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1

Pieterse, Jan Nederveen. "Europe, traveling light: Europeanization and globalization." European Legacy 4, no. 3 (1999): 3–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10848779908579968.

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Kim, Jeyeon, Kenta Sato, Naohisa Hashimoto, et al. "Impact of the face angle to traveling trajectory during the riding standing-type personal mobility device." MATEC Web of Conferences 161 (2018): 03001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/matecconf/201816103001.

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In this paper, we investigate the impact of face direction during traveling by Standing-Type Personal Mobility Device (PMD). The use of PMD devices has been a popular choice for recreational activities in the developed countries such as in the USA and the countries in Europe. These devices are not completely risk free and various accidents have been reported. Since that, the risk factors leading to accidents have to be investigated. Unfortunately, the research studies on the risk factors on riding PMD devices have not been matured as much as the studies on driving cars. In this paper, we evalu
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Engels-Schwarzpaul, A.-Chr (Tina). "Traveling Houses: Performing Diasporic Relationships in Europe." Contemporary Pacific 29, no. 1 (2017): 38–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/cp.2017.0002.

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Barbato, Mariano P. "Geopolitics of Papal Traveling: (Re)Constructing a Catholic Landscape in Europe." Religions 11, no. 10 (2020): 525. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/rel11100525.

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For the popes, traveling has developed into a key instrument for mobilizing masses, spreading messages, and shaping public Catholic identities. Traveling ranks high within the papal efforts to (re)construct a Catholic landscape in Europe. Thus, comparing the European travel schedules of Pope Benedict XVI and Pope Francis in the context of their global journeys can help to understand their different conceptualizations of Europe. While both popes share the focus on Marian shrines, mass events, Parliamentary addresses, and interfaith encounters that has been established by their predecessors, the
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Leibetseder, Mathis. "Across Europe: Educational Travelling of German Noblemen in a Comparative Perspective." Journal of Early Modern History 14, no. 5 (2010): 417–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/157006510x525274.

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AbstractIn recent years, cultural historians interested in the Grand Tour have written divided histories focusing on travelers from one particular nation or region. Drawing from what these researchers report on educational traveling as well as from primary sources, it is now possible to put the Grand Tour into a European perspective. As to travelers from Germany, there is a wide scope of source material at hand, comprising funeral sermons, university rolls, travelogues, travel accounts, and correspondence. As a comparative perspective clearly reveals, educational travelling was vital in shapin
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Robin, William. "Traveling with “Ancient Music”." Journal of Musicology 32, no. 2 (2015): 246–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/jm.2015.32.2.246.

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In reforming psalmody in early nineteenth-century New England, participants in the so-called “Ancient Music” movement imported the solemnly refined hymn tunes and scientific rhetoric of Europe. This transatlantic exchange was in part the result of European travels by a generation of young members of the American socioeconomic and intellectual elite, such as Joseph Stevens Buckminster and John Pickering, whom scholars have not previously associated with hymnody reform. This study asserts that non-composers, particularly clergy and academics, played a crucial role in the “Ancient Music” movement
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Otsuka, Y., K. Suzuki, S. Nakagawa, M. Nishioka, K. Shiokawa, and T. Tsugawa. "GPS observations of medium-scale traveling ionospheric disturbances over Europe." Annales Geophysicae 31, no. 2 (2013): 163–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/angeo-31-163-2013.

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Abstract. Two-dimensional structures of medium-scale traveling ionospheric disturbances (MSTIDs) over Europe have been revealed, for the first time, by using maps of the total electron content (TEC) obtained from more than 800 GPS receivers of the European GPS receiver networks. From statistical analysis of the TEC maps obtained 2008, we have found that the observed MSTIDs can be categorized into two groups: daytime MSTID and nighttime MSTID. The daytime MSTID frequently occurs in winter. Its maximum occurrence rate in monthly and hourly bin exceeds 70% at lower latitudes over Europe, whereas
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8

Leibfried, Stephan, and Karin van Elderen. "“And they shall Beat their Swords into Plowshares” - The Dutch Genesis of a European Icon and the German Fate of the Treaty of Lisbon." German Law Journal 10, no. 8 (2009): 1297–308. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s2071832200001632.

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9

LeCrom, Carrie, Brendan Dwyer, Gregory Greenhalgh, Chad Goebert, and Jennifer Gellock. "Comparing Elements of Study Abroad Among Sport Management Students." Sport Management Education Journal 14, no. 2 (2020): 85–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1123/smej.2019-0043.

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A globalized curriculum has the potential to prepare students in a way that equips them for whatever sport looks like in the future. Study abroad programs are one way to achieve this. The current study looked at two short-term study abroad programs (one to western Europe, one to South Africa), offered during the same semester at the same institution, comparing learning outcomes between students on the two trips. Utilizing a mixed methods design, students completed quantitative pre/post surveys and responded to qualitative, open-ended daily prompts while on the trips. Findings indicate that kno
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Ananieva, Anna. "Intelligence, Diplomacy, Entertainment: Catherine II’s Son Tours Europe Incognito." Journal of Modern Russian History and Historiography 12, no. 1 (2019): 149–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22102388-01201005.

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From September 1781 to November 1782 Grand Duke Paul Petrovich, in the company of his wife, Grand Duchess Mariia Feodorovna, visited the major royal courts of Europe under the pseudonym “Comte & Comtesse du Nord.” By emphasizing the ceremonial meanings of high-status incognito tour, this article addresses the seemingly paradoxical relationship between the private status public visibility of the traveling Russian court analyzes the narratives about it in the European press in other documentary accounts related to the tour.
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Panagiotis Kaltsas, Evangelos. "Traveling With the Greek Language through Time." Sumerianz Journal of Education, Linguistics and Literature, no. 42 (June 17, 2021): 58–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.47752/sjell.42.58.61.

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Introduction. A language is the fundamental characteristic of a nation’s identity. It can unite the members of an ethic team and set them apart from the members of other ethnic teams. Aim. In this current review, the study presents the evolution of the Greek language from the ancient times, all the way up to today. Methodology. The study’s material consists of articles related to the topic, found in Greek and International και databases, the Google Scholar, and the Hellenic Academic Libraries (HEAL-Link). Results. The Greek language has been used since the third millennia B.C.. During the anci
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Böhmer, Maria. "The case as a travelling genre." History of the Human Sciences 33, no. 3-4 (2020): 111–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0952695119897867.

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This contribution explores how Forrester’s work on cases has opened up an arena that might be called ‘the medical case as a travelling genre’. Although usually focused on the course of disease in an individual patient and authored mostly by one medical author, medical case histories have a social dimension: Once published, they often circulate in networks of scholars. Moreover, scholars of the history of literature have shown that numerous medical cases seem to travel easily beyond the context of medical science into the realm of popular literature and journalism. After tracing the idea of cas
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Song, Q., F. Ding, W. Wan, B. Ning, and L. Liu. "Global propagation features of large-scale traveling ionospheric disturbances during the magnetic storm of 7~10 November 2004." Annales Geophysicae 30, no. 4 (2012): 683–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/angeo-30-683-2012.

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Abstract. Larger-scale traveling ionospheric disturbances (LSTIDs) were studied using the total electron content (TEC) data observed from global GPS network in the regions of North America, Europe, and East Asia during the magnetic storm of 7~10 November 2004. 4 LSTID events were detected in North America, 4 in Europe, and 3 in East Asia. The parameters of the 11 LSTID events, such as the propagation azimuth (the angle with respect to north, taking clockwise as positive), horizontal phase velocity and damping rate were determined. Our results showed two new propagation features of the LSTIDs.
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Borries, Claudia, Norbert Jakowski, Kirsti Kauristie, Olaf Amm, Jens Mielich, and Daniel Kouba. "On the dynamics of large‐scale traveling ionospheric disturbances over Europe on 20 November 2003." Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics 122, no. 1 (2017): 1199–211. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/2016ja023050.

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SALVADORE, MATTEO. "AFRICAN COSMOPOLITANISM IN THE EARLY MODERN MEDITERRANEAN: THE DIASPORIC LIFE OF YOHANNES, THE ETHIOPIAN PILGRIM WHO BECAME A COUNTER-REFORMATION BISHOP." Journal of African History 58, no. 1 (2017): 61–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s002185371600058x.

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AbstractThe article chronicles the diasporic life of the Cyprus-born Ethiopian priest Yoḥannǝs (1509–65), who, after traveling far and wide across Europe and to Portuguese India, eventually settled in Rome and served the papacy for over two decades. Rare language skills and a cosmopolitan coming of age enabled his remarkable ecclesiastical career as an agent of the Counter-Reformation. Shortly before an untimely death, Yoḥannǝs became the second black bishop and the first black nuncio in the history of the Roman Church, rare appointments that would not be accessible to black Africans again unt
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Pankiv, N. "Evolution of transport infrastructure and its’ influence on the development of traveling and tourism." Visnyk of the Lviv University. Series Geography 2, no. 43 (2013): 39–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.30970/vgg.2013.43.1678.

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Development of tourism and transport infrastructure closely related and interwoven process. Tourism as mass phenomenon was a result of nascence and development of transport. It’s admitted fact. However emergence of transport area as direction of social-geographic research happened in the middle of XIX century. Before that transport infrastructure just had been forming, evolving and making direct influence on the world’s travelling at all. Main stages of conception and development of transport infrastructure of Europe in the context of territorial spreading of tourism are considered in this art
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Prins, Harald E. L. "To the Land of the Mistogoches: American Indians Traveling to Europe in the Age of Exploration." American Indian Culture and Research Journal 17, no. 1 (1993): 175–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.17953/aicr.17.1.p7u382u0lu5n2w76.

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18

Martinis, Carlos, Jeffrey Baumgardner, Michael Mendillo, et al. "First Conjugate Observations of Medium‐Scale Traveling Ionospheric Disturbances (MSTIDs) in the Europe‐Africa Longitude Sector." Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics 124, no. 3 (2019): 2213–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2018ja026018.

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Ferreira, Arthur Amaral, Claudia Borries, Chao Xiong, Renato Alves Borges, Jens Mielich, and Daniel Kouba. "Identification of potential precursors for the occurrence of Large-Scale Traveling Ionospheric Disturbances in a case study during September 2017." Journal of Space Weather and Space Climate 10 (2020): 32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/swsc/2020029.

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Traveling Ionospheric Disturbances (TIDs) reflect changes in the ionospheric electron density which are caused by atmospheric gravity waves. These changes in the electron density impact the functionality of different applications such as precise navigation and high-frequency geolocation. The Horizon 2020 project TechTIDE establishes a warning system for the occurrence of TIDs with the motivation to mitigate their impact on communication and navigation applications. This requires the identification of appropriate indicators for the generation of TIDs and for this purpose we investigate potentia
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Borries, C., N. Jakowski, and V. Wilken. "Storm induced large scale TIDs observed in GPS derived TEC." Annales Geophysicae 27, no. 4 (2009): 1605–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/angeo-27-1605-2009.

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Abstract. This work is a first statistical analysis of large scale traveling ionospheric disturbances (LSTID) in Europe using total electron content (TEC) data derived from GNSS measurements. The GNSS receiver network in Europe is dense enough to map the ionospheric perturbation TEC with high horizontal resolution. The derived perturbation TEC maps are analysed studying the effect of space weather events on the ionosphere over Europe. Equatorward propagating storm induced wave packets have been identified during several geomagnetic storms. Characteristic parameters such as velocity, wavelength
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21

Wunder, Amanda. "WESTERN TRAVELERS, EASTERN ANTIQUITIES, AND THE IMAGE OF THE TURK IN EARLY MODERN EUROPE." Journal of Early Modern History 7, no. 1 (2003): 89–119. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/157006503322487368.

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AbstractEducated elite Europeans who visited Constantinople on diplomatic, scholarly, and commercial enterprises in the sixteenth century shared a common culture of antiquarianism, and their passion for the antiquities of the East shaped their accounts of the Turk and Ottoman Constantinople. The traveling antiquarians Augier Ghislain de Busbecq, Pierre Gilles, Melchior Lorck, Pieter Coecke van Aelst, and Nicholas de Nicolay produced a diverse range of printed works based on their firsthand experiences in the Ottoman Empire, in which they used traditional Renaissance genres (such as the urban e
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Andrzejczak, Aldona. "Tourism among Students’ Life Goals." Folia Turistica 47 (June 30, 2018): 69–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.5604/01.3001.0012.6204.

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Purpose. Diagnosing the place of tourism among the life goals of students graduating from economics universities. Method. Quantitative and qualitative analysis of Individual Development Plans for Master's students at an economic university. The sample consisted of 225 plans prepared by students participating in the authors’ lecture undergoing full-time and part-time studies, collected in 2015, 2016 and 2017. Findings. Traveling around the world is one of the priority life goals of over a third of respondents. Tourist plans cover all continents, with the dominance of traveling around Europe. Ge
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Vermote, Frederik. "Travellers Lost and Redirected: Jesuit Networks and the Limits of European Exploration in Asia." Itinerario 41, no. 3 (2017): 484–506. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0165115317000651.

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This article analyses two databases with information on traveling Jesuit missionaries to calculate the human cost of connecting Europe and China between 1500 and 1800. After combining analysis of these statistics with travel accounts, the article argues that when missionaries did not arrive at their intended destination, it was more often the case that they had been redirected than that they had died en route. Particular groups and individual Jesuits were redirected as a result of political fissures within the global Jesuit network. Since Jesuit missionaries held allegiances to competing state
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Stannek, Antje. "VESTIS VIRUM FACIT: FASHION, IDENTITY, AND ETHNOGRAPHY ON THE SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY GRAND TOUR." Journal of Early Modern History 7, no. 3 (2003): 332–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/157006503772486928.

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AbstractA new outfit for German princes and their entourages became fashionable with the adoption of Renaissance courtly behavior after the Thirty Years' War. This article considers the role of dress in the identity-building process of young German noblemen as they learned about new and fashionable dress codes while on Grand Tour through Europe. Wearing foreign clothes became a strategy of distinction by which noble cavaliers gained access to European court societies and made themselves discernible from regional noble elites. At the same time, traveling incognito allowed a German nobleman to o
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Altadill, David, Antoni Segarra, Estefania Blanch, et al. "A method for real-time identification and tracking of traveling ionospheric disturbances using ionosonde data: first results." Journal of Space Weather and Space Climate 10 (2020): 2. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/swsc/2019042.

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Traveling Ionospheric Disturbances (TIDs) are wave-like propagating irregularities that alter the electron density environment and play an important role spreading radio signals propagating through the ionosphere. A method combining spectral analysis and cross-correlation is applied to time series of ionospheric characteristics (i.e., MUF(3000)F2 or foF2) using data of the networks of ionosondes in Europe and South Africa to estimate the period, amplitude, velocity and direction of propagation of TIDs. The method is verified using synthetic data and is validated through comparison of TID detec
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Debeusscher, Juliane. "Traveling images and words: Czech action art through the lens of exhibitions and art criticism in Western Europe." Journal of Contemporary Central and Eastern Europe 27, no. 1 (2019): 29–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/25739638.2019.1643054.

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Michael A. Chaney. "Traveling Harlem's Europe: Vagabondage from Slave Narratives to Gwendolyn Bennett's "Wedding Day" and Claude McKay's Banjo." Journal of Narrative Theory 32, no. 1 (2002): 52–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/jnt.2011.0020.

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Hershenzon, Daniel. "Traveling Libraries: The Arabic Manuscripts of Muley Zidan and the Escorial Library." Journal of Early Modern History 18, no. 6 (2014): 535–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15700658-12342419.

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In 1612, a Spanish fleet captured a French ship whose stolen cargo included the entire manuscript collection of the Sultan of Morocco, Muley Zidan. Soon, the collection made its way to the royal library, El Escorial, transforming the library into an important repository of Arabic books, which, since then, Arabists from across Europe sought to visit. By focusing on the social life of the collection, from the moment of its capture up through the process of its incorporation into the Escorial, this article examines three related issues: the first regards the social trajectories of books and the e
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Goleşteanu, Raluca. "Representations of Central and Eastern Europe in Travelogues of Romanian and Polish Public Figures." Linguaculture 2015, no. 2 (2015): 43–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/lincu-2015-0044.

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Abstract This article proposes a reading of Milica Bakić-Hayden’s concept of “nesting orientalisms” in a wider regional context, by showing some of its first manifestations, as employed one hundred years or so ago. The debut of this phenomenon is part of the nineteenth century trend of traveling to “Eastern Europe,” and of appropriating it as such, in the desire to compete with the previous century, especially with the latter’s attempt of designing the map according to the dichotomy: “enlightened-ignorant peoples.” Consequently, the adoption of the concept of “Eastern Europe” by western public
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Fischer, Georg. "“Where are the Botocudos?” Anthropological displays and the entanglements of staring, 1882-1883." História, Ciências, Saúde-Manguinhos 26, no. 3 (2019): 969–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/s0104-59702019000300014.

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Abstract This article proposes an entangled perspective on nineteenth-century anthropological exhibitions. Whereas the existing scholarship mostly focuses on the receiving end of such displays or the agency of indigenous performers, this article argues for more stopovers and contextualization to grasp both the ambiguous position of non-metropolitan exhibitors like Brazil and the semantic transformations of traveling exhibits. In 1882, a group of Botocudo Amerindians was first taken to Rio de Janeiro and later put on display in Britain. Their presence in Rio sparked great interest, with lasting
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Rice, Louise. "Poussin’s Elephant." Renaissance Quarterly 70, no. 2 (2017): 548–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/693181.

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AbstractNicolas Poussin’s “Hannibal Crossing the Alps,” long considered one of his earliest surviving works, is here recognized as a portrait of a historical elephant who visited Rome in 1630 and re-dated accordingly. The article tells the story of this remarkable animal. It traces his passage from South Asia through Portugal, Spain, England, France, the Netherlands, Germany, Austria, Italy, and back again to France, and examines his encounters along the way with kings and courtiers, scholars, artists, and traveling showmen, giving insight into the diplomatic and economic uses of exotic animal
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Tängdén, Thomas, Otto Cars, Åsa Melhus та Elisabeth Löwdin. "Foreign Travel Is a Major Risk Factor for Colonization with Escherichia coli Producing CTX-M-Type Extended-Spectrum β-Lactamases: a Prospective Study with Swedish Volunteers". Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy 54, № 9 (2010): 3564–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/aac.00220-10.

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ABSTRACT Foreign travel has been suggested to be a risk factor for the acquisition of extended-spectrum beta-lactamase (ESBL)-producing Enterobacteriaceae. To our knowledge, this has not previously been demonstrated in a prospective study. Healthy volunteers traveling outside Northern Europe were enrolled. Rectal swabs and data on potential travel-associated risk factors were collected before and after traveling. A total of 105 volunteers were enrolled. Four of them did not complete the study, and one participant carried ESBL-producing Escherichia coli before travel. Twenty-four of 100 partici
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López-Moreno, Borja, David Martín-Barrios, Ivan Revuelta-Antizar, Santiago Rodríguez-Tejedor, Mariluz del Valle Ortega, and Eunate Arana-Arri. "PP133 Ensuring Secure Health Data Exchange Across Europe. The SHIELD Project." International Journal of Technology Assessment in Health Care 35, S1 (2019): 62–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0266462319002502.

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IntroductionData exchange protection is one of the main challenges in e-health. Nowadays, many people move from one country to another for various reasons, even though they may have chronic diseases or multiple pathologies. The main objective of the SHIELD project is to create an open and extendable security architecture, with supported privacy mechanisms that citizens can trust, to provide systematic protection for the storage and exchange of health data across European borders.MethodsepSOS is a European project that deals with the security and interoperability of e-health data, and has devel
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Gkoumas, Konstantinos, Kyriaki Gkoktsi, Flavio Bono, Maria Cristina Galassi, and Daniel Tirelli. "The Way Forward for Indirect Structural Health Monitoring (iSHM) Using Connected and Automated Vehicles in Europe." Infrastructures 6, no. 3 (2021): 43. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/infrastructures6030043.

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Europe’s aging transportation infrastructure requires optimized maintenance programs. However, data and monitoring systems may not be readily available to support strategic decisions or they may require costly installations in terms of time and labor requirements. In recent years, the possibility of monitoring bridges by indirectly sensing relevant parameters from traveling vehicles has emerged—an approach that would allow for the elimination of the costly installation of sensors and monitoring campaigns. The advantages of cooperative, connected, and automated mobility (CCAM), which is expecte
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Aksonova, K. D., and S. V. Panasenko. "PREDOMINANT TRAVELING IONOSPHERIC DISTURBANCES OVER EASTERN EUROPE DURING LOW LEVELS OF SOLAR AND GEOMAGNETIC ACTIVITIES USING INCOHERENT SCATTER RADAR DATA." Radio physics and radio astronomy 25, no. 2 (2020): 100–117. http://dx.doi.org/10.15407/rpra25.02.100.

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Bonnet, Yannis. "Surrogacy in France: A summary of the situation." Bioethica 7, no. 1 (2021): 64. http://dx.doi.org/10.12681/bioeth.26538.

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Since the first law on bioethics in France in 1994, surrogacy is prohibited. With the liberalization of our society, some occidental countries accepted surrogacy under a specific legal framework. Still, France did not bend to this and always stated that surrogacy must be forbidden. However, with globalization, that facilitates fertility tourism across Europe and even further, France faced an issue with intended parents traveling abroad to have surrogacy and went back to France with children having uncertain civil status. The French legislation has been modified, taking into account all the iss
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Mihes, Cristina. "A GLIMPSE INTO THE PRESENT AND FUTURE OF LABOUR LAW AND INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS IN CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE." Polityka Społeczna 551, no. 2 (2020): 21–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.5604/01.3001.0013.9496.

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This paper seeks to take a look at recent labour law reforms in a number of selected CEE countries, and to examine the manner, in which the equation of standard employment relationship and the dynamics of collective bargaining processes have changed. The 1st section discusses the policy goals as well as drivers of legal changes, which have aff ected and guided recent labour law reforms in the sub-region. External infl uences over shaping of the new policy visions and recovery policies are also examined here. The 2nd section examines recent trends in regulating standard and non-standard employm
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Bernays, Elizabeth A. "An Unlikely Beginning: A Fortunate Life." Annual Review of Entomology 64, no. 1 (2019): 1–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.1146/annurev-ento-011118-111820.

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Elizabeth A. Bernays grew up in Australia and studied at the University of Queensland before traveling in Europe and teaching high school in London. She later obtained a PhD in entomology at London University. Then, as a British government scientist, she worked in England and in developing countries on a variety of projects concerned with feeding by herbivorous insects and their physiology and behavior. In 1983, she was appointed professor at the University of California, Berkeley, where her research expanded to a variety of topics, all related to the physiology, behavior, and ecology of feedi
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Morgan, Kimberly J. "Path Shifting of the Welfare State: Electoral Competition and the Expansion of Work-Family Policies in Western Europe." World Politics 65, no. 1 (2013): 73–115. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0043887112000251.

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What explains the surprising growth of work-family policies in several West European countries? Much research on the welfare state emphasizes its institutional stickiness and immunity to major change. Yet, over the past two decades, governments in Germany, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom have introduced important reforms to their welfare regimes, enacting paid leave schemes, expanded rights to part-time work, and greater investments in child care. A comparison of these countries reveals a similar sequence of political and policy change. Faced with growing electoral instability and the
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Snigovska, Oksana, and Andriy Malakhiti. "“RED” ODESSA IN THE EYES OF N. KAZANDZAKIS: DOCUMENTARY-ARTISTIC TWO of the AUTHOR’s worlds (based on the travelogue «Traveling: Russia»)." Studia Linguistica, no. 15 (2019): 235–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.17721/studling2019.15.235-249.

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The article explores the features of documentary works of art, in particular letters, articles, travel notes, newspaper publications, photo and video materials, which formed the basis of the travelogue «Travelling: Russia» by the Greek writer Nikos Kazantzakis. It describes his trips to the Soviet Union in the 20s of the XX century. A complex of themes and motives typical of travelogue, topos is considered, topographic plots focused on the presentation of facts and situations are highlighted. The subject of the image in travel notes and feature articles by N. Kazantzakis is practically everyth
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Igreja, Ricardo Pereira. "Pre-travel health advice for human immunodeficiency virus-infected travelers, from Rio de Janeiro." Revista da Sociedade Brasileira de Medicina Tropical 42, no. 3 (2009): 260–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/s0037-86822009000300005.

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Counseling for human immunodeficiency virus infected travelers is becoming increasingly specialized. Previous studies have reported the experience of HIV-infected travelers from temperate-climate countries but little is known about HIV-infected travelers from tropical countries. A retrospective study was conducted on HIV-infected travelers presenting at a travel health clinic in Rio de Janeiro. Eleven journeys by ten people were recorded. Brazil (Amazon region and Northeast) was the destination for six journeys. Other destinations were Peru, Angola, Europe and Asia. Nine attendees were undergo
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Schüller, Volkmar, and Sonja Brentjes. "Pietro Della Valle's Latin Geography of Safavid Iran (1624-1628): Introduction." Journal of Early Modern History 10, no. 3 (2006): 169–219. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/157006506778234162.

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AbstractThis article argues that Pietro della Valle's Latin geography of the Safavid Empire is important for taking a middle ground between two common tendencies of early modern authors in Catholic and Protestant Europe when writing about Western Asia and Northern Africa. While cartographers and mapmakers—in Venice, Antwerp, Amsterdam, and Paris—privileged new information (from travelers) in their choice of place names, those who wrote on the history or geography of these regions often suppressed local knowledge, giving preference to terms from ancient Greek and Latin history and geography, en
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Johnson, James Turner. "Does Democracy “Travel”? Some Thoughts on Democracy and Its Cultural Context." Ethics & International Affairs 6 (March 1992): 41–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1747-7093.1992.tb00541.x.

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The fundamental question is whether the non-Western world is capable of developing our form of liberal democratic self-government, despite our differences in tradition and culture. The author taps on several critical differences of interpretation of what we consider to be integral to our form of government, such as John Locke's concept of “civil society”; the idea of “pluralism”; and the concept of “inherent human rights” counsel, which have distinctly different meanings in the West compared to those of Central and Eastern Europe. Interestingly, the differences are indicative of the profound c
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Oliveira, Ivo, Carlos Miguel Oliveira, and Natália Costa. "Millennial Generation Outbound Travel Market, the Case of Oporto." JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS RESEARCH AND MARKETING 3, no. 1 (2017): 25–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.18775/jibrm.1849-8558.2015.31.3004.

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In Europe, short city breaks are popular. Tourism is characterized by shorter and more frequent trips, spaced throughout the year, lower spending per tourist and making use of low cost airlines. We witnessed a democratization of the use of air transport, traveling who cannot afford this activity in the past and increasing travel the frequency of those who have travelled. This change in travel habits affect the travel industry and hospitality. Oporto is currently one of Europe’s tourist destinations with the highest growth, which is due mainly to increased demand from tourists for city breaks.
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Bowen, John R. "Scripture and Society in Modern Muslim Asia—A Symposium Introduction." Journal of Asian Studies 52, no. 3 (1993): 559–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2058853.

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Since the late nineteenth century, Muslim movements for religious and social reform have underscored the value of making scripture accessible to a broad public. Scholars and activists alike have urged ordinary Muslim men and women to study and follow the Qur'ān and the hadīth (the reports of the Prophet Muhammad's words and deeds), and to do so they have rendered these scriptural writings and commentaries on them into the vernaculars of Asia, Africa, and Europe. They have also framed a wide range of appeals—to study the sciences, to modernize society, to stage a revolution—in the language and
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Bottomore, Stephen. "Travelling cinema in Europe: Sources and perspectives/Wanderkino in Europa." Early Popular Visual Culture 7, no. 2 (2009): 226–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17460650903011277.

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Poniatowski, Mateusz, and Grzegorz Nykiel. "Degradation of Kinematic PPP of GNSS Stations in Central Europe Caused by Medium-Scale Traveling Ionospheric Disturbances During the St. Patrick’s Day 2015 Geomagnetic Storm." Remote Sensing 12, no. 21 (2020): 3582. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/rs12213582.

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In solar cycle 24, the strongest geomagnetic storm took place on 17 March 2015, when the geomagnetic activity index was as high as −223 nT. To verify the impact that the storm had on the Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS)’s positioning accuracy and precision, we used 30-s observations from 15 reference stations located in Central Europe. For each of them, we applied kinematic precise point positioning (PPP) using gLAB software for the day of the storm and, for comparison, for a selected quiet day (13 March 2015). Based on the conducted analyses, we found out that the position root mean
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Classen, Albrecht. "Evgeny Khvalkov, The Colonies of Genoa in the Black Sea Region: Evolution and Transformation. Routledge Research in Medieval Studies, 11. New York and London: Routledge, 2018, xiv, 443 pp., 10 fig., 7 tables." Mediaevistik 32, no. 1 (2020): 482–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.3726/med.2019.01.129.

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Our current and very urgent goal is to transform Medieval Studies into Global Medieval Studies, a thorny, challenging, maybe also daunting task, but one that we cannot turn away if we want to progress in our field. In fact, it does not matter whether we want to go that route or not; if we want to understand the Middle Ages both holistically and in specifics, we must simply accept that many people (merchants, soldiers, diplomats, artists, craftsmen, preachers, rulers, scholars, etc.) traveled not only throughout Europe, but also far beyond those limits, and encountered in that way countless oth
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Zagaria, Valentina. "“A Small Story With Great Symbolic Potential”: Attempts at Fixing a Cemetery of Unknown Migrants in Tunisia." American Behavioral Scientist 64, no. 4 (2019): 540–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0002764219882994.

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From the summer of 2015, as Europe faced the so-called “refugee crisis,” a cemetery in southeast Tunisia started gaining fame. Journalists, researchers, filmmakers, photographers, and activists began traveling to the coastal town of Zarzis to report on a burial site for the victims of the European Union’s border. They were welcomed by local actors, and in particular by Chamseddine, a former fisherman who over the years became deeply involved in these burials. Told through one man’s charitable commitment to provide dignity to those who died at the European Union’s liquid border, the cemetery wa
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Bronshteyn, A. M., N. A. Malyshev, N. G. Kochergin, S. N. Jarov, and N. E. Vikhrev. "Diseases caused by arthropods-moth larva in clitoris, tungiasis, cutaneous and intestinal myiasis in Russian travelers: report of eight cases and review the literature." Epidemiology and Infectious Diseases 18, no. 2 (2013): 40–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.17816/eid40722.

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Diseases caused by several species of arthropods are rare diseases in Europe. Very few cases of these diseases have been reported in the literature. It is widespread in the tropics and subtropics of Africa and the Americas, and occurs with significantly less frequency in most other areas of the world. They are defined by the development of parasitic, mostly tropical maggots and sand fleas in the human body. The infestation of body tissues by the larvae of flies, sand fleas and moth caterpillars, occurs infrequently in Russian tourists who return from areas where certain species are endemic. As
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