "Transitional spaces"

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McCrone, Luke. "Transitional space: learning in the spaces in-between." In Learning Connections 2019: Spaces, People, Practice. University College Cork||National Forum for the Enhancement of Teaching and Learning in Higher Education, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.33178/lc2019.14.

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There is increasing evidence, particularly in STEMM education, that traditional didactic transmission lecturing is less effective than more active, student-centred learning (Freeman et al., 2014). This mounting evidence has resulted in institution-wide curriculum review, pedagogic transformation and ongoing space refurbishments at Imperial College London, a research-intensive institution that provides the context for this work. Although active learning is proven to improve cognitive outcomes by supporting ‘students to do meaningful learning activities and think about what they are doing’ (Prince, 2004, p.223), its examination remains largely linked to instructional contexts, with neglect for the self-directed, non-timetabled learning spaces that support a rich learning experience. This instructional emphasis is evident from the capital that Imperial College London, among other institutions, continue to invest into ongoing classroom refurbishments to support curriculum review and innovation. However, it could be argued that these changes to physical infrastructure do not accurately reflect and address the growing self-directed workload that students now contend with. Furthermore, as capital spending on maintaining and modernising university buildings in the UK approaches £3 billion annually (Temple, 2018), these refurbishments are increasingly time- and money-intensive, placing a financial strain on institutions. The assumption that students successfully transition between passive and active learning, between directed and self-directed learning and between formal, timetabled and informal, non-timetabled spaces has meant transitional space being overlooked. By seeking to better understand student engagement with these transitional spaces as physical, curricular and cognitive spatial phenomena, this study is generating evidence for the educational importance of transitional space and using this to better understand active learning. By redesigning underutilised ancillary spaces adjacent to formal lecture spaces at lower cost than lecture theatre refurbishments, students can better self-direct active learning at moments of transition into and out of formal, timetabled spaces.
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Jetter, Hans-Christian, Jan-Henrik Schröder, Jan Gugenheimer, Mark Billinghurst, Christoph Anthes, Mohamed Khamis, and Tiare Feuchtner. "Transitional Interfaces in Mixed and Cross-Reality: A new frontier?" In ISS '21: Interactive Surfaces and Spaces. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3447932.3487940.

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Rajapaksha, I., and R. G. P. Sandamini. "APPRAISING INDOOR THERMAL PERCEPTION OF ELDERLY IN HOT CLIMATES: An experimental investigation of free-running residential aged care homes in Colombo." In Beyond sustainability reflections across spaces. Faculty of Architecture Research Unit, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.31705/faru.2021.23.

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Rapid demographic transition with higher growth in ageing population demonstrate a major societal challenge in South Asia and Sri Lankans will age faster than other developing economies in the region. Climate shocks of people living in economically deprived countries will increase in future and elders are more vulnerable to the adverse effects of temperature extremes. The study experimentally investigated free-running residential care homes in hot climate of Colombo performing simultaneous personal monitoring and questionnaire surveys. Results explicitly prove overheated indoors with less air flow. Majority of elders confirmed thermally unacceptable interiors with warm thermal sensations and low air velocities of 0.1 to 0.29 m/s with predominant preference of more air movement proves inadequate passive airflow. A significant relationship between wind preference and presence of openings of their place of stay were evident. Staying away from a window or door instigated to practice a behavioural adaptation of moving towards transitional areas such as corridors, verandas, and outdoor spaces for more wind sensation. Since ageing is associated with physical inabilities and elders spend their life mostly in indoors, findings emphasize the importance of enhancing passive airflow and application of appropriate design strategies to ensure optimum air velocities and dispersion of airflow within interiors.
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"Effects of the Green Façade on Thermal Comfort in the Transitional Spaces: Field Measurements in Munich, Germany." In Countermeasures to Urban Heat Islands. BS Publications, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.37285/bsp.ic2uhi.34.

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Perera, Deepthie. "Colonialism on Spatial Transformation: A Socio-Spatial Analysis of the Outdoor Transitional Spaces of Sri Lankan House." In BERF3. Basel Switzerland: MDPI, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/environsciproc2021012001.

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Song, Lei, Xiongbin Liu, Qin Zhou, and Xiaotian Li. "Comparison of Transitional Turbulence Models for Numerical Simulation of Flow Past a Sphere in a Pipe." In 2022 29th International Conference on Nuclear Engineering. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/icone29-92409.

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Abstract To develop a novel passive valve with a spherical disc for reactors, it is necessary to find a suitable numerical model to study the flow characteristics of flow past a sphere in confined spaces. The problem of flow past a sphere arises in many fields, and the phenomenon of drag crisis of a sphere in external flow, in which the drag coefficient of the sphere drops off suddenly as the Reynolds number increases, still occurs in internal flows. With the rapid development of transitional turbulence models in the past decade, we try to improve the drag coefficient prediction of flow past a sphere in a pipe with a wide range of Reynolds numbers using transitional turbulence models. In this study, we numerically investigated the flow past a sphere in a pipe with a blockage ratio (the ratio of sphere diameter to pipe diameter) of 0.667 with three transitional turbulence models. The SST k-ω turbulence model without transition effects was also employed for comparison purposes. The studied Reynolds numbers ranged from subcritical region to supercritical region (5E+3 ⩽ Re ⩽ 3E+5). The skin friction coefficients and pressure coefficients of the sphere were calculated and compared for the four turbulence models. Compared to the measured drag coefficient data of a sphere in a pipe with a similar blockage ratio in the literature, the Intermittency transition model performs best in predicting the drag coefficient than the other turbulence models. None of the four turbulence models can adequately capture the drag crisis phenomenon, i.e., the calculated drag coefficients drop smoothly near the critical region of Reynolds numbers for all four turbulence models. The pipe wall effect is not neglectable in the estimation of the sphere drag coefficient by the pressure drop between the ends of the pipe.
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Guerini Scopel, Vanessa. "Espaços de transição: o elo conector entre o edifício e a cidade." In Seminario Internacional de Investigación en Urbanismo. Barcelona: Curso de Arquitetura e Urbanismo. Universidade do Vale do Itajaí, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.5821/siiu.6291.

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O artigo em questão é uma reflexão acerca dos espaços de transição presentes nas cidades. Estes espaços podem ser entendidos como locais intermediários que fazem a conexão entre a arquitetura e a cidade, podendo ser semipúblicos ou semiprivados, apresentando diversas tipologias e outras nomenclaturas. Tendo como base uma pesquisa bibliográfica e iconográfica, pretende-se evidenciar o conceito e as definições sobre os espaços de transição, bem como ressaltar sua importância para a melhora da relação entre o edifício e a rua, além de apresentar estudos de caso que exemplifiquem de forma clara as tipologias destes locais de transição. O objetivo deste estudo é refletir sobre a importância destes elos entre a arquitetura e a cidade, ressaltando sua significância para, a partir da proposição e incentivo de arquiteturas menos individualistas, a qualificação dos centros urbanos. The article in question is a reflection about the transition spaces present in cities. These spaces can be understood as intermediate locations that make the connection between architecture and city, can be semi-public or semiprivate, with various types and other nomenclatures. Based on a bibliographic and iconographic research, it intends to demonstrate the concept and definitions of the transitional spaces, and to underscore its importance for the improvement of the relationship between the building and the street, and presents case studies that illustrate the clearly the types of these transition areas. The aim of this study is to reflect on the importance of links between architecture and the city, highlighting its significance for, from the proposition and incentive less individualistic architectures, the qualification of urban centers.
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Patil, Vishal A., and James A. Liburdy. "Flow Regime Characteristics in Porous Media Flows at High Reynolds Numbers." In ASME 2012 Fluids Engineering Division Summer Meeting collocated with the ASME 2012 Heat Transfer Summer Conference and the ASME 2012 10th International Conference on Nanochannels, Microchannels, and Minichannels. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/fedsm2012-72273.

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An experimental study on the turbulent flow characteristics in a randomly packed porous bed is presented and discussed. Time resolved PIV measurements, taken in specific pore spaces are used to evaluate transitional and developed turbulent flow statistics for pore Reynolds numbers from 54 to 3964. Three different regimes of steady laminar, transitional and turbulent flow are presented. Small scale coherent vortical structures are examined, using large eddy scale (LES) decomposition, for pore Reynolds number of greater than 1000. Integral length scales were found to reach asymptotic values of approximately 0.1 times the hydraulic diameter of the bed. The integral Eulerian time scales are found to reach an asymptotic value of approximately 0.3 times the convective time scale in the bed. Mean velocity vector maps show flattening of the velocity distribution due to increased momentum mixing. Turbulent stresses show increasing level of homogeneity at higher pore Reynolds numbers.
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Patil, Vishal A., and James A. Liburdy. "Flow Structure Identification in Unsteady Flow in Porous Media." In ASME 2012 Fluids Engineering Division Summer Meeting collocated with the ASME 2012 Heat Transfer Summer Conference and the ASME 2012 10th International Conference on Nanochannels, Microchannels, and Minichannels. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/fedsm2012-72394.

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This study is an experimental investigation of the turbulent flow structure in randomly packed porous bed made with uniform sized spheres. Results are based on time resolved, two component PIV measurements in individual pore spaces of the bed. Data are presented for pore Reynolds number range of 54–3964. Three different flow regimes are identified, steady laminar, and unsteady transitional and turbulent flows. Small scale coherent vortical structures are visualized, by performing large eddy scale decomposition, for pore Reynolds number of greater than 1000. Quantative analysis of vortical coherent structures was performed using swirl strength analysis. The number density of vortical structures is found to monotonically increase gradually with pore Reynolds number. The rotation rate of these vortical structures is found to increase linearly with pore Reynolds number. The stretching rate (linear deformation) of the eddies were calculated using continuity to determine the out of plane stretching. The ratio of stretching rate to swirl strength (rotation rate) shows a normal distribution which collapsed onto a single curve. The convective velocities of the structures show a symmetric distribution with a peak value close to 0.8 times the average pore velocity.
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Reza Emad, Gholam, and Aditi Kataria. "Challenges of simulation training for future engineering seafarers - A qualitative case study." In 13th International Conference on Applied Human Factors and Ergonomics (AHFE 2022). AHFE International, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.54941/ahfe1002501.

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Maritime transportation is currently in a transitional period to an impending autonomous future. To that end, novel technologies are increasingly being introduced on-board ships and their engine rooms. At the same time, advancements in digitalization and automation are progressively replacing and reducing the number of marine engineers on-board. Consequently, with increasing automation in machinery spaces and unmanned engine rooms, the role of the marine engineers has been altered to that of monitoring and oversight. The substantial changes in the nature of tools and job description of the marine engineers necessitate the re-assessment and revision of their training and pedagogy. Currently, the simulator is a powerful tool in the training and development of marine operators. Although the literature review reveals some interest in marine engineering simulation training, however, there is a lack of attention to remote and cloud-based simulation training as part of blended learning. This study reveals that imparting marine engineering simulation training online is not free from challenges. This study reports the findings from a qualitative study of marine engineering simulation training, conducted as part of a larger ethnographic study on developing maritime competence. The study utilizes the socio-historical, context-dependent framework of the Activity System (AS) to analyze marine engineering simulation training. The study reveals issues with cloud-based marine engineering simulation training. Firstly, cloud-based training is not seamless to access. Secondly, not all features present in the desktop simulation are present in the cloud version. Thirdly the cloud-based platform affords limited feedback in comparison to the desktop version. Fourthly, cloud-based simulation training does not support peer learning. An understanding of the challenges of cloud-based marine engineering simulation training will help address these concerns. Furthermore, it will facilitate the competence development of marine engineers as they work in increasingly automated workspaces in the transition to autonomous ship operations.
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Reports on the topic "Transitional spaces"

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Haider, Huma. Transitional Justice and Reconciliation in the Western Balkans: Approaches, Impacts and Challenges. Institute of Development Studies (IDS), January 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/k4d.2021.033.

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Countries in the Western Balkans have engaged in various transitional justice and reconciliation initiatives to address the legacy of the wars of the 1990s and the deep political and societal divisions that persist. There is growing consensus among scholars and practitioners that in order to foster meaningful change, transitional justice must extend beyond trials (the dominant international mechanism in the region) and be more firmly anchored in affected communities with alternative sites, safe spaces, and modes of engagement. This rapid literature review presents a sample of initiatives, spanning a range of sectors and fields – truth-telling, art and culture, memorialisation, dialogue and education – that have achieved a level of success in contributing to processes of reconciliation, most frequently at the community level. It draws primarily from recent studies, published in the past five years. Much of the literature available centres on Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH), with some examples also drawn from Serbia, Kosovo and North Macedonia.
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Borchardt, Gary C. Transition Space. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, November 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada231404.

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Delventhal, Matthew, Jesús Fernández-Villaverde, and Nezih Guner. Demographic Transitions Across Time and Space. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, November 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w29480.

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Martínez-Cano, FJ, R. Cifuentes-Albeza, and B. Ivars Nicolás. Prosocial video games as a transitional space for peace: the case of Reconstrucción. Revista Latina de Comunicación Social, September 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4185/rlcs-2019-1394en.

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Raka E., L. Ahrens, and E. Gill. Tuning the AGS for Minimum Phase Space Dilution at Transition: Preliminary Study of Transverse Instabilities After Transition. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), October 1985. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1130924.

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LaFlamme, Marcel. Affiliation in Transition: Rethinking Society Membership with Early-Career Researchers in the Social Sciences. Association of Research Libraries, October 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.29242/report.affiliationintransition2020.

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This paper by Marcel LaFlamme explores new forms of connection and community for early-career researchers in less formal structures, often facilitated by social media and other communication technologies. By learning from these loosely institutionalized spaces, LaFlamme contends, scholarly societies as well as research libraries and their parent institutions can adapt to a changing environment and take steps to make scholarship more open and accessible.
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Lloyd, Jeremey E. Higher Ground: Guidelines for the Air Force's Transition to the Space Environment. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, October 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada370494.

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Ruggiero, A. G. Space Charge Mismatch for the Transition Energy Crossing in the AGS and RHIC. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), April 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1119078.

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Plettner, T. Analysis of Laser Acceleration in a Semi-infinite Space as Inverse Transition Radiation. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), October 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/878026.

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García-Gil, S., S. Gómez García, and I. Reguero Sanz. Alternative spaces of freedom during the Transition. Brief history of free radio stations in Spain (1976-1983). Revista Latina de Comunicación Social, June 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4185/rlcs-2018-1302en.

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