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doab38233
|
Migration in the Southern Balkans: From Ottoman Territory to Globalized Nation States
| null | null | null | null |
Springer Nature
|
2015
|
[
"978-3-319-13719-3",
"9783319137193"
] |
[
"Development studies",
"Humanities",
"Law",
"Social classes",
"Cities, Countries, Regions",
"Demography",
"History, general",
"Migration"
] |
eng
|
https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/38233
|
https://library.oapen.org/bitstream/20.500.12657/28021/1/1001976.pdf
| null | null |
[] |
CC BY-NC
|
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
|
4.0
|
Creative Commons
|
Migration; History, general; Cities, Countries, Regions; Demography
|
IMISCOE Research Series
|
1 online resource (211 p.)
|
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pdfs/cc-by-nc/doab38233.pdf
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[
"",
"IMISCOE Research Series",
"This series is the official book series of IMISCOE, the largest network of excellence\non migration and diversity in the world. It comprises publications which present\nempirical and theoretical research on different aspects of international migration.\nThe authors are all specialists, and the publications a rich source of information for\nresearchers and others involved in international migration studies.\nThe series is published under the editorial supervision of the IMISCOE Editorial\nCommittee which includes leading scholars from all over Europe. The series, which\ncontains more than eighty titles already, is internationally peer reviewed which en-\nsures that the book published in this series continue to present excellent academic\nstandards and scholarly quality. Most of the books are available open access.\nFor information on how to submit a book proposal, please visit: http://www.\nimiscoe.org/publications/how-to-submit-a-book-proposal.\nMore information about this series at http://www.springer.com/series/13502\nA welcome addition to the migration scholarship on this little-known, fragmented but\nglobally important region. Taken together, the contributions offer a rich blend of history,\npolitics, sociology and anthropology, alongside studies of memory, mobility and ethno-\nlinguistic identity.\nRussell King, University of Sussex and Malmö University\nThis well researched volume is a welcomed addition to our understanding of cross border\nmigration over time in the southern Balkan region. The focus on the transformation of so-\ncial identities is a testimony to the long term historical processes that underpin large scale\npopulation displacements which are far richer than mere ‘migration crises’.\nEftihia Voutira, Professor, Anthropology of Forced Migration, Department of Balkan Slavic\nand Oriental Studies, University of Macedonia, Thessaloniki\nMigration is a ubiquitous phenomenon in the modern world. This thoughtful book stud-\nies migration patterns and intercultural exchanges within the transnational region of the\nSouthern Balkans against a deep historical background, offering fresh and alternative\nreadings of the past two centuries. From the final decades of the multicultural Ottoman\nEmpire, through the homogenizing efforts of several nation states, to new forms of ethnic\nand cultural diversity imposed through globalized networks, this important collection of\noriginal essays successfully brings together two separate fields within migration studies,\nthose of forced and voluntary migrations. A genuinely transnational volume, both in its\nscholarly approach and the makeup of its contributors.\nMaria Todorova, Gutgsell Professor of History, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign",
"Hans Vermeulen • Martin Baldwin-Edwards\nRiki van Boeschoten\nEditors\nMigration in the Southern\nBalkans\nFrom Ottoman Territory to Globalized\nNation States",
"Editors\nHans Vermeulen Riki van Boeschoten\nEmeritus professor History, Archeology and Soc. Anthropology\nUniversity of Amsterdam University of Thessaly\nAmsterdam Volos\nThe Netherlands Greece\nMartin Baldwin-Edwards\nFormer Director\nMediterranean Migration Observatory\nAthens\nGreece\nAdditional material to this book can be downloaded from http://extras.springer.com.\nIMISCOE Research Series\nISBN 978-3-319-13718-6 ISBN 978-3-319-13719-3 (eBook)\nDOI 10.1007/978-3-319-13719-3\nLibrary of Congress Control Number: 2015933275\nSpringer Cham Heidelberg New York Dordrecht London\n© The Editor(s) (if applicable) and the Author(s) 2015. The book is published with open access at\nSpringerLink.com.\nOpenAccess: This book is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution\nNoncommercial License which permits any noncommercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any\nmedium, provided the original author(s) and source are credited.\nAll commercial rights are reserved by the Publisher, whether the whole or part of the material is\nconcerned, specifically the rights of translation, reprinting, re-use of illustrations, recitation, broadcasting,\nreproduction on microfilms or in any other way, and storage in data banks. Duplication of this publication\nor parts thereof is permitted only under the provisions of the Copyright Law of the Publisher’s location,\nin its current version, and permission for commercial use must always be obtained from Springer.\nPermissions for commercial use may be obtained through RightsLink at the Copyright Clearance Center.\nViolations are liable to prosecution under the respective Copyright Law. The use of general descriptive\nnames, registered names, trademarks, etc. in this publication does not imply, even in the absence of a\nspecific statement, that such names are exempt from the relevant protective laws and regulations and\ntherefore free for general use.\nPrinted on acid-free paper\nSpringer is a brand of Springer International Publishing\nSpringer International Publishing is part of Springer Science+Business Media (www.springer.com)",
"Appendix\nMap 3 Sax’s Ethnographic Map of European Turkey in 1877\nAt the end of the nineteenth and the beginning of the twentieth century, many maps\nwere produced claiming to show the ethnographic composition of the Balkans. Al-\nmost all maps were published to substantiate claims on territory.1 These maps were\nintended as weapons in nationalist struggles. Depending on the interests of the con-\ntesting nation states most were based on one of two criteria: language or religion.\nNevertheless, some maps were better than others. One of the best—if not the best—\nis the map presented here by Carl Sax. Sax was Austro-Hungarian consul in vari-\nous cities of the Ottoman Empire. He gathered information for the map by studying\nmaps made by others, by consulting other Austro-Hungarian consuls and by travelling\nthrough the region. His Ethnographic Map of European Turkey and her Dependencies\nwas published in 1878 by the Imperial and Royal Geographical Society of Vienna.\nSax’s map uses both language and religion as criteria for ethno-national groups.\nThe key organizes the linguistic differences in columns, with the rows indicating\nthe three main religions of Oriental Christianity, Catholic Christianity and Islam.\nWithin the language-religion cells, Sax makes a number of further differentiations.\nThese are not all of one kind. In four cases, Sax distinguishes what could be called\nin-between categories: Greco Vlachs, Serbo-Bulgarians, Greco-Bulgarians and\nGreco-Albanians. But while Greco-Bulgarians are placed in the Bulgarian category,\nGreco-Albanians are classified as Greeks. Apparently—and understandably—Sax\njudged that the Greco-Albanians as a group were more Hellenized than the Greco-\nBulgarians. The key here has been translated into English and superimposed onto\nthe original. We have tried to keep the translations of the group names close to the\noriginal, with the exception of notating Graeco-Albanesen as Albano-Greeks.\nThe online version of the appendix (doi: 10.1007/978-3-319-13719-3) contains a high-resolution\ncolour image of the Sax map\n1 For example, see Wilkinson (1951), Maps and Politics: A Review of the Ethnographic Cartogra-\nphy of Macedonia, Liverpool University Press.\n© The Author(s) 2015. This book is published with open access at SpringerLink.com 209\nH. Vermeulen et al. (eds.), Migration in the Southern Balkans,IMISCOE Research Series,\nDOI 10.1007/978-3-319-13719-3",
"210 Appendix",
"Appendix 211\nThis volume collects ten essays that look at intra-regional migration in the Southern\nBalkans from the late Ottoman period to the present. It examines forced as well as\nvoluntary migrations and places these movements within their historical context,\nincluding ethnic cleansing, population exchanges, and demographic engineering in\nthe service of nation-building as well as more recent labor migration due to global-\nization.\nInside, readers will find the work of international experts that cuts across national\nand disciplinary lines. This cross-cultural, comparative approach fully captures the\ncomplexity of this highly fractured, yet interconnected, region. Coverage explores\nthe role of population exchanges in the process of nation-building and irredentist\npolicies in interwar Bulgaria, the story of Thracian refugees and their organizations\nin Bulgaria, the changing waves of migration from the Balkans to Turkey, Albanian\nimmigrants in Greece, and the diminished importance of ethnic migration after the\n1990s. In addition, the collection looks at such under-researched aspects of migra-\ntion as memory, gender, and religion.\nThe field of migration studies in the Southern Balkans is still fragmented along\nnational and disciplinary lines. Moreover, the study of forced and voluntary migra-\ntions is often separate with few interconnections. The essays collected in this book\nbring these different traditions together. This complete portrait will help readers\ngain deep insight and better understanding into the diverse migration flows and\nintercultural exchanges that have occurred in the Southern Balkans in the last two\ncenturies."
] |
[
1,
2,
3,
4,
5,
217,
218,
219
] | 219 | |
doab30040
|
So schaffen wir das - eine Zivilgesellschaft im Aufbruch
|
90 wegweisende Projekte mit Geflüchteten
| null | null | null |
transcript Verlag
|
2017
|
[
"9783837638295;9783732838295",
"9783839438299_978-3-8394-3829-9_So"
] |
[
"Refugees & political asylum",
"Berlin",
"bürgerschaftliches engagement",
"civil society",
"cultural anthropology",
"deutschland",
"Ehrenamt",
"fleeing",
"flucht",
"flüchtlingsarbeit",
"flüchtlingsforschung",
"germany",
"integration",
"integrationl",
"kulturanthropologie",
"migration",
"migration policy",
"migrationspolitik",
"refugee studies",
"sociology",
"soziologie",
"Verein",
"volunteering",
"zivilgesellschaft",
"zuwanderung"
] |
ger
|
https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/30040
|
https://library.oapen.org/bitstream/20.500.12657/31212/1/634739.pdf
| null | null |
[] |
CC BY-NC-ND
|
by-nc-nd/3.0/
|
3.0
|
Creative Commons
|
In der Auseinandersetzung mit Flucht hat sich die deutsche Zivilgesellschaft neu aufgestellt. Zwischen 2015 und 2016 sind etwa 15.000 Projekte entstanden, in denen kreative Antworten auf die vielfältigen Herausforderungen der Zuwanderung gefunden wurden. Sie bilden eine Alternative zu Panikreaktionen, die den einzigen Umgang mit Flucht in Kontrollen und Abschreckung sehen. In diesem Band werden 90 beispielhafte Projekte dargestellt. Sie zeigen, welche Kraft zur Bewältigung von gesellschaftlichen Problemen in der gegenwärtigen Zivilgesellschaft zu finden ist - und welches Potenzial zu einem neuen Miteinander nicht nur im Umgang mit Zuwanderern, sondern auch innerhalb der Zivilgesellschaft steckt. ''Diese Publikation wurde gefördert durch die Beauftragte der Bundesregierung für Migration, Flüchtlinge und Integration. While dealing with the challenge of fleeing from war and poverty, the German civilian society has reinvented itself. Between 2015 and 2016 approximately 15,000 projects were established and creative answers to the manifold challenges of immigration were found. They provide an alternative to panic reactions that consider controls and deterrence to be the only means of how to deal with refugees. This volume describes 90 exemplary projects. They show how much power to master social problems can be found in today's civilian society - and how much potential for a new kind of interacting not only with immigrants but also within the society itself.
|
Kultur und soziale Praxis
|
1 online resource (344 p.)
|
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"Werner Schiffauer, Anne Eilert, Marlene Rudloff (Hg.)\nSo schaffen wir das – eine Zivilgesellschaft im Aufbruch\nKultur und soziale Praxis",
"",
"Werner Schiffauer, Anne Eilert, Marlene Rudloff (Hg.)\nSo schaffen wir das –\neine Zivilgesellschaft im Aufbruch\n90 wegweisende Projekte mit Geflüchteten",
"Ein Projekt des Rats für Migration\nGefördert durch die Bundesbeauftragte für Migration, Flüchtlinge und Integration\nDieses Werk ist lizenziert unter der\nCCrreeaattiivvee CCoommmmoonnss AAttttrriibbuuttiioonn--NNoonnCCoommmmeerrcciiaall--NNooDDeerriivvss 33..00 DDEE LLiizzeennzz\n((BBYY--NNCC--NNDD))..\nDiese Lizenz erlaubt die private Nutzung, gestattet aber keine Bearbeitung und\nkeine kommerzielle Nutzung. Weitere Informationen finden Sie unter\nhttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/de/.\nBBiibblliiooggrraaffiisscchhee IInnffoorrmmaattiioonn ddeerr DDeeuuttsscchheenn NNaattiioonnaallbbiibblliiootthheekk\nDie Deutsche Nationalbibliothek verzeichnet diese Publikation in der Deutschen\nNationalbibliografie; detaillierte bibliografische Daten sind im Internet über\nhttp://dnb.d-nb.de abrufbar.\nDieVerwertungderTexteundBilderistohneZustimmungdesVerlagesurheber-\nrechtswidrig und strafbar. Das gilt auch für Vervielfältigungen, Übersetzungen,\nMikroverfilmungen und für die Verarbeitung mit elektronischen Systemen.\n© 2017 transcript Verlag, Bielefeld\nUmschlaggestaltung: Kordula Röckenhaus, Bielefeld\nSatz: Justine Buri, Bielefeld\nPrinted in Germany\nPrint-ISBN 978-3-8376-3829-5\nPDF-ISBN 978-3-8394-3829-9\nEPUB-ISBN 978-3-7328-3829-5\nBesuchen Sie uns im Internet: http://www.transcript-verlag.de",
"Soziologie\nUwe Becker\nDie Inklusionslüge\nBehinderung im flexiblen Kapitalismus\n2015, 216 S., kart., 19,99 € (DE),\nISBN 978-3-8376-3056-5\nE-Book: 17,99 € (DE), ISBN 978-3-8394-3056-9\nEPUB: 17,99 € (DE), ISBN 978-3-7328-3056-5\nGabriele Winker\nCare Revolution\nSchritte in eine solidarische Gesellschaft\n2015, 208 S., kart., 11,99 € (DE),\nISBN 978-3-8376-3040-4\nE-Book: 10,99 € (DE), ISBN 978-3-8394-3040-8\nEPUB: 10,99 € (DE), ISBN 978-3-7328-3040-4\nJohannes Angermuller, Martin Nonhoff ,\nEva Herschinger, Felicitas Macgilchrist,\nMartin Reisigl, Juliette Wedl, Daniel Wrana,\nAlexander Ziem (Hg.)\nDiskursforschung\nEin interdisziplinäres Handbuch (2 Bde.)\n2014, 1264 S., kart., 2 Bde. im Schuber, zahlr. Abb.\n44,99 € (DE), ISBN 978-3-8376-2722-0\nE-Book: 44,99 € (DE), ISBN 978-3-8394-2722-4\nLeseproben, weitere Informationen und Bestellmöglichkeiten\nfinden Sie unter www.transcript-verlag.de",
"Soziologie\nSilke Helfrich, Heinrich-Böll-Stiftung (Hg.)\nCommons\nFür eine neue Politik\njenseits von Markt und Staat\n2014, 528 S., kart., 24,80 € (DE),\nISBN 978-3-8376-2835-7\nals Open-Access-Publikation kostenlos erhältlich\nE-Book: ISBN 978-3-8394-2835-1\nCarlo Bordoni\nInterregnum\nBeyond Liquid Modernity\nMärz 2016, 136 p., 19,99 € (DE),\nISBN 978-3-8376-3515-7\nE-Book: 17,99 € (DE), ISBN 978-3-8394-3515-1\nEPUB: 17,99 € (DE), ISBN 978-3-7328-3515-7\nKijan Espahangizi, Sabine Hess, Juliane Karakayali,\nBernd Kasparek, Simona Pagano, Mathias Rodatz,\nVassilis S. Tsianos (Hg.)\nmovements. Journal für kritische Migrations-\nund Grenzregimeforschung\nJg. 2, Heft 1/2016:\nRassismus in der postmigrantischen Gesellschaft\nSeptember 2016, 272 S., kart.\n24,99 € (DE), ISBN 978-3-8376-3570-6\nals Open-Access-Publikation kostenlos erhältlich:\nwww.movements-journal.org\nLeseproben, weitere Informationen und Bestellmöglichkeiten\nfinden Sie unter www.transcript-verlag.de",
""
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doab37167
|
Chapter 6 Digital Editing and the Greek New Testament
| null | null | null | null |
Brill
|
2016
|
[
"9789004325234",
"9789004325234"
] |
[
"Christianity",
"Bible",
"Bible",
"Christianity",
"Christianity",
"Classics",
"Classics",
"Collaborative editing",
"Culture",
"Culture",
"Digital Humanities",
"Digital Humanities",
"Humanities",
"Humanities",
"Institute for New Testament Textual Research",
"Judaism",
"Judaism",
"Manuscript",
"Münster",
"New Testament",
"Novum Testamentum Graece",
"Primary source",
"Software",
"Textual criticism",
"XML"
] |
eng
|
https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/37167
|
https://library.oapen.org/bitstream/20.500.12657/29708/1/9789004325234_webready_content_s007.pdf
| null | null |
[] |
CC BY-NC
|
by-nc/4.0/
|
4.0
|
Creative Commons
|
The textual tradition of the Bible has inspired many of the most significant developments, principles and methodologies in editorial practice, from the parallel texts and critical symbols of Origen's Hexapla in the early third century to Lachmann's nineteeth-century stemmatics. It is therefore unsurprising that, in this digital age, the New Testament continues to be at the forefront of new and exciting initiatives. The present chapter describes the workflow and tools developed for the Editio Critica Maior of the Greek New Testament, in particular those associated with the Workspace for Collaborative Editing, and how these have shaped the task of editing both the text and documents of the New Testament and offer new models of publication thanks to the capacity of electronic media and the Internet.
|
Digital Biblical Studies
|
1 online resource (17 p.)
|
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[
"110 Houghton And Smith\nChapter 6 Houghton and Smith\nDigital Editing and the Greek New Testament1\nHugh A.G. Houghton and Catherine J. Smith\nThe textual tradition of the Bible has inspired many of the most significant\ndevelopments, principles and methodologies in editorial practice, from the\nparallel texts and critical symbols of Origen’s Hexapla in the early third century\nto Lachmann’s nineteeth-century stemmatics. It is therefore unsurprising that,\nin this digital age, the New Testament continues to be at the forefront of new\nand exciting initiatives. The present chapter describes the workflow and tools\ndeveloped for the Editio Critica Maior of the Greek New Testament, in particu-\nlar those associated with the Workspace for Collaborative Editing, and how\nthese have shaped the task of editing both the text and documents of the New\nTestament and offer new models of publication thanks to the capacity of elec-\ntronic media and the Internet.\nThe Novum Testamentum Graecum Editio Critica Maior (ecm) has been\ndescribed as “the apotheosis of the critical edition” (Parker 2008, 200). Although\nit follows in the tradition of the great nineteenth-century editions of the New\nTestament, such as Lachmann and Buttmann (1842–1850), Tregelles (1857–\n1879), Tischendorf (1869–1884), and Westcott and Hort (1881), its comprehensive\napproach based on every surviving manuscript is predicated on the use of\ncomputers to acquire, analyse and publish the data associated with the edi-\ntion.2 The final goal is twofold: a reconstruction of the form of text underlying\nall the existing evidence (the Ausgangstext, or “Initial Text”) along with a pres-\nentation of variant readings from the most significant witnesses, reflecting the\ntextual history of the first millennium. As each section of the New Testament\nis completed, the newly-constituted editorial text is to be adopted by the\nNestle–Aland hand edition which will thus become the editio minor to the\n1 This chapter draws on research from the Workspace for Collaborative Editing project, sup-\nported by the Arts and Humanities Research Council and the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft,\nand the compaul project funded from the European Union Seventh Framework Programme\n(FP7/2007–2013) under grant agreement no. 283302 (compaul: “The Earliest Commentaries\non Paul in Greek and Latin as Sources for the Biblical Text”). An initial version was presented\nat the SBL Annual Meeting in Baltimore, November 2013.\n2 For a recent overview of editions of the Greek New Testament, including the ecm, see Parker\n2012, especially chapter 4; Wachtel 2000 provides an explanation of the initial workflow for\nthe ecm and printed edition.\n© Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, 2016 | doi 10.1163/9789004325234_007",
"Digital Editing and the Greek New Testament 111\nmore substantial presentation of the ecm. This is already the case for the\nCatholic Epistles, the first books to be published in the series (B. Aland et al.\n2013), whose text now appears in the twenty-eighth edition of Nestle–Aland\n(Nestle et al. 2012) and the fifth edition of the United Bible Societies’ Greek New\nTestament (United Bible Societies 2014).\nThe ecm is currently a collaborative endeavour between the Institut für\nneutestamentliche Textforschung in Münster (intf), the International Greek\nNew Testament Project (igntp) and the Institut für Septuaginta- und biblische\nTextforschung in Wuppertal (isbtf). One of the factors making this collabora-\ntion possible is the adoption of shared software and encoding schemes.3 These\nhave recently been brought together in the Workspace for Collaborative\nEditing, a joint Anglo-German project with the aim of providing a shared\nonline environment for editorial work on the ecm. Although it is by no means\nunique to the Greek New Testament, the impact of digital data and electronic\ncommunications in fostering collaboration both within and between research\nteams is a significant advance in itself: the ease with which material and exper-\ntise can be shared in a multinational context can lead to a more consultative\nand mutually responsible approach between a number of partners working on\noverlapping projects.\nThe process of making an edition of the Greek New Testament is, in princi-\nple, the same as for any other work.4 As with most writings from antiquity, the\nautographs have not survived, although it remains possible that forms of text\nin circulation may reflect differing recensions produced by the author or com-\nmunity responsible for the earliest form of the work. The task of the editor is to\nidentify and assemble the available evidence, making a selection from this as\nrequired; the textual data must then be compared and the variants evaluated,\nespecially if an eclectic text is to be reconstructed based on various witnesses;\nthe final publication must be as transparent as possible, both in presenting the\nprimary sources and in explaining any editorial intervention.5 In printed edi-\ntions, constraints of space for reasons of economy have usually led to the\ncompression of the critical apparatus. Electronic publishing, however, allows\nmuch more freedom, with the potential for users to customise their views,\nsuch as toggling between a positive and negative apparatus, or selecting differ-\nent witnesses for inclusion. The scope for extensive presentation of primary\n3 The collaboration is outlined by Parker and Wachtel 2005. The main aspects of the encoding\nare described in Houghton 2013.\n4 This is considered and described in detail in Parker 2012.\n5 For further thoughts on presentation, see Elliott 1986; and Parker 2000, 36–39.",
"112 Houghton And Smith\nmaterial in a digital edition ties the editorial endeavour ever closer to the docu-\nments on which it is based, as will be explained further below.\nOne of the principal problems facing an editor of the New Testament is\nthe abundance of material. Over five and a half thousand complete or frag-\nmentary copies of the Greek New Testament survive from the period when it\nwas transmitted by hand. A full catalogue is therefore indispensable for iden-\ntifying the witnesses required for an edition. Since 1963, the index of Greek\nmanuscripts has been the Kurzgefasste Liste der griechischen Handschriften des\nNeuen Testaments, maintained by the intf (K. Aland et al. 1994). In it, each\nmanuscript is assigned a unique identifier, known as its Gregory–Aland (or\nGA) number.6 Following numerous printed updates, the Liste is now avail-\nable online as part of the intf’s “New Testament Virtual Manuscript Room”\n(nt.vmr; <http://ntvmr.uni-muenster.de/>). This electronic version can be\nsearched by number, country and holding institution, as well as filtered by\ndate and physical features such as the number of columns and lines on each\npage. The latter information is particularly important in examining potential\nnew additions and identifying manuscripts which have changed ownership\nsince the last available information. Further facilities currently in progress on\nthe site include searches for biblical verses and specific codicological features,\nbased on the crowd-sourced indexing of individual manuscripts: although it\nwill be many years before these give exhaustive results, they are nonetheless\nindicative of the potential of the digital Liste to provide resources for further\nresearch.\nThe selection of manuscripts for the ecm is based on the Text und Textwert\nanalysis undertaken in the second half of the twentieth century by the intf.7\nThis represents one of the early uses of databases to analyse Greek New\nTestament manuscripts. A series of points of variation (Teststellen) were cho-\nsen in each of the New Testament writings (apart from Revelation), and the\nreading of every extant document recorded at that point. Texts which agreed\nwith the majority of manuscripts are given the identifier “1,” while those corre-\nsponding to the earliest text reconstructed in the Nestle–Aland edition (where\nthis differed from the majority) are labelled “2” and further variant readings\n(Sonderlesarten) numbered in sequence. Given the trend towards uniformity\nin the textual tradition of the Greek New Testament, witnesses which devi-\nate from the norm are more likely to preserve earlier forms of text, regardless\nof the age of the document. The most significant manuscripts can be identi-\nfied according to their percentage agreement with the majority readings, using\n6 A detailed description of the Liste is given in Parker 2008, 38–46.\n7 For further description of the published volumes, see K. Aland and B. Aland 1989, 317–332.",
"Digital Editing and the Greek New Testament 113\nan appropriate cut-off point. For example, an overall agreement of 85% or\nless with the majority results in a group of around one hundred and twenty\nmanuscripts for each writing, which usually includes all of the oldest, most\nfamous, witnesses and provides the principal variant readings from the first\nthousand years of transmission. Experiments with raising or lowering the per-\ncentage agreement provide a way of identifying the amount of information\nwhich would be lost by choosing a particular cut-off point. The most thorough\nvindication of the approach is provided by the comparison of the ecm edi-\ntion of Jude, relying on 140, manuscripts, with Wasserman’s collation of all\n560 Greek manuscripts of the epistle (Wasserman 2006): although the latter\nreports additional variant readings and further attestation for known alterna-\ntives, as expected, none of the significant forms are missing from the former.\nInteractive tools using the Text und Textwert data for the Gospels are available\nonline.8\nThe manuscripts identified for inclusion in the edition then need to be\nexamined in full for the relevant New Testament book. Before the advent of\ndigital reproductions, there were three ways to access the complete text of a\nmanuscript: (1) consultation of the document in person at the holding institu-\ntion; (2) microfilm or photographic images; (3) published editions or collations\nof individual witnesses, sometimes in the form of a facsimile. The recent move\ntowards full digitisation of manuscripts by holding institutions (e.g. the British\nLibrary,9 the Bibliothèque Nationale de France,10 the Biblioteca Apostolica\nVaticana,11 and a consortium of Swiss libraries12) means that consultation of a\nsurrogate for the original is now significantly easier. Even digitised microfilm,\nwhile often of inferior quality, is still a major step forward in making images\navailable. Furthermore, this innovation serves to broaden the user community,\nwhich formerly was normally restricted to scholars with special permission as\nwell as funds available for travel (or acquiring reproductions); now, anyone\nwith an internet browser can view manuscripts. One result has been an explo-\nsive increase in the discussion of these artefacts, by those with or without the\n“manuscript literacy” necessary for informed comment.13 The impact on criti-\n8 The “Manuscript Clusters” tool at <http://intf.uni-muenster.de/TT_PP/>, last accessed\nFebruary 11, 2016, earlier Text und Texwert data is not currently in a format suitable for\nonline publication.\n9 <http://www.bl.uk/manuscripts/>, last accessed February 11, 2016.\n10 <http://gallica.bnf.fr/>, last accessed February 11, 2016.\n11 <http://www.mss.vatlib.it/guii/scan/link.jsp>, last accessed February 11, 2016.\n12 <http://www.e-codices.unifr.ch/>, last accessed February 11, 2016.\n13 The need for such “manuscript literacy” was powerfully articulated by Ulrich Schmid in\nhis contribution to the SBL 2013 panel at which the initial version of the present chapter\nwas also delivered.",
"114 Houghton And Smith\ncal editions is that they are scrutinised more than ever for the accuracy of their\nreporting of primary sources.\nIn addition to institution-based online collections (and aggregators such as\n<http://papyri.info/>), New Testament scholars are fortunate to benefit from\ntwo discipline-based collections, the digitisation project of the Center for the\nStudy of New Testament Manuscripts (<http://www.csntm.org>) and the\nnt.vmr. At present, the latter includes complete sets of images for 1634 Greek\nNew Testament manuscripts. Some are incorporated via links to holding insti-\ntutions, but the majority come from the intf microfilm holdings which were\nused for the Text und Textwert analysis and subsequently digitised. A facility for\nindexing the biblical content of each page has been in place for a number of\nyears in order to enable a search by biblical content: according to the graph on\nthe homepage, 120,296 of the 578,613 images in the system have so far been\nindexed.14 The nt.vmr portal also includes a discussion forum for use by the\n676 registered users, where links can be supplied directly to features of inter-\nest. The provision of this website by the intf, making available resources which\ncould already be consulted in person by visitors to Münster, has been instru-\nmental in extending the research community in the discipline. Like many of\nthe other features on the intf website, it encourages collaboration by present-\ning the raw materials gathered for the creation of the ecm, making the process\nof editing more transparent and adding value to the end result.\nTextual data is gathered from the selected manuscripts in the form of com-\nplete electronic transcriptions. The original motivation for this was the use of\nthe collate software developed by Peter Robinson (Robinson 1994).15 Before\nthe advent of computers, the readings of an individual witness would be\nrecorded as a collation, a list of differences from a standard text. However,\nworks not with a subset of readings but a complete transcription of each man-\nuscript. These separate files are then automatically compared to produce a\ncritical apparatus: the comparison relies on the algorithm developed by\nRobinson, while the parameters which control the presentation are set by the\nuser. At the lowest level, altering an electronic file of a reference text to repre-\nsent the text of each manuscript involves the same amount of work as a paper\ncollation but leads to considerably more flexible results. As each witness exists\nindependently of the collation base, users are no longer bound by the choice of\nthe reference text. The critical apparatus can be linked back to the individual\ntranscriptions, permitting investigation of each reading in its context. The\n14 <http://ntvmr.uni-muenster.de/en_GB/home>, last accessed May 13, 2014.\n15 The history of this program was described online by Robinson in 2007 at <http://www.\nsd-editions.com/blog/?p=15>, last accessed February 11, 2016; see also Robinson 2009b.",
"Digital Editing and the Greek New Testament 125\nElectronic resources and communications, however, have also served to\nincrease and diversify the community engaged in the study of these texts and\ndocuments. While the specialist linguistic and palaeographical skills required\nmean that the Greek New Testament is probably less likely to benefit from\ncrowd-sourcing than other textual traditions, the establishment of the nt.vmr\nby the intf as a central, authoritative portal with a range of user-contributed\ntasks is a significant step in the “democratization of scholarship,” increasing\nthe potential for volunteer contributions and public engagement with this\nmaterial. At the same time, the online publication of tools and resources\nextends participation to researchers from countries with few or no institutions\nholding primary sources, which have not traditionally been active in the disci-\npline. The readiness of the international range of partners in the ecm to\ncollaborate in this endeavour, sharing procedures, software, resources and\nexpertise, sustained both by digital tools and personal contact, should also be\nhailed as a welcome advance which brings this long-awaited edition closer.\nEldon Epp famously – and controversially – characterised the twentieth cen-\ntury as an “interlude” in New Testament textual criticism, going so far as to\nsuggest its imminent demise (Epp 1974; Epp 1979).37 At the beginning of the\ntwenty-first century, the discipline is in good health, with the editorial task and\nassociated research questions renewed by the advent of the digital age.\nReferences\nAland, Barbara, Kurt Aland, Gerd Mink, Holger Strutwolf, and Klaus Wachtel, eds. 2013.\nNovum Testamentum Graecum. Editio Critica Maior. Vol. IV: Catholic Letters. 2nd ed.\nStuttgart: Deutsche Bibelgesellschaft.\nAland, Kurt, and Barbara Aland. 1989. The text of the New Testament: An Introduction to\nthe Critical Editions and to the Theory and Practice of Modern Textual Criticism.\nTranslated by Erroll F. Rhodes. 2nd ed. Grand Rapids, Mich.: W.B. Eerdmans Pub. Co.\nAland, Kurt, Michael Welte, Beate Köster, and Klaus Junack. 1994. Kurzgefasste Liste der\ngriechischen Handschriften des Neuen Testaments. 2nd ed. (first edition 1963), en-\nlarged. Arbeiten zur neutestamentlichen Textforschung 1. Berlin/ New York: W. de\nGruyter.\nBurnard, Lou, Katherine O’Brien O’Keeffe, and John Unsworth, eds. 2006. Electronic\nTextual Editing. New York: Modern Language Association of America.\nElliott, James Keith. 1986. “The Purpose and Construction of a Critical Apparatus to a\nGreek New Testament.” In Studien zum Text und zur Ethik des Neuen Testaments:\nFestschrift zum 80. Geburtstag von Heinrich Greeven, edited by Wolfgang Schrage.\n37 For an assessment of these articles and further bibliography, see Hurtado 1999.",
"126 Houghton And Smith\nBeihefte zur Zeitschrift für die neutestamentliche Wissenschaft und die Kunde der\nälteren Kirche 47. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter.\nEpp, Eldon Jay. 1974. “The Twentieth Century Interlude in New Testament Textual\nCriticism.” Journal of Biblical Literature 93: 386–414.\n———. 1979. “New Testament Textual Criticism in America: Requiem for a Discipline.”\nJournal of Biblical Literature 98: 94–98.\nHarmon, Steven R. 2003. “A Note on the Critical Use of Instrumenta for the Retrieval of\nPatristic Biblical Exegesis.” Journal of Early Christian Studies 11: 95–107.\nHoughton, Hugh A.G. 2011. “Recent Developments in New Testament Textual Criticism.”\nEarly Christianity 2: 245–68.\n———. 2013. “The Electronic Scriptorium: Markup for New Testament Manuscripts.” In\nDigital Humanities in Biblical, Early Jewish and Early Christian Studies, edited by Claire\nClivaz, Andrew F. Gregory, and David Hamidović, 31–60. Scholarly Communication\n2. Leiden: Brill.\nHurtado, Larry W. 1999. “Beyond the Interlude? Developments and Directions in New\nTestament Textual Criticism.” In Studies in the early text of the Gospels and Acts: the\npapers of the First Birmingham Colloquium on the Textual Criticism of the New\nTestament, edited by David G.K. Taylor, 26–48. Birmingham: Univ. of Birmingham\nPress.\nLachmann, Karl, and Philipp Buttmann. 1842–1850. Novum Testamentum Graece et\nLatine. 2nd ed. 2 vols. Berlin: Reimer.\nLeroquais, Victor. 1934. “Review of Hippolyte Delehaye et Henri Quentin, Acta Sanctorum\nNovembris (1931); Hippolyte Delehaye, Les Origines Du Culte Des Martyrs (1933).” Revue\nD’histoire de l’Église de France 20: 249–52.\nMellerin, Laurence. 2013a. “Methodological Issues in BiblIndex, An Online Index of\nBiblical Quotations in Early Christian Literature.” In Biblical quotations in patristic\ntexts : studia patristica, vol. 54, edited by Laurence Mellerin, Markus Vinzent, and\nHugh A.G. Houghton, 11–32. Leuven: Peeters.\n———. 2013b. “New Ways of Searching with Biblindex, the Online Index of Biblical\nQuotations in Early Christian Literature.” In Digital Humanities in Biblical, Early\nJewish and Early Christian Studies, edited by Claire Clivaz, Andrew F. Gregory, and\nDavid Hamidović, 175–92. Scholarly Communication 2. Leiden: Brill.\nMink, Gerd. 2011. “Contamination, Coherence, and Coincidence in Textual Transmission.”\nIn The Textual History of the Greek New Testament: Changing Views in Contemporary\nResearch, Text-Critical Studies, Number 8, edited by Klaus Wachtel and Michael W.\nHolmes, 4:141–216. Novum Testamentum 54. Atlanta: Brill.\nNestle, Eberhard, Erwin Nestle, Barbara Aland, Kurt Aland, Johannes Karavidopoulos,\nCarlo Maria Martini, Bruce M. Metzger, and the Institute for New Testament Textual\nResearch Münster/Westphalia. 2012. Novum Testamentum Graece. 28th ed. revised.\nStuttgart: Deutsche Bibelgesellschaft.",
"Digital Editing and the Greek New Testament 127\nParker, David C. 2000. “The Text of the New Testament and Computers: The International\nGreek New Testament Project.” Literary and Linguistic Computing 15 (1): 27–41.\n———. 2003. “Through a Screen Darkly: Digital Texts and the New Testament.” Journal\nfor the Study of the New Testament 25 (4): 395–411.\n———. 2008. An Introduction to the New Testament Manuscripts and Their Texts.\nCambridge: Cambridge University Press.\n———. 2012. Textual Scholarship and the Making of the New Testament. Lyell Lectures.\nOxford: Oxford University Press.\nParker, David C., and Klaus Wachtel. 2005. “The Joint igntp/ intf Editio Critica Maior\nof the Gospel of John: Its Goals and Their Significance for New Testament Scholarship.”\nPaper Delivered at the Annual Meeting of SNTS, August 2–6, 2005. <http://epapers.\nbham.ac.uk/754/>.\nRobinson, Peter M.W. 1994. Collate: Interactive Collation of Large Textual Traditions,\nVersion 2. (Computer Program distributed by the Oxford University Centre for\nHumanities Computing: Oxford).\n———. 2009a. “The Ends of Editing.” Digital Humanities Quarterly 3 (3).\n———. 2009b. “Towards a Scholarly Editing System for the Next Decades.” Lectures\nNotes in Computer Sciences 5402: 346–57.\n———. 2013. “Towards a Theory of Digital Editions.” Variants 10: 105–31.\nvon Tischendorf, Constantin. 1869–1884. Novum Testamentum Graece ... Editio Octava\nCritica Maior. 3 vols. Leipzig: Giesecke & Devrient.\nTregelles, Samuel Prideaux. 1857–1879. The Greek New Testament. 7 vols. London:\nS. Bagster and Sons [and] United Bible Societies, 2014. The Greek New Testament,\n5th ed. revised. Stuttgart.\nWachtel, Klaus. 2000. “Editing the Greek New Testament on the Threshold of the Twenty-\nFirst Century.” Literary and Linguistic Computing 15 (1): 43–50.\n———. 2008. “Towards a Redefinition of External Criteria: The Role of Coherence in\nAssessing the Origin of Variants.” In Textual Variation: Theological and Social\nTendencies? Papers from the Fifth Birmingham Colloquium on the Textual Criticism of\nthe New Testament, edited by David C. Parker and Hugh A.G. Houghton, 109–27. Texts\nand Studies 3. Piscataway, NJ: Gorgias Press.\n———. 2012. “The Coherence-Based Genealogical Method: A New Way to Reconstruct\nthe Text of the Greek New Testament.” In Editing the Bible: Assessing the Task Past\nand Present, edited by John S. Kloppenborg and Judith H. Newman, 123–38. Resources\nfor Biblical Study 69. Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature.\nWasserman, Tommy. 2006. The Epistle of Jude: Its Text and Transmission. Coniectanea\nBiblica, New Testament Series 43. Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell International.\nWestcott, Brooke Foss, and Fenton John Anthony Hort. 1881. The New Testament in the\nOriginal Greek. Introduction and Appendix. Cambridge: Macmillan."
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16,
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doab64789
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Waste Management
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IntechOpen
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2010
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[
"185",
"9789535164197",
"9789537619848"
] |
[
"Urban & municipal planning",
"Urban & municipal planning"
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eng
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https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/64789
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https://mts.intechopen.com/storage/books/3712/authors_book/authors_book.pdf
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[] |
CC BY-NC-SA
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https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/
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3.0
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Creative Commons
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Solid Waste Management is one of the essential obligatory functions of the Urban Local Bodies/Municipal Corporation. This service is falling too short of the desired level of efficiency and satisfaction resulting in problems of health, sanitation and environmental degradation. Due to lack of serious efforts by town/city authorities, garbage and its management has become a tenacious problem. Moreover, unsafe disposal of garbage and wastewater, coupled with poor hygiene, is creating opportunities for transmission of diseases. Solutions to problems of waste management are available. However, a general lack of awareness of the impact of unattended waste on people's health and lives, and the widespread perception that the solutions are not affordable have made communities and local authorities apathetic towards the problems. The aim of this Book is to bring together experiences reported from different geographical regions and local contexts. It consolidates the experiences of the experts from different geographical locations viz., Japan, Portugal, Columbia, Greece, India, Brazil, Chile, Australia and others.
| null |
1 online resource (242 p.)
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"Edited by Er Sunil Kumar\nSolid Waste Management is one of the essential obligatory functions of the Urban\nLocal Bodies/Municipal Corporation. This service is falling too short of the desired\nlevel of efficiency and satisfaction resulting in problems of health, sanitation and\nenvironmental degradation. Due to lack of serious efforts by town/city authorities,\ngarbage and its management has become a tenacious problem. Moreover, unsafe\nWaste Management\ndisposal of garbage and wastewater, coupled with poor hygiene, is creating\nopportunities for transmission of diseases. Solutions to problems of waste management\nare available. However, a general lack of awareness of the impact of unattended waste\non people’s health and lives, and the widespread perception that the solutions are\nEdited by Er Sunil Kumar\nnot affordable have made communities and local authorities apathetic towards the\nproblems. The aim of this Book is to bring together experiences reported from different\ngeographical regions and local contexts. It consolidates the experiences of the experts\nfrom different geographical locations viz., Japan, Portugal, Columbia, Greece, India,\nBrazil, Chile, Australia and others.\nISBN 978-953-7619-84-8\nPhoto by Rost-9D / iStock\nWaste\nManagement",
"Waste Management\nEdited by\nEr Sunil Kumar\nIntech",
"Waste Management\nEdited by\nEr Sunil Kumar\nIntech",
"Waste Management\nhttp://dx.doi.org/10.5772/185\nEdited by Er Sunil Kumar\n© The Editor(s) and the Author(s) 2010\nThe moral rights of the and the author(s) have been asserted.\nAll rights to the book as a whole are reserved by INTECH. The book as a whole (compilation) cannot be reproduced,\ndistributed or used for commercial or non-commercial purposes without INTECH’s written permission.\nEnquiries concerning the use of the book should be directed to INTECH rights and permissions department\n([email protected]).\nViolations are liable to prosecution under the governing Copyright Law.\nIndividual chapters of this publication are distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0\nUnported License which permits commercial use, distribution and reproduction of the individual chapters, provided\nthe original author(s) and source publication are appropriately acknowledged. If so indicated, certain images may not\nbe included under the Creative Commons license. In such cases users will need to obtain permission from the license\nholder to reproduce the material. More details and guidelines concerning content reuse and adaptation can be\nfoundat http://www.intechopen.com/copyright-policy.html.\nNotice\nStatements and opinions expressed in the chapters are these of the individual contributors and not necessarily those\nof the editors or publisher. No responsibility is accepted for the accuracy of information contained in the published\nchapters. The publisher assumes no responsibility for any damage or injury to persons or property arising out of the\nuse of any materials, instructions, methods or ideas contained in the book.\nFirst published in Croatia, 2010 by INTECH d.o.o.\neBook (PDF) Published by IN TECH d.o.o.\nPlace and year of publication of eBook (PDF): Rijeka, 2019.\nIntechOpen is the global imprint of IN TECH d.o.o.\nPrinted in Croatia\nLegal deposit, Croatia: National and University Library in Zagreb\nAdditional hard and PDF copies can be obtained from [email protected]\nWaste Management\nEdited by Er Sunil Kumar\np. cm.\nISBN 978-953-7619-84-8\neBook (PDF) ISBN 978-953-51-6419-7",
"We are IntechOpen,\nthe world’s leading publisher of\nOpen Access books\nBuilt by scientists, for scientists\n4,200+ 116,000+ 125M+\nOpen access books available International authors and editors Downloads\nOur authors are among the\n151 Top 1% 12.2%\nCountries delivered to most cited scientists Contributors from top 500 universities\nSelection of our books indexed in the Book Citation Index\nin Web of Science™ Core Collection (BKCI)\nInterested in publishing with us?\nContact [email protected]\nNumbers displayed above are based on latest data collected.\nFor more information visit www.intechopen.com",
"232 Waste Management\nUNEP (1993). Biosolids Management: An Environmentally Sound Approach for Managing\nSewage Treatment Plant Sludge – An Introductory Guide for Decision-Makers.\nUnited Nations Environment Programme, United Nations University, International\nNetwork on Water, Environment and Health, Osaka, Japan.2002.\nUSEPA (United States Environmental Protection agency).(1993).Standard for the Use or\nDisposal of Sewage Sludge: Final Rules 40 CFR parts 257,403 and 503.Fed. Reg.\n58(32) 9284-9415. USEPA, Washington, DC.\nUS Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA). (2002). Solid waste management: a local\nchallenge with global impacts. Solid Waste and Emergency Response. EPA530-F-\n02-026 (5306W) second ed.\nUS Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA). (2006). Inventory of U.S. Greenhouse Gas\nEmissions and Sinks.\nVan Noordwijk, M., Schonsderbeek, D. & Kooistra, M. J. (1993). Root-soil contact of grown\nwinter wheat.Geoderma. 56, 277-286.\nWong, J. W. C., & Wong, M. H. (1990). Effects of Fly ash on Yields and Elemental\nComposition of Two Vegetables, Brassica parachinensis and B. chinensis. Agr.\nEcosyst. Environ. 30, 251–264.\nWright, A. L., & Hons, F. M. (2005). Soil Carbon and nitrogen storage in aggregate from\ndifferent tillage and crop regimes. Soil Sci.Soc. Am.J.69, 141-147\nYan, F., Schubert, S. & Mengel, K. (1992). Effect of low root medium pH on net proton\nrelease, root respiration, and root growth of corn and broad bean. Plant Physiol. 99,\n415-421.",
"232 Waste Management\nUNEP (1993). Biosolids Management: An Environmentally Sound Approach for Managing\nSewage Treatment Plant Sludge – An Introductory Guide for Decision-Makers.\nUnited Nations Environment Programme, United Nations University, International\nNetwork on Water, Environment and Health, Osaka, Japan.2002.\nUSEPA (United States Environmental Protection agency).(1993).Standard for the Use or\nDisposal of Sewage Sludge: Final Rules 40 CFR parts 257,403 and 503.Fed. Reg.\n58(32) 9284-9415. USEPA, Washington, DC.\nUS Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA). (2002). Solid waste management: a local\nchallenge with global impacts. Solid Waste and Emergency Response. EPA530-F-\n02-026 (5306W) second ed.\nUS Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA). (2006). Inventory of U.S. Greenhouse Gas\nEmissions and Sinks.\nVan Noordwijk, M., Schonsderbeek, D. & Kooistra, M. J. (1993). Root-soil contact of grown\nwinter wheat.Geoderma. 56, 277-286.\nWong, J. W. C., & Wong, M. H. (1990). Effects of Fly ash on Yields and Elemental\nComposition of Two Vegetables, Brassica parachinensis and B. chinensis. Agr.\nEcosyst. Environ. 30, 251–264.\nWright, A. L., & Hons, F. M. (2005). Soil Carbon and nitrogen storage in aggregate from\ndifferent tillage and crop regimes. Soil Sci.Soc. Am.J.69, 141-147\nYan, F., Schubert, S. & Mengel, K. (1992). Effect of low root medium pH on net proton\nrelease, root respiration, and root growth of corn and broad bean. Plant Physiol. 99,\n415-421.",
"Edited by Er Sunil Kumar\nSolid Waste Management is one of the essential obligatory functions of the Urban\nLocal Bodies/Municipal Corporation. This service is falling too short of the desired\nlevel of efficiency and satisfaction resulting in problems of health, sanitation and\nenvironmental degradation. Due to lack of serious efforts by town/city authorities,\ngarbage and its management has become a tenacious problem. Moreover, unsafe\nWaste Management\ndisposal of garbage and wastewater, coupled with poor hygiene, is creating\nopportunities for transmission of diseases. Solutions to problems of waste management\nare available. However, a general lack of awareness of the impact of unattended waste\non people’s health and lives, and the widespread perception that the solutions are\nEdited by Er Sunil Kumar\nnot affordable have made communities and local authorities apathetic towards the\nproblems. The aim of this Book is to bring together experiences reported from different\ngeographical regions and local contexts. It consolidates the experiences of the experts\nfrom different geographical locations viz., Japan, Portugal, Columbia, Greece, India,\nBrazil, Chile, Australia and others.\nISBN 978-953-7619-84-8\nPhoto by Rost-9D / iStock\nWaste\nManagement\nISBN 978-953-51-6419-7"
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doab79798
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Soziale Arbeit als Arbeit am Gemeinwesen
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Ein theoretischer Begründungsrahmen
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Verlag Barbara Budrich
|
2017
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[
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"Gemeinwesen",
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"Sozialraum"
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ger
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https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/79798
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https://library.oapen.org/bitstream/20.500.12657/53653/1/9783847410041.pdf
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CC BY
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by/4.0
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Creative Commons
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Der Autor entfaltet einen eigenen, raumtheoretisch unterfütterten Begriff des Gemeinwesens ausgehend von unterschiedlichen Bestimmungsversuchen in der Geschichte von Philosophie und Sozialwissenschaften - von Hegel, über Marx und Arendt, bis zu Habermas und Negt. Daran anschließend wird eine Konzeption der Sozialen Arbeit als Arbeit am Gemeinwesen in kritischer Auseinandersetzung mit verschiedenen Theorien begründet und methodisch konkretisiert.
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Beiträge zur Sozialraumforschung
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1 online resource (192 p.)
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pdfs/cc-by/doab79798.pdf
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"",
"Beiträge zur Sozialraumforschung\nherausgegeben von\nMonika Alisch\nMichael May\nBand 14",
"Michael May\nSoziale Arbeit als Arbeit\nam Gemeinwesen\nEin theoretischer Begründungsrahmen\nVerlag Barbara Budrich\nOpladen, Berlin & Toronto 2017",
"Bibliografische Information der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek\nDie Deutsche Nationalbibliothek verzeichnet diese Publikation in der Deutschen\nNationalbibliografie; detaillierte bibliografische Daten sind im Internet über\nhttps://portal.dnb.de abrufbar.\n© 2017 Dieses Werk ist bei der Verlag Barbara Budrich GmbH erschienen und steht\nunter der Creative Commons Lizenz Attribution 4.0 International\n(CC BY 4.0): https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/\nDiese Lizenz erlaubt die Verbreitung, Speicherung, Vervielfältigung und Bearbeitung\nunter Angabe der UrheberInnen, Rechte, Änderungen und verwendeten Lizenz.\nwww.budrich.de\nDieses Buch steht im Open-Access-Bereich der Verlagsseite zum kostenlosen\nDownload bereit (https://doi.org/10.3224/84741004).\nEine kostenpflichtige Druckversion (Print on Demand) kann über den Verlag bezogen\nwerden. Die Seitenzahlen in der Druck- und Onlineversion sind identisch.\nISBN 978-3-8474-2017-0 (Paperback)\neISBN 978-3-8474-1004-1 (PDF)\nDOI 10.3224/84741004\nUmschlaggestaltung: Walburga Fichtner, Köln\nTechnisches Lektorat: Ulrike Weingärtner, Gründau – [email protected]\nDruck: paper & tinta, Warschau\nPrinted in Europe",
"Inhaltsverzeichnis\nVorwort …………………………………………………………………. 9\n1. Zur Rekonstruktion der historischen Verhältnisbestimmungen\nvon oikos und polis in der Begründung von Gemeinwesen im\nRahmen unterschiedlicher Gesellschaftsformationen ................. 17\n1.1 Die Frage nach einem ursprünglichen Gemeinwesen ........................ 17\n1.2 Das antike Gemeinwesen: oikos und/oder polis? .............................. 18\n1.3 Die Verschiebungen von Öffentlichkeit und Privatheit im\nmittelalterlichen Gemeinwesen ……………………………. ............ 21\n1.4 Das Gemeinwesen unter der Herrschaft der politischen Ökonomie .. 25\n2. Zur philosophischen, politiktheoretischen, gesellschafts-\nwissenschaftlichen und gesellschaftspolitischen Begründung\nvon Gemeinwesen ……………… ................................................... 35\n2.1 Der durch Aristoteles ausgelöste Streit um das Verhältnis von oikos\nund polis bei der Begründung von Gemeinwesen ............................. 35\n2.2 Sozialutopische Begründungsversuche von Gemeinwesen ............... 36\n2.3 Hegels an Aristoteles anschließende Bestimmung von Gemeinweisen\nin der dialektischen Vermittlung von Arbeit, Sprache und sittlichem\nVerhältnis .......................................................................................... 38\n2.4 Hannah Arendts an Aristoteles anschließende handlungs- und\nmachttheoretische Begründung eines politischen Gemeinwesen ...... 44\n2.5 Jürgen Habermas(cid:1932) diskurstheoretische Begründung eines\nvernünftigen Gemeinwesen ............................................................... 48\n2.6 Helmut Richters Begründung von Gemeinwesen in einer\nkommunalen Pädagogik des Sozialen ............................................... 61\n2.7 Marx(cid:1932) Begriffe von politischem und subjektivem Gemeinwesen ..... 64\n2.8 Die Perspektive der Alltagskritik ...................................................... 68\n5",
"narmaterialien. Frankfurt (am Main). http://ritsert-online.de/materialien.htm#\nSeminarmaterialien, zuletzt abgerufen am 12.8.2016.\nRochat, Philippe (1995): Early objectification of the self. In: Rochat, P. (Hrsg.): The\nself in infancy. Theory and research. Advances in psychology, Band 112. Am-\nsterdam, New York: Elsevier, S. 53–72.\nRogers, Carl R. (2004): Entwicklung der Persönlichkeit. Psychotherapie aus der Sicht\neines Therapeuten. Stuttgart: Klett-Cotta.\nRose, Nikolas (2000): Tod des Sozialen? Eine Neubestimmung der Grenzen des\nRegierens. In: Bröckling, U. et al. (Hrsg.): Gouvernementalität der Gegenwart.\nStudien zur Ökonomisierung des Sozialen. Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp, S. 72–\n109.\nRoss, Murray George (1971): Gemeinwesenarbeit. Theorie, Prinzipien, Praxis. Frei-\nburg i. Br.: Lambertus-Verl.\nRöttger, Bernd/Wissen, Markus (2005): (Re-)Regulation des Lokalen. In: Kessl, F. et\nal. (Hrsg.): Handbuch Sozialraum. Wiesbaden: VS Verlag für Sozialwissenschaf-\nten, S. 207–225.\nRousseau, Jean-Jacques (1963): Emile oder über die Erziehung. Universal-Bibliothek,\n901/909. Stuttgart: Reclam.\nRousseau, Jean-Jacques (1971): Der Gesellschaftsvertrag oder Die Grundsätze des\nStaatsrechts. Universal-Bibliothek, 1769/70. Stuttgart: Reclam.\nSchiesser, Giaco (2004): Arbeit am und mit EigenSinn. Medien | Kunst | Ausbildung,\noder:. Über den Eigensinn als künstlerische Produktivkraft.\nhttp://netzspannung.org/cat/servlet/CatServlet/$files/273695/schiesser_II.pdf, zu-\nletzt abgerufen am 12.8.2016.\nSchlippe, Arist v./Schweitzer, Jochen (1996): Lehrbuch der systemischen Therapie\nund Beratung. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht.\nSeligman, Martin E. P. (1979): Erlernte Hilflosigkeit. München, Wien, Baltimore:\nUrban und Schwarzenberg.\nSoiland, Tove (2012): Die Verhältnisse gingen und die Kategorien kamen. Intersecti-\nonality oder Vom Unbehagen an der amerikanischen Theorie. http://portal-\nintersektionalitaet.de/theoriebildung/schluesseltexte/soiland/.\nStaub-Bernasconi, Silvia (1983a): Ein ganzheitliches Methodenkonzept – Wunsch-\ntraum? Chance? Notwendigkeit? Problembezogene Arbeitsweisen in der Sozialen\nArbeit. In: Staub-Bernasconi, S./Passavant, C. v./Wagner, A. (Hrsg.): Theorie\nund Praxis der sozialen Arbeit. Entwicklung und Zukunftsperspektiven Fest-\nschrift zum 75-jährigen Bestehen der Schule für Soziale Arbeit Zürich. Soziale\nArbeit, Bd. 2. Bern: P. Haupt, S. 277–316.\nStaub-Bernasconi, Silvia (1983b): Soziale Probleme - Dimensionen ihrer Artikulation.\nUmrisse einer Theorie sozialer Probleme als Beitrag zu einem theoretischen Be-\nzugsrahmen Sozialer Arbeit. Diessenhofen: Rüegger.\nStaub-Bernasconi, Silvia (1995): Systemtheorie, soziale Probleme und Soziale Arbeit.\nLokal, national, international, oder, Vom Ende der Bescheidenheit. Soziale Ar-\nbeit, Bd. 13. Bern: P. Haupt.\nStaub-Bernasconi, Silvia (1997): Soziale Arbeit als Menschenrechtsprofession. In:\nHochstrasser, F. et al. (Hrsg.): Die Fachhochschulen für Soziale Arbeit. Bil-\ndungspolitische Antwort auf soziale Entwicklungen. Soziale Arbeit, Band 17.\nBern: Haupt, S. 315–340.\n190",
"Staub-Bernasconi, Silvia (2007a): Soziale Arbeit als Handlungswissenschaft. System-\ntheoretische Grundlagen und professionelle Praxis - ein Lehrbuch. Soziale Ar-\nbeit, Sozialwissenschaften, Band 2786. Bern: Haupt.\nStaub-Bernasconi, Silvia (2007b): Vom beruflichen Doppel - zum professionellen\nTripelmandat. Wissenschaft und Menschenrechte als Begründungsbasis der Pro-\nfession Soziale Arbeit. In: Sozialarbeit in Österreich, 2, S. 8–17.\nStern, Daniel N. (1992): Die Lebenserfahrung des Säuglings. Stuttgart: Klett-Cotta.\nStern, Daniel N. (1998): Die Mutterschaftskonstellation. Eine vergleichende Darstel-\nlung verschiedener Formen der Mutter-Kind-Psychotherapie. Stuttgart: Klett-\nCotta.\nStern, Daniel N. (2005): Der Gegenwartsmoment. Veränderungsprozesse in Psycho-\nanalyse, Psychotherapie und Alltag. Frankfurt am Main: Brandes und Apsel.\nStern, Daniel N./ Bruschweiler-Stern, Nadia/Lyons-Ruth, Karlen/Morgan, Alexander\nC./Nahum, Jeremy P./Sander; Louis W. (2012): Veränderungsprozesse. Ein in-\ntegratives Paradigma. Frankfurt am Main: Brandes & Apsel.\nStolorow, Robert D./Brandchaft, Bernard/Atwood, George E. (1996): Psychoanalyti-\nsche Behandlung. Ein intersubjektiver Ansatz. Fischer, 12565 Geist und Psyche.\nFrankfurt am Main: Fischer-Taschenbuch-Verlag.\nStövesand, Sabine (2011): Arbeit am Gemeinwesen: Michael May. In: Stövesand,\nS./Stoik, C./Troxler, U. (Hrsg.): Handbuch Gemeinwesenarbeit. Traditionen und\nPositionen, Konzepte und Methoden. Theorie, Forschung und Praxis der Sozialen\nArbeit, Band 4. Leverkusen: Budrich, S. 93–96.\nTheweleit, Klaus (1980): Männerphantasien. Reinbek bei Hamburg: Rowohlt.\nThompson, Edward P. (1979): The Grid of Inheritance. A Comment. In: Goody,\nJ./Thirsk, J. (Hrsg.): Family and inheritance. Rural society in western Europe,\n1200 - 1800. Past and present publications. Cambridge: Cambridge University\nPress, S. 328–360.\nWalgenbach, Katharina (2010): Postscriptum: Intersektionalität – Offenheit, interne\nKontroversen und Komplexität als Ressourcen eines gemeinsamen Orientie-\nrungsrahmens. In: Lutz, H./Herrera Vivar, M. T./Supik, L. (Hrsg.): Fokus Inter-\nsektionalität. Bewegungen und Verortungen eines vielschichtigen Konzeptes.\nWiesbaden: VS Verlag, S. 245–256.\nWeber, Joachim (2014): Soziale Arbeit aus Überzeugung. Ethische Perspektiven auf\nsozialpädagogische Praxis. Opladen [u.a.]: Barbara Budrich.\nWeber, Max (2005): Die protestantische Ethik und der Geist des Kapitalismus. Wort-\nSchätze. Erftstadt: Area.\nWeiss, Halko (2007): Bewusstsein, Gewahrsein und Achtsamkeit. In: Marlock,\nG./Weiss, H. (Hrsg.): Handbuch der Körperpsychotherapie. Stuttgart [u.a.]:\nSchattauer, S. 406–413.\nWendt, Wolf Rainer (1982): Ökologie und soziale Arbeit. Enke Sozialwissenschaften.\nStuttgart: F. Enke.\nWendt, Wolf Rainer (1986): Das breite Feld der sozialen Arbeit:. Historische Beweg-\ngründe und ökologische Perspektiven. In: Oppl, H./Tomaschek, A. (Hrsg.): Sozi-\nale Arbeit 2000. Band 1: Soziale Probleme und Handlungsflexibilität. Freiburg\nim Breisgau: Lambertus, S. 43–79.\nWendt, Wolf Rainer (1989): Gemeinwesenarbeit. Ein Kapitel zu ihrer Entwicklung\nund zu ihrem gegenwärtigen Stand. In: Ebbe, K./Friese, P.: Milieuarbeit. Grund-\nlage präventiver Sozialarbeit im lokalen Gemeinwesen. Stuttgart: Enke, S. 1–34.\n191",
"Widersprüche Redaktion (Hrsg.) (2007): \"Alles schön bunt hier!\". Zur Kritik kultura-\nlistischer Praxen der Differenz. Widersprüche. Zeitschrift für sozialistische Poli-\ntik im Bildungs-, Gesundheits- und Sozialbereich, Band 104. Bielefeld: Kleine.\nWidersprüche Redaktion (Hrsg.) (2012): Gekreuzt?! - Intersektionalität und Soziale\nArbeit. Widersprüche. Zeitschrift für sozialistische Politik im Bildungs-, Ge-\nsundheits- und Sozialbereich, Band 126. Münster: Westfälisches Dampfboot.\nWild-Missong, Agnes (1981): Focusing. (Fokussieren). In: Linden, M./Hautzinger, M.\n(Hrsg.): Psychotherapie-Manual. Sammlung psychotherapeutischer Techniken\nund Einzelverfahren. Berlin, New York: Springer-Verlag, S. 79–82.\nWillms, Bernard (1973): Kritik und Politik. Jürgen Habermas oder das politische\nDefizit der \"Kritischen Theorie\". Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp.\nWinker, Gabriele/Degele, Nina (2009): Intersektionalität. Zur Analyse sozialer Un-\ngleichheiten. Bielefeld: Transcript.\nWinkler, Michael (1988): Eine Theorie der Sozialpädagogik. Konzepte der Human-\nwissenschaften. Stuttgart: Klett-Cotta.\nWinnicott, Donald W. (2002): Reifungsprozesse und fördernde Umwelt. Bibliothek\nder Psychoanalyse. Gießen: Psychosozial-Verlag.\nWissen, Markus/Röttger, Bernd/Heeg, Susanne (Hrsg.) (2008): Politics of Scale.\nRäume der Globalisierung und Perspektiven emanzipatorischer Politik. Raum-\nproduktionen, Band 3. Münster: Westfälisches Dampfboot.\nZedler, Peter/Moser, Heinz (Hrsg.) (1983): Aspekte qualitativer Sozialforschung.\nStudien zu Aktionsforschung, empirischer Hermeneutik und reflexiver Sozial-\ntechnologie. Opladen: Leske + Budrich.\nZiegler, Holger (2011): Soziale Arbeit und das gute Leben - Capabilities als sozialpä-\ndagogische Kategorie. In: Sedmak, C. et al. (Hrsg.): Der Capability-Approach in\nsozialwissenschaftlichen Kontexten. Überlegungen zur Anschlussfähigkeit eines\nentwicklungspolitischen Konzepts. Wiesbaden: Springer Fachmedien, S. 117–\n138.\nZur Lippe, Rudolf (1974): Naturbeherrschung am Menschen. Körpererfahrungen und\nEntfaltung von Sinnen und Beziehungen in der Ära des italienischen Kauf-\nmannskapitals, Bd. 1. Frankfurt (am Main): Suhrkamp.\nZur Lippe, Rudolf (1983/84): Am eigenen Leibe. Zur Ökonomie des Lebens. Frank-\nfurt am Main: Syndikat.\n192"
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doab26807
|
The Climate Crisis
|
South African and Global Democratic Eco-Socialist Alternatives
| null | null | null |
Wits University Press
|
2018
|
[
"22018020541",
"9781776143306"
] |
[
"Climate change",
"Capitalism",
"Climate change",
"Democracy",
"South Africa"
] |
eng
|
https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/26807
|
https://library.oapen.org/bitstream/20.500.12657/29462/1/9781776143306.pdf
| null | null |
[] |
CC BY-NC-ND
|
by-nc-nd/4.0
| null |
Creative Commons
|
Capitalism's addiction to fossil fuels is heating our planet at a pace and scale never before experienced. Extreme weather patterns, rising sea levels and accelerating feedback loops are a commonplace feature of our lives. The number of environmental refugees is increasing and several island states and low-lying countries are becoming vulnerable. Corporate-induced climate change has set us on an ecocidal path of species extinction. Governments and their international platforms such as the Paris Climate Agreement deliver too little, too late. Most states, including South Africa, continue on their carbon-intensive energy paths, with devastating results. Political leaders across the world are failing to provide systemic solutions to the climate crisis. This is the context in which we must ask ourselves: how can people and class agency change this destructive course of history? Volume three in the Democratic Marxism series, The Climate Crisis investigates eco-socialist alternatives that are emerging. It presents the thinking of leading climate justice activists, campaigners and social movements advancing systemic alternatives and developing bottom-up, just transitions to sustain life. Through a combination of theoretical and empirical work, the authors collectively examine the challenges and opportunities inherent in the current moment. This volume builds on the class-struggle focus of Volume 2 by placing ecological issues at the centre of democratic Marxism. Most importantly, it explores ways to renew historical socialism with democratic, eco-socialist alternatives to meet current challenges in South Africa and the world.
| null |
1 online resource (372 p.)
|
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"DEMOCRATIC\nMARXISM\nDEMOCRATIC MARXISM SERIES\nSeries Editor: Vishwas Satgar\nThe crisis of Marxism in the late twentieth century was the crisis of orthodox and van-\nguardist Marxism associated mainly with hierarchical communist parties, and imposed,\neven as state ideology, as the ‘correct’ Marxism. The Stalinisation of the Soviet Union\nand its eventual collapse exposed the inherent weaknesses and authoritarian mould of\nvanguardist Marxism. More fundamentally, vanguardist Marxism was rendered obsolete\nbut for its residual existence in a few parts of the world, as well as within authoritarian\nnational liberation movements in Africa and in China.\nWith the deepening crises of capitalism, a new democratic Marxism (or democratic his-\ntorical materialism) is coming to the fore. Such a democratic Marxism is characterised in\nthe following ways:\n• Its sources span non-vanguardist grassroots movements, unions, political fronts,\nmass parties, radical intellectuals, transnational activist networks and parts of the\nprogressive academy;\n• It seeks to ensure that the inherent categories of Marxism are theorised within\nconstantly changing historical conditions to find meaning;\n• Marxism is understood as a body of social thought that is unfinished and hence\nchallenged by the need to explain the dynamics of a globalising capitalism and\nthe futures of social change;\n• It is open to other forms of anti-capitalist thought and practice, including cur-\nrents within radical ecology, feminism, emancipatory utopianism and indigenous\nthought;\n• It does not seek to be a monolithic and singular school of thought but engenders\ncontending perspectives;\n• Democracy, as part of the heritage of people’s struggles, is understood as the\nbasis for articulating alternatives to capitalism and as the primary means for con-\nstituting a transformative subject of historical change.\nThis series seeks to elaborate the social theorising and politics of democratic Marxism.\nPublished in the series and available:\nMichelle Williams and Vishwas Satgar (eds). 2013. Marxisms in the 21st Century: Crisis,\nCritique and Struggle. Johannesburg: Wits University Press.\nVishwas Satgar (ed.), 2015. Capitalism’s Crises: Class Struggles in South Africa and the\nWorld. Johannesburg: Wits University Press.",
"",
"The\nClimate\nCrisis\nSouth African and Global\nDemocratic Eco-Socialist\nAlternatives\nEdited by Vishwas Satgar",
"The Climate Crisis\nsocialism (cont.) Spain 44, 72, 76, 93, 162\nreclaiming 219–221, 226–227 Stockholm Conference of the Human\nstatist 22, 152, 155–156, 159, 164n11, Environment 36, 39\n171, 220 Switzerland 81, 99n12\nsocialist modernisation 12, 22, 154, 170, 178 Sudan 193, 196–197\nsolidarity economy 19, 24, 136–137–139, sumak kawsay see buen vivir\n142, 144–146n4, 171, 293, 295–296 Swilling, Mark 282, 331\nsee also buen vivir: alternative economy Syngenta 191, 199\nto support\nsolidarity economy, South African context 24, T\n294, 297, 300, 302–303, 306, 310 Tanzania 170–171, 194, 199\nSolidarity Economy Movement (SEM) Arusha Declaration 185n6\n299–300, 302, 311n3 Terkel, Studs 85, 87, 91\nSouth Africa 89 Thatcher, Margaret 84–85\ncorruption/state patrimony in 23, 161, Trans-Atlantic Trade and Investment\n253–254, 259, 263–264, 266, 276, Partnership (TTIP) 39\n317, 325, 329 Trans-Pacific Partnership 39\neconomic crisis/indebtedness 253, 258, Trapp, K 73–74, 99n3\n264–266, 273–275, 315, 325–327 Trump, Donald 6–7, 31–32, 43–44, 57,\nfood insecurity/crisis 253, 297–298, 338\n307–309 Turner, Rick 20, 149, 156–157, 162, 165n14\nFree State province 264, 302, 304\nGauteng province 218, 242, 281, 317 U\nGrowth, Employment and ubuntu 9, 132, 161\nRedistribution (GEAR) strategy dialogue with eco-socialism 20–21,\n273, 276 157, 168, 170, 173–175, 181–183,\nInfrastructure Development Act 327, 331 185n14, 333\nKwaZulu-Natal province 175, 242 ethics of 169–172, 174–180, 182–183\nNew Growth Path 153, 220, 244–245, nation-building experiments 169–170\n273 respect for diversity 171\n‘rebellion of the poor’ in 298–299 revolutionary 183\nsmall-scale farming in 196–197 see also restorative justice ethics\nsocial grants system in 86–87, 226, 274 UN conference on the Environment and\nstate-owned enterprises 253, 255, 259, Development (UNCED) 35–36\n261 UN Convention on the Law of the Sea 319\ntrade union movement in see labour UN-COP summits 3, 8, 13, 16, 31, 33–34–\nmovement, South Africa 38, 48, 63\nUBIG campaign in 83–84 ineffectiveness/failed leadership of 1, 7,\nunemployment crisis in 72, 76, 84, 93, 21, 33–37, 63–64, 273, 289\n153, 222, 253, 272–274 see also Paris Agreement\nsee also National Development Plan UN Environment Programme (UNEP)\nSouth African Airways (SAA) 263–264 34–36, 38, 249\nSouth African Communist Party (SACP) UN Framework Convention on Climate\n153, 210, 220, 259 Change (UNFCCC) 3, 7, 31, 39,\nSouth African Transport and Allied 41, 273, 289\nWorkers Union 223, 242 UN Global Compact 38\nSouthern African Faith Communities’ unemployment 18, 23, 59, 142, 274\nEnvironmental Institute 258, global increase in 71–72, 76\n266–267 impact of labour-replacing\nSoviet Union/Bloc 11–12, 152, 155, 164n11, technologies on 76\n210, 220 psychological impact of 90, 101n32\nRussian revolution 15 youth 72, 93\n356",
"INDEX\nsee also South Africa: unemployment Williams, Raymond 14–15\ncrisis in work\nuniversal basic income grant (UBIG) 82, meanings of 88–89, 91, 101n38\n84–85, 96 post-work vision 94–95, 98\nadvantages of 70, 79, 81–83, 86–88, socially determined 96–97\n91–95, 97–98 workers’ organisations/movements 18, 71,\narguments against 70, 82, 84–85, 88, 74–75, 77, 92\n93–94, 97 World Bank 34, 72, 86, 153, 203, 225, 253,\nin context of ‘just transition’ 18, 70, 80, 276, 326–327\n87, 92, 97–98, 101n33 World Food Programme (WFP) 192, 196\nfunding of 80–81 World Meteorological Organisation\nUruguay 203, 247 (WMO) 3, 35\nUS 155, 274 World People’s Conference on Climate\nanti-capitalist activism in 162 Change and the Rights of Mother\nbasic income grant 82–83 Earth 42\nfood aid 195–196 World Trade Organisation (WTO) 36, 39\nmilitary repression 175 World War Two 74, 76, 151, 155\nresistance to Trump’s policies 44 working class 9, 49, 61, 150, 243, 330\nrights of nature initiatives in 118–120, as ‘gravedigger’ of capitalism 152, 154\n123 impact of climate change on 9, 63,\nwage labour/workers’ movements in 211–212, 226–227, 340\n74–76, 232–233 women 212–216, 226–227, 330\nsee also imperial ecocide, US-led\nY\nV\n‘Yes to life, no to mining’ campaign\nVan Marle, K 168–169, 172, 177, 180, 183\n176–177, 185n14\nVenezuela 160, 173, 205, 235, 239\nvivir bien see buen vivir\nVulnerable 20 (V20) see under climate Z\nchange Zambia 72, 195–196\nZimmerman, Michael 115–116\nW Zuma, Jacob 153, 213, 242, 254, 265, 268\nwage labour 18, 55–56, 212 blue economy initiative 314, 317–318,\ndeclining share of income 73–74, 321, 323, 325, 328, 330–331\n77–78, 99n3&4, 151 corruption/patrimonial politics of\nperceived importance of 90, 92, 94, 98 259–260, 262–265, 317–318\nWild Law 19, 115–117 relationship with Guptas 260–261,\nsee also Earth Jurisprudence 317–318, 329–330\n357",
""
] |
[
1,
2,
3,
4,
5,
368,
369,
370
] | 370 | |
doab31583
|
Sicherheit als Grundsatz
|
Eine grundrechtsdogmatische Rekonstruktion im Unionsrecht am Beispiel der Cybersicherheit
| null | null | null |
Mohr Siebeck
|
2018
|
[
"9783161568435",
"j.ctv9hj8ws"
] |
[
"Cyber Security",
"European Fundamental Rights Law",
"Law",
"Security"
] |
ger
|
https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/31583
|
https://library.oapen.org/bitstream/20.500.12657/27412/1/1002597.pdf
| null | null |
[] |
CC BY-NC-ND
|
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/legalcode
|
4.0
|
Creative Commons
|
In its basic rights doctrine, security takes on various different guises. However, the understandings of security as a legitimate aim, as a positive obligation to protect, or even as a fundamental right, do not do justice to its special need to be treated differently. How, then, might security be fundamentally re-thought?
|
Internet und Gesellschaft
|
1 online resource
|
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pdfs/cc-by-nc-nd/doab31583.pdf
|
[
"",
"Internet und Gesellschaft\nSchriften des Alexander von Humboldt Institut\nfür Internet und Gesellschaft\nHerausgegeben von\nJeanette Hofmann, Ingolf Pernice,\nThomas Schildhauer und Wolfgang Schulz\n10",
"",
"Sebastian Leuschner\nSicherheit als Grundsatz\nEine grundrechtsdogmatische Rekonstruktion im\nUnionsrecht am Beispiel der Cybersicherheit\nMohr Siebeck",
"Sebastian Leuschner, geboren 1985; Studium der European Studies an der Uni-\nversität Magdeburg und der Rechtswissenschaft an der Humboldt-Universität zu\nBerlin; Wiss. Mitarbeiter am Walter Hallstein-Institut für Europäisches Verfas-\nsungsrecht der HU Berlin; Wiss. Mitarbeiter am Alexander von Humboldt-Institut\nfür Internet und Gesellschaft, Berlin; 2017 Promotion; seit 2016 Referendar am KG\nBerlin.\nISBN 978-3-16-155515-2 / eISBN 978-3-16-156843-5\nISSN 2199-0344 (Internet und Gesellschaft)\nDie Deutsche Nationalbibliothek verzeichnet diese Publikation in der Deutschen\nNational bibliographie; detaillierte bibliographische Daten sind im Internet über\nhttp://dnb.dnb.de abrufbar.\n© 2018 Mohr Siebeck Tübingen. www.mohr.de\nDas Werk einschließlich aller seiner Teile ist urheberrechtlich geschützt. Jede\nVer wertung außerhalb der engen Grenzen des Urheberrechtsgesetzes ist ohne\nZustimmung des Verlags unzulässig und strafbar. Das gilt insbesondere für Ver-\nvielfältigungen, Übersetzungen, Mikroverfilmungen und die Einspeicherung und\nVerarbeitung in elektronischen Systemen.\nDas Buch wurde von epline in Böblingen gesetzt, von Gulde-Druck in Tübingen\nauf alterungsbeständiges Werkdruckpapier gedruckt und gebunden.",
"",
"Sachregister\nAbtreibungsdebatte 4 Instruktionsnorm 110 f., 115, 117, 128,\nAnschein, grundrechtlicher 169, 179 131, 138 f., 145, 174\nAushandlungsbedürftigkeit/aushand- Internationaler Pakt über bürgerliche und\nlungsbedürftig 2, 5, 13, 22 ff., 27, 29, politische Rechte 74, 87\n40, 42, 44, 60, 105, 106, 110 f., 128, 156,\n173 ff., 177 f., 180 f., 184, 186 ff., 199, Jurisdiktionsstaat 3, 57, 76, 106\n203, 220, 228, 231, 233\nKatastrophen, erzählte 212 f.\nbestandserweiternd 90, 92, 96, 104 ff., kollektiv-rechtlich/Kollektivrechtsgüter\n201 ff. 11, 44 f., 62 ff., 75, 158, 181, 187 ff., 202,\nbestandssichernd 90, 104 ff. 232 f.\nBundesverfassungsgericht 3, 9, 15, 46, Konstitutionalisierung 56, 58 f.\n57 f., 65, 74, 100, 179 f., 206, 217 f., 223 f. konstruktivistisch 17, 20, 22, 41\nCopenhagen School 20, 22, 40, 212 Leistungsrecht/leistungsrechtlich/gewähr-\nleistungsrechtlich 48 f., 96, 107, 117,\nDatenschutz 216 119, 121 ff., 136 f., 140 ff., 144, 147, 155,\n– -abkommen 216 158, 167 ff., 173, 180, 184, 186, 194, 228\n– -recht 34, 169\n– -rechtlich 211 Optimierungsgebote 69, 124\n– -grundrecht 51 f., 66, 169\n– -niveau 66 Paradoxien/Paradoxon/Sicherheits-\nparadoxien 5, 13, 16 f., 22, 23 f., 32,\nEingriffsgebot 44, 53 f. 38 f., 87, 110, 231 f.\nEingriffsverbot 44, 53 f. positive obligations 45, 48 ff., 54\nEinheitsthese 151 ff.\nRaum der Freiheit, der Sicherheit und des\nFördergebot 128, 145 ff. Rechts 15, 29, 84, 97, 195\nFreiflächen, grundrechtliche 128, 131, 233 Rights Talk 4, 11, 21, 31, 42, 60 f., 67, 71,\n76, 107 ff., 185, 189 f., 207, 212, 218 ff.,\nGesundheit 30, 52, 182 223 f., 232 ff.\n– -sschutz 52, 62, 66, 119 Rückschrittsverbot 144 ff., 156, 199 ff.,\n– -sschutzniveau 30, 35, 64, 66 228\nGewaltmonopol 10, 14, 47, 179\nGleichgewicht, institutionelles 7 Schutzanspruch 1 f., 6, 45, 57, 63, 68 ff.,\nGrundfreiheiten 30 f., 36, 46, 63, 88 89, 106 f., 108 f., 188 ff., 195, 200, 215,\nGrundrechtsverbund, europäischer 9, 96, 219, 223 f., 226 f., 232 f.\n98, 102, 105, 193, 197 Schutz durch Eingriff 16, 55, 63, 85, 95 f.,\n103, 193\nHandlungsgebote 54, 56, 71 Schwangerschaftsabbruch 57, 58, 223\nHandlungsverbote 54, 56, 71 Sicherheitsakteur 20 f., 29, 40, 61, 107,\n189, 218, 220",
"250 Sachregister\nSicherheitskultur 17 ff., 86 Verfassungsinhalt 15\nSicherheitsunion 9 Verfassungsvoraussetzung 15\nSubjektivierungsgebot 129, 144, 147 f., Vergrundrechtlichung 1 f., 4, 8, 53, 56, 60,\n156, 199, 201, 203 72, 76, 105, 107 f., 219, 232 f.\nVersicherheitlichung 5, 8, 20 f., 60, 212,\nUmwelt 181 f. 219, 234\n– -schutz 62, 66, 119, 130 – -sakteure 21\n– -grundsatz 133, 136, 139, 143, 148 – -potentiale 220\n– -standards 130, 141 – -prozesse 15, 20 ff., 40 f., 54, 61, 189,\nU.N.-Menschenrechtsausschuss 74, 87 207, 212, 218 f., 222, 224 f., 228 f.\n– -tendenzen 11, 29, 41 f., 71, 86, 107 f.,\nVerbraucher 206 f., 212, 218, 220, 233 f.\n– Sicherheit der 30 Vorratsdatenspeicherung 2, 34, 38, 64, 75,\n– -schutz 30, 62, 119, 154 101, 171\n– -schutzgrundsatz 66, 153\n– -vertrauen 52 Werteordnung, objektive 3, 46\n– -niveau 154 Wesentlichkeitslehre 176 ff.\nVerfassungsverbund 9, 176, 179"
] |
[
1,
2,
3,
4,
5,
267,
268,
269
] | 269 | |
doab33162
|
Cycling Futures
| null | null | null | null |
University of Adelaide Press
|
2015
|
[
"9781925261172",
"cycling-futures"
] |
[
"Transport planning & policy",
"bicycle",
"bike accidents",
"bike crashes",
"bike ed",
"bike lanes",
"bike paths",
"bike safety",
"bikes",
"city planning",
"commuting",
"cycling",
"cycling and gender",
"cycling in australia",
"cycling in new zealand",
"health benefits of cycling",
"Motor vehicle",
"sustainable transport"
] |
eng
|
https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/33162
|
https://library.oapen.org/bitstream/20.500.12657/32940/1/586710.pdf
| null | null |
[] |
CC BY-NC-ND
|
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
|
4.0
|
Creative Commons
|
Australasian researchers, practitioners, policy makers and community members are engaged in a global discussion on the role of cycling in addressing these concerns. Contributors to this book report on and extend this discussion as they explore the insights generated locally and internationally on the past, present and future of cycling. The focus of the first half of the book is largely on the current engagement with cycling, challenges faced by existing and would-be cyclists and the issues cycling might address. The second half of the book is concerned with strategies and processes of change. Contributors working from different ontological positions reflect on changing socio-spatial relations to enable the broadest possible participation in cycling.'
| null |
1 online resource
|
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pdfs/cc-by-nc-nd/doab33162.pdf
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[
"",
"",
"",
"C y c l i n g\nF u t u re s",
"The high-quality paperback edition of this book\nis available for purchase online:\nhttps://shop.adelaide.edu.au/",
"Strategies for change\nRutter, H, Cavill, N, Dinsdale, H, Kahlmeier, S, Racioppi, F, & Oja, P. (2011).\nHealth economic assessment tools (HEAT) for cycling. Copenhagen:\nWHO Regional Office for Europe.\nSadik-Khan, J. (2014, May 27-30). How New York City made room for bikes.\nVelo-City Global Conference, Adelaide. Retrieved 31 July 2015 from http://\nwww.adelaidecitycouncil.com/inside-adelaide/article/janette-sadik-khan-\nhow-new-york-city-made-room-for-bikes.\nShoup, D. (2005). The high cost of free parking. Chicago: Planners Press.\nSloman, L, Cavill, N, Cope, A, Muller, L, & Kennedy, A. (2009). Analysis and\nsynthesis of evidence on the effects of investment in six Cycling Demonstration\nTowns. England: Department for Transport and Cycling England.\nStanding Committee on Planning Environment and Territory and Municipal\nServices. (2014). Inquiry into vulnerable road users. Canberra: ACT\nLegislative Assembly. Retrieved 18 September 2015 from http://www.\nparliament.act.gov.au/in-committees/recent-reports/?a=602200.\nSugiyama, T, Merom, D, Reaves, M, Leslie, E, & Owen, N. (2010). Habitual\nactive transport moderates the association of TV viewing time with body\nmass index. Journal of Physical Activity and Health, 7, 11-16.\nTransport, Housing and Local Government Committee. (2013). A new direction\nfor cycling in Queensland. Report No. 39. Brisbane: Queensland Parliament.\nVicRoads. (2011). 2011-2012 Victorian speed limit review. Melbourne: VicRoads.\nVicRoads. (2014). Cycling data and statistics. Retrieved 31 July 2015 from\nhttps://www.vicroads.vic.gov.au/traffic-and-road-use/road-network-and-\nperformance/road-use-and-performance.\nWray, JH. (2008). Pedal power: The quiet rise of the bicycle in American Public Life.\nBoulder, USA: Paradigm Publishers.\nYang, L, Sahlqvist, S, McMinn, A, Griffin, SJ, & Ogilvie, D. (2010).\nInterventions to promote cycling: Systematic review. British Medical\nJournal, 341, c5293.\n452",
"Electronic Index\nThis book is available as a free fully-searchable ebook from\nwww.adelaide.edu.au/press",
""
] |
[
1,
2,
3,
4,
5,
473,
474,
475
] | 475 | |
doab27160
|
Fritid, frihet og fellesskap
|
Kunnskap og løsninger i lokalt kulturarbeid blant barn og unge
| null | null | null |
Cappelen Damm Akademisk/NOASP (Nordic Open Access Scholarly Publishing)
|
2019
|
[
"9788202642358",
"noasp.65"
] |
[
"Cultural studies",
"barn og unge",
"cultural policy",
"cultural work",
"Drammen",
"Drammen",
"kulturarbeid",
"youth"
] |
nor
|
https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/27160
|
https://library.oapen.org/bitstream/20.500.12657/25189/1/Frihet_PDF.pdf
| null | null |
[] |
CC BY
|
by/4.0/
|
4.0
|
Creative Commons
|
Denne boken handler om muligheter, utfordringer og kunnskap i lokalt kulturarbeid blant barn og unge. Den beskriver kulturarbeid på kommunalt nivå, men viser også hvordan dette arbeidet tar sikte på å nå nasjonale kulturpolitiske mål som kvalitet, deltakelse, inkludering, mangfold og demokrati. Med Drammen som et utsiktspunkt, undersøker boken hvordan ulike faktorer påvirker lokalt kulturarbeid, og hvordan kulturpolitikken på kommunalt nivå nødvendigvis er både pragmatisk og prinsipiell, praktisk og prosaisk. De empiriske dataene som presenteres og diskuteres i boken er en kombinasjon av kvalitative casestudier og kvantitative surveydata. Surveydataene viser variasjoner og mønstre i det kulturelle forbruket blant en hel aldersgruppe, og case-studiene viser ulike måter å gjennomføre og organisere kulturarbeid på dette området. Boken drøfter også det komplekse samspillet mellom midler og mål som er involvert når en kommune arbeider for å gjøre kultur betydningsfullt for unge mennesker. This book is about possibilities for, challenges for and knowledge about local cultural work among young people. It describes cultural work at a municipal level but shows also how this work is aiming to reach goals that it has in common with national cultural policy: quality, participation, inclusion, diversity and democracy. Using the municipality and town of Drammen as a vantage point, the book investigates how different parameters effect local cultural work, and how cultural policy at a municipal level is, by necessity, pragmatic, practical and sometimes prosaic. This topic is dealt with through a combination of qualitative and quantitative analysis. The empirical data presented and discussed in the book is a combination of qualitative case studies and quantitative survey data. The survey data shows variations and patterns in the cultural consumption of an age cohort in the municipality, and the case studies show different ways of effectuating and organizing cultural work at this level. Finally, the book discusses the complex interplay between means and ends when a municipality is working to make culture matter for young people.
| null |
1 online resource (189 p.)
|
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pdfs/cc-by/doab27160.pdf
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[
"",
"Fritid, frihet og fellesskap",
"",
"Ole Marius Hylland og Åsne Dahl Haugssevje\nFritid, frihet og\nfellesskap\nKUNNSKAP OG LØSNINGER I LOKALT\nKULTURARBEID BLANT BARN OG UNGE",
"© 2019 Ole Marius Hylland og Åsne Dahl Haugsevje\nDette verket omfattes av bestemmelsene i Lov om opphavsretten til åndsverk m.v. av 1961.\nVerket utgis Open Access under betingelsene i Creative Commons-lisensen CC-BY 4.0 (http://\ncreativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). Denne tillater tredjepart å kopiere, distribuere og\nspre verket i hvilket som helst medium eller format, og å remixe, endre, og bygge videre på\nmaterialet til et hvilket som helst formål, inkludert kommersielle, under betingelse av at korrekt\nkreditering og en lenke til lisensen er oppgitt, og at man indikerer om endringer er blitt gjort.\nTredjepart kan gjøre dette på enhver rimelig måte, men uten at det kan forstås slik at lisensgiver\nbifaller tredjepart eller tredjeparts bruk av verket.\nISBN trykt bok: 978-82-02-64237-2\nISBN PDF: 978-82-02-61656-4\nISBN EPUB: 978-82-02-64233-4\nISBN HTML: 978-82-02-64234-1\nISBN XML: 978-82-02-64235-8\nDOI: https://doi.org/10.23865/noasp.65\nDette er en fagfellevurdert monografi.\nBoken har blitt utgitt med støtte fra Telemarksforskning\nog Drammen kommune.\nOmslagsdesign: Cappelen Damm AS\nOmslagsfoto: Jupiterimages/Getty Images\nCappelen Damm Akademisk/NOASP\[email protected]",
"referanser\nKleppe, B., & Leikvoll, G.-K. (2015). Norsk kulturindeks 2015. Bø: Telemarksforsking\nKulturdepartementet (1996). Broen og den blå hesten. Handlingsplan for dei estetiske\nfaga og kulturdimensjonen i grunnskolen. Oslo: Kulturdepartementet og Kyrkje,\nutdannings- og forskningsdepartementet.\nLidén, H. (2004). Tørrfisken stinka, men kahytten var topp. En oppfølgingsstudie\nav to modeller for organisering av Den kulturelle skolesekken. Oslo: Institutt for\nsamfunnsforskning.\nLøyland, K., & Håkonsen, L. (2012). Kulturutgifter i kommunene. Bø: Telemarks-\nforsking.\nMangset, P. (2012). Demokratisering av kulturen? Om sosial ulikhet i kulturbruk og\n-deltakelse. TF-notat nr. 7/2012. Bø: Telemarksforsking.\nMedietilsynet 2018. Barn og medier-undersøkelsen 2018. 9–18-åringer om medievaner\nog opplevelser. Oslo: Medietilsynet.\nMeld.St. 10 (2011–2012). Kultur, inkludering og deltaking. Oslo: Kulturdepartementet.\nNielsen, F. S. (1996). Nærmere kommer du ikke. Håndbok i antropologisk feltarbeid.\nBergen: Fagbokforlaget.\nNKS (1979). Kommunale musikkskoler. Temahefte. Oslo: Norske kommuners\nsentralforbund.\nNorsk kulturråd (1966). Innstilling om forsøksvirksomhet med Rikskonserter i Norge.\n(Rikskonsertutvalget). Oslo: Norsk kulturråd.\nNOU (2013:4). Kulturutredningen 2014. Oslo: Kulturdepartementet.\nNOVA (2014). Ungdata. Nasjonale resultater 2013. NOVA Rapport 10/14. Oslo:\nNOVA.\nNOVA (2015). Ungdata. Nasjonale resultater 2014. NOVA Rapport 7/15. Oslo:\nNOVA\nvon Oettingen, A. (2001). Det pædagogiske paradoks. København: Klim.\nPedersen. W. (1994). Ungdom er bare et ord. Samfunnsvitenskapelige essays. Oslo:\nUniversitetsforlaget.\nRammeplan (2015). Rammeplan for kulturskolen. Mangfold og fordypning. Oslo:\nNorsk kulturskoleråd.\nRepstad, P. (2007). Mellom nærhet og distanse: kvalitative metoder i samfunnsfag.\nOslo: Universitetsforlaget, Oslo.\nRoncossek, S. D., & Kleppe, B. (2017). Norsk kulturindeks 2017. Resultater for\nBuskerud fylke. Bø: Telemarksforsking.\nRugkåsa, M., & Thorsen, K. T. (2003). Nære steder, nye rom: utfordringer i\nantropologiske studier i Norge. Oslo: Gyldendal Akademisk.\nRøyseng, S. (2007). Den gode, hellige og disiplinerte kunsten. Forestillinger om\nkunstens autonomi i kulturpolitikk og kunstledelse. Ph.d.-avhandling. Bergen:\nUniversitetet i Bergen.\nSSB (1974). Tidsnyttingsundersøkelsen 1971–1972. Hefte II. Oslo: Statistisk sentralbyrå.\n186",
"referanser\nSSB (1977). Døgnets 24 timer. En analyse av tidsnytting i 1971–1972. Oslo: Statistisk\nsentralbyrå.\nSSB (1992). Kultur- og mediebruk 1991. Oslo: Statistisk sentralbyrå.\nSSB (1995). Kultur- og mediebruk 1994. Oslo: Statistisk sentralbyrå.\nSSB (1996). Norsk mediebarometer 1995. Oslo: Statistisk sentralbyrå.\nStafseng, O. (1996). Den historiske konstruksjon av moderne ungdom. Om ungdom\nsom forskningsobjekt i vitenskaps- og utdanningshistorisk belysning. Oslo:\nCappelen.\nStavrum, H. (2013). Begeistringsforskning eller evalueringstyranni? Om\nkunnskap om kunst for barn og unge. Nordisk kulturpolitisk tidsskrift, 16(1),\n154–170.\nStavrum, H. (2014). Danseglede og hverdagsliv. Etikk, estetikk og politikk i det norske\ndansebandfeltet. Ph.d.-avhandling. Bergen: Universitetet i Bergen.\nSt.meld. nr. 91 (1965–1966). Norsk kulturfond – årsmelding 1965. Oslo: Kirke- og\nundervisningsdepartementet.\nSt.meld. nr. 38 (2003–2003). Den kulturelle skulesekken. Oslo: Kultur- og\nkyrkjedepartementet.\nSt.meld. nr. 39 (2002–2003). «Ei blot til Lyst». Om kunst og kultur i og i tilknytning til\ngrunnskolen. Oslo: Utdannings- og forskningsdepartementet.\nSt.meld. nr. 8 (2007–2008). Kulturell skulesekk for framtida. Oslo: Kultur- og\nkyrkjedepartementet.\nSt.prp. nr. 1. (1949). Tillegg nr. 17. Om stønad til organisert ungdomsarbeid og tiltak for\nfritidskultur. Oslo: Kyrkje- og undervisningsdepartementet.\nSvendsen, L. F. H. (2013). Frihetens filosofi. Oslo: Universitetsforlaget.\nSørlie, K., Havnen, E. og Ruud, M. E. (2010). Levekårsutvikling og flytting på\nFjell i Drammen. NIBR-rapport 2010:21. Oslo: Norsk institutt for by- og\nregionforskning.\nThagaard, T. (2003). Systematikk og innlevelse. En innføring i kvalitativ metode.\nBergen: Fagbokforlaget.\nTNS Gallup (2009). Kulturtilbud og kulturinteresser på Nord-Jæren 2009, på oppdrag\nfra Interkommunalt Kulturråd for Nord-Jæren. TNS Gallup.\nVestheim, G. (2008). All kulturpolitikk er instrumentell. I: S. Beckman & S.\nMånsson (red.), KulturSverige 2009. Problemanalys og statistik (s. 56–63).\nLinköping: Swedish Cultural Policy Research Observatory.\nVaage, O. F. (2007). Kultur- og mediebruk i forandring. Bruk av kulturtilbud og\nmassemedier fra 1991 til 2006. Oslo: Statistisk sentralbyrå.\nVaage O. F. (2009a). Norsk kulturbarometer 2008. Oslo: Statistisk sentralbyrå.\nVaage, O. F. (2009b). Kultur- og mediebruk blant personer med innvandrerbakgrunn.\nOslo: Statistisk sentralbyrå.\n187",
"referanser\nVaage O. F. (2010). Oslo-befolkningens bruk av kulturtilbud: Resultater fra Kultur- og\nmediebruksundersøkelsene fra 1991 til 2008 og Levekårsundersøkelsen 2007. Oslo:\nStatistisk sentralbyrå.\nVaage, O. F. (2013). Norsk kulturbarometer 2012. Oslo: Statistisk sentralbyrå.\nVaage, O. F. (2017). Norsk kulturbarometer 2016. Oslo: Statistisk sentralbyrå.\nWadel, C. (1991). Feltarbeid i egen kultur. En innføring i kvalitativt orientert\nsamfunnsforskning. Flekkefjord: SEEK.\nYin, R. K. (2003). Case Study Research. Design and Methods. London: SAGE\nPublications.\n188"
] |
[
1,
2,
3,
4,
5,
187,
188,
189
] | 189 | |
doab26465
|
Intersektionale Sozialforschung
| null | null | null | null |
transcript Verlag
|
2020
|
[
"9783837645149",
"9783839445143",
"9783839445143"
] |
[
"Society & social sciences",
"Einführung",
"Gender",
"Gender Studies",
"Geschlecht",
"Gesellschaft",
"Intersectionality",
"Intersektionalität",
"Introduction",
"Praxeologie",
"Praxeology",
"Qualitative Forschung",
"Qualitative Research",
"Qualitative Social Research",
"Qualitative Sozialforschung",
"Social Inequality",
"Society",
"Sociological Theory",
"Sociology",
"Soziale Ungleichheit",
"Soziologie",
"Soziologische Theorie"
] |
ger
|
https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/26465
|
https://library.oapen.org/bitstream/20.500.12657/41179/1/9783839445143.pdf
| null | null |
[] |
CC BY
|
by/4.0/
|
4.0
|
Creative Commons
|
Wie wirken Herrschaftsverhältnisse in gegenwärtigen kapitalistischen Gesellschaften? Wie lassen sich Ungleichheiten im Zusammenhang erforschen? Die Intersektionale Mehrebenenanalyse ist ein vielseitig anwendbares Instrument für subjektzentrierte und praxisorientierte Sozialforschung im Rahmen einer intersektional-feministischen Gesellschaftsanalyse. Kathrin Ganz und Jette Hausotter stellen die Theorie des Intersektionalen Mehrebenenansatzes vor und führen Schritt für Schritt durch den Forschungsprozess: von der Konzeption über die Datenerhebung und -auswertung bis zu den Ergebnissen. Zudem werden die Potenziale der Methode für die intersektionale Praxisforschung ausgelotet.; How do power relations work in contemporary capitalist societies? How can inequalities be explored in context? The intersectional multi-level analysis presented in this handbook is a versatile instrument for subject-centered and practice-oriented research within the framework of an intersectional-feminist social analysis. Kathrin Ganz and Jette Hausotter guide the reader through the research process step by step: from the concept through data collection and evaluation to the results. In addition, potentials of the method for intersectional practice research are explored.
|
Sozialtheorie
|
1 online resource (156 p.)
|
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Wie lassen sich Ungleichheiten im Zusammenhang erforschen? Die Intersektionale Mehrebenenanalyse ist ein vielseitig anwendbares Instrument f\u00fcr subjektzentrierte und praxisorientierte Sozialforschung im Rahmen einer intersektional-feministischen Gesellschaftsanalyse. Kathrin Ganz und Jette Hausotter stellen die Theorie des Intersektionalen Mehrebenenansatzes vor und f\u00fchren Schritt f\u00fcr Schritt durch den Forschungsprozess: von der Konzeption \u00fcber die Datenerhebung und -auswertung bis zu den Ergebnissen. Zudem werden die Potenziale der Methode f\u00fcr die intersektionale Praxisforschung ausgelotet.; How do power relations work in contemporary capitalist societies? How can inequalities be explored in context? The intersectional multi-level analysis presented in this handbook is a versatile instrument for subject-centered and practice-oriented research within the framework of an intersectional-feminist social analysis. Kathrin Ganz and Jette Hausotter guide the reader through the research process step by step: from the concept through data collection and evaluation to the results. In addition, potentials of the method for intersectional practice research are explored."}]}}, {"540": {"ind1": " ", "ind2": " ", "subfields": [{"a": "Creative Commons"}, {"f": "by/4.0/"}, {"2": "cc"}, {"u": "http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"}]}}, {"546": {"ind1": " ", "ind2": " ", "subfields": [{"a": "German"}]}}, {"650": {"ind1": " ", "ind2": "7", "subfields": [{"a": "Society & social sciences"}, {"2": "bicssc"}]}}, {"653": {"ind1": " ", "ind2": " ", "subfields": [{"a": "Einf\u00fchrung"}]}}, {"653": {"ind1": " ", "ind2": " ", "subfields": [{"a": "Gender"}]}}, {"653": {"ind1": " ", "ind2": " ", "subfields": [{"a": "Gender Studies"}]}}, {"653": {"ind1": " ", "ind2": " ", "subfields": [{"a": "Geschlecht"}]}}, {"653": {"ind1": " ", "ind2": " ", "subfields": [{"a": "Gesellschaft"}]}}, {"653": {"ind1": " ", "ind2": " ", "subfields": [{"a": "Intersectionality"}]}}, {"653": {"ind1": " ", "ind2": " ", "subfields": [{"a": "Intersektionalit\u00e4t"}]}}, {"653": {"ind1": " ", "ind2": " ", "subfields": [{"a": "Introduction"}]}}, {"653": {"ind1": " ", "ind2": " ", "subfields": [{"a": "Praxeologie"}]}}, {"653": {"ind1": " ", "ind2": " ", "subfields": [{"a": "Praxeology"}]}}, {"653": {"ind1": " ", "ind2": " ", "subfields": [{"a": "Qualitative Forschung"}]}}, {"653": {"ind1": " ", "ind2": " ", "subfields": [{"a": "Qualitative Research"}]}}, {"653": {"ind1": " ", "ind2": " ", "subfields": [{"a": "Qualitative Social Research"}]}}, {"653": {"ind1": " ", "ind2": " ", "subfields": [{"a": "Qualitative Sozialforschung"}]}}, {"653": {"ind1": " ", "ind2": " ", "subfields": [{"a": "Social Inequality"}]}}, {"653": {"ind1": " ", "ind2": " ", "subfields": [{"a": "Society"}]}}, {"653": {"ind1": " ", "ind2": " ", "subfields": [{"a": "Sociological Theory"}]}}, {"653": {"ind1": " ", "ind2": " ", "subfields": [{"a": "Sociology"}]}}, {"653": {"ind1": " ", "ind2": " ", "subfields": [{"a": "Soziale Ungleichheit"}]}}, {"653": {"ind1": " ", "ind2": " ", "subfields": [{"a": "Soziologie"}]}}, {"653": {"ind1": " ", "ind2": " ", "subfields": [{"a": "Soziologische Theorie"}]}}, {"720": {"ind1": "1", "ind2": " ", "subfields": [{"a": "Hausotter, Jette"}, {"4": "aut"}]}}, {"793": {"ind1": "0", "ind2": " ", "subfields": [{"a": "DOAB Library."}]}}, {"856": {"ind1": "4", "ind2": "0", "subfields": [{"u": "https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/26465"}, {"7": "0"}, {"z": "Open Access: DOAB: description of the publication"}]}}, {"856": {"ind1": "4", "ind2": "0", "subfields": [{"u": "https://library.oapen.org/bitstream/20.500.12657/41179/1/9783839445143.pdf"}, {"7": "0"}, {"z": "Open Access: DOAB, download the publication"}]}}]}
|
pdfs/cc-by/doab26465.pdf
|
[
"",
"Kathrin Ganz, Jette Hausotter\nIntersektionale Sozialforschung\nSozialtheorie",
"Kathrin Ganz (Dr. rer. pol) promovierte an der TU Hamburg zum politischen Dis-\nkurs der Netzbewegung und beschäftigt sich mit Intersektionalität, Digitalisie-\nrung und Open Access.\nJette Hausotter (Dr. rer. pol.) beschäftigt sich mit Care-Arbeit und sozialer Un-\ngleichheit sowie Gleichstellung und Antidiskriminierung. Sie promovierte an der\nTU Hamburg mit einer intersektionalen Studie über die Lebensführung von In-\ngenieur_innen.",
"Kathrin Ganz, Jette Hausotter\nIntersektionale Sozialforschung",
"Die Publikation wurde ermöglicht durch eine Ko-Finanzierung für Open-Access-\nMonografien und -Sammelbände der Freien Universität Berlin.\nBibliografische Information der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek\nDie Deutsche Nationalbibliothek verzeichnet diese Publikation in der Deutschen\nNationalbibliografie; detaillierte bibliografische Daten sind im Internet über\nhttp://dnb.d-nb.de abrufbar.\nDieses Werk ist lizenziert unter der Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Lizenz (BY). Diese\nLizenz erlaubt unter Voraussetzung der Namensnennung des Urhebers die Bearbeitung,\nVervielfältigung und Verbreitung des Materials in jedem Format oder Medium für be-\nliebige Zwecke, auch kommerziell. (Lizenztext: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/\nby/4.0/deed.de)\nDie Bedingungen der Creative-Commons-Lizenz gelten nur für Originalmaterial. Die\nWiederverwendung von Material aus anderen Quellen (gekennzeichnet mit Quellenan-\ngabe) wie z.B. Schaubilder, Abbildungen, Fotos und Textauszüge erfordert ggf. weitere\nNutzungsgenehmigungen durch den jeweiligen Rechteinhaber.\nErschienen 2020 im transcript Verlag, Bielefeld\n© Kathrin Ganz, Jette Hausotter\nUmschlaggestaltung: Kordula Röckenhaus, Bielefeld\nLektorat: Ulf Heidel\nSatz: Mark-Sebastian Schneider, Bielefeld\nDruck: Majuskel Medienproduktion GmbH, Wetzlar\nPrint-ISBN 978-3-8376-4514-9\nPDF-ISBN 978-3-8394-4514-3\nhttps://doi.org/10.14361/9783839445143\nGedruckt auf alterungsbeständigem Papier mit chlorfrei gebleichtem Zellstoff.\nBesuchen Sie uns im Internet: https://www.transcript-verlag.de\nUnsere aktuelle Vorschau finden Sie unter\nwww.transcript-verlag.de/vorschau-download",
"Soziologie\nNaika Foroutan\nDie postmigrantische Gesellschaft\nEin Versprechen der pluralen Demokratie\n2019, 280 S., kart., 18 SW-Abbildungen\n19,99 € (DE), 978-3-8376-4263-6\nE-Book: 17,99 € (DE), ISBN 978-3-8394-4263-0\nEPUB: 17,99 € (DE), ISBN 978-3-7328-4263-6\nMaria Björkman (Hg.)\nDer Mann und die Prostata\nKulturelle, medizinische\nund gesellschaftliche Perspektiven\n2019, 162 S., kart., 10 SW-Abbildungen\n19,99 € (DE), 978-3-8376-4866-9\nE-Book: 17,99 € (DE), ISBN 978-3-8394-4866-3\nFranz Schultheis\nUnternehmen Bourdieu\nEin Erfahrungsbericht\n2019, 106 S., kart.\n14,99 € (DE), 978-3-8376-4786-0\nE-Book: 17,99 € (DE), ISBN 978-3-8394-4786-4\nEPUB: 17,99 € (DE), ISBN 978-3-7328-4786-0\nLeseproben, weitere Informationen und Bestellmöglichkeiten\nfinden Sie unter www.transcript-verlag.de",
"Soziologie\nSybille Bauriedl, Anke Strüver (Hg.)\nSmart City – Kritische Perspektiven\nauf die Digitalisierung in Städten\n2018, 364 S., kart.\n29,99 € (DE), 978-3-8376-4336-7\nE-Book: 26,99 € (DE), ISBN 978-3-8394-4336-1\nEPUB: 26,99 € (DE), ISBN 978-3-7328-4336-7\nWeert Canzler, Andreas Knie, Lisa Ruhrort, Christian Scherf\nErloschene Liebe?\nDas Auto in der Verkehrswende\nSoziologische Deutungen\n2018, 174 S., kart.\n19,99 € (DE), 978-3-8376-4568-2\nE-Book: 17,99 € (DE), ISBN 978-3-8394-4568-6\nEPUB: 17,99 € (DE), ISBN 978-3-7328-4568-2\nJuliane Karakayali, Bernd Kasparek (Hg.)\nmovements.\nJournal for Critical Migration\nand Border Regime Studies\nJg. 4, Heft 2/2018\n2019, 246 S., kart.\n24,99 € (DE), 978-3-8376-4474-6\nLeseproben, weitere Informationen und Bestellmöglichkeiten\nfinden Sie unter www.transcript-verlag.de",
""
] |
[
1,
2,
3,
4,
5,
155,
156,
157
] | 157 | |
doab26947
|
På vei til å bli skrivelærer
|
Lærerstudenten i dialog med teori og praksis
| null | null | null |
Cappelen Damm Akademisk/NOASP (Nordic Open Access Scholarly Publishing)
|
2016
|
[
"9788202525163",
"noasp.4.4"
] |
[
"Education",
"lower secondary school teachers",
"primary school teacher",
"teachers competence",
"writing"
] |
und
|
https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/26947
|
https://library.oapen.org/bitstream/20.500.12657/31150/1/637320.pdf
| null | null |
[] |
CC BY
|
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
|
4.0
|
Creative Commons
|
This book focuses on how student teachers for primary and lower secondary school develop competence as teachers of writing. Analyses are based on written, digital dialogues between student teachers, mentors and lecturers during field practice. The dialogues can be characterized as discussions, and are results of SKRIVUT, an intervention study. Using writing as a mediating tool, the goal of SKRIVUT was to facilitate and strengthen the interplay between the two arenas of learning in teacher education.
| null |
1 online resource (256 p.)
|
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|
pdfs/cc-by/doab26947.pdf
|
[
"",
"",
"På vei til å bli skrivelærer",
"Takk til kollega Rutt Trøite Lorentzen som har vist oss veier inn i\nelevers og studenters skrivelandskap.",
"Torunn Klemp, Vivi Nilssen, Elin Strømman\nog Carl F. Dons\nPå vei til å bli\nskrivelærer\nLærerstudenten i dialog med teori og praksis",
"referanser\nTømte, C., Kårstein, A. & Olsen, D.S. (2013). IKT i lærerutdanningen. På\nvei mot profesjonsfaglig digital kompetanse? NIFU-rapport 20/2013.\nOslo: NIFU.\nVan der Leeuw, B.T. (2006). Schrijftaken in de lerarenopleiding.\nEen etnografie van onderwijsvernieuwing [Skriftlige oppgaver\ni lærerutdanninga. En etnografisk studie av utviklingsarbeid i\nundervisning]. Heeswijk-Dinther: Esstede.\nVygotskij, L.S. (1978). Mind in society: The development of higher\npsychological processes. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.\n(Original publisert i 1930–35).\nVygotskij, L.S. (1981). The genesis of higher mental functions. I\nJ.V. Wertsch (Red.), The concept of activity in Soviet psychology\n(s. 144–188). New York: M.E. Sharpe.\nVygotskij, L.S. (1987). Thinking and speech. I R. W. Rieber &\nA.S. Carton (Red.), The collected works of L. S. Vygotsky. Volume 1.\nProblems of general psychology (s. 39–285). New York: Plenum Press.\n(Original publisert i 1934).\nVygotskij, L.S. (2001). Tenkning og tale (T.-J. Bielenberg &\nM. T. Roster, Trans.). Oslo: Gyldendal Akademisk. (Original\npublisert i 1934).\nWenger, E. (1998). Communities of practice. Learning, meaning, and\nidentity. New York: Cambridge University press.\nWertsch, J.V. (1991). Voices of the mind. A sociocultural approach to\nmediated action. London: Harvester Wheatsheaf.\nWertsch, J.V. & Stone, C.A. (1985). The concept of internalization in\nVygotsky’s account of the genesis of higher mental functions. I\nJ.V. Wertsch (Red.), Culture, communication, and cognition\n(s. 162–179). New York: Cambridge University Press.\nWigfield, A. & Wagner, A.L. (2005). Competence, motivation and\nidentity development during adolescence. I A. Elliot & C. Dweck\n(Red.), Handbook of competence and motivation (s. 222–239).\nNew York: Guilford Press.\nWittek, L. (2004). Læring i og mellom mennesker. En innføring i\nsosiokulturelle perspektiver. Oslo: Cappelen Akademisk Forlag.\nWolcott, H.F. (1990). Writing up qualitative research. Newbury Park,\nCA: Sage.\n254",
"referanser\nWood, D., Bruner, J.S. & Ross, G. (1976). The role of tutoring in problem\nsolving. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 17, 89–100.\nZeichner, K. (2010). Rethinking the connections between campus\ncourses and field experiences in college- and university-based\nteacher education. Journal of Teacher Education, 61(1–2), 89–99.\ndoi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0022487109347671.\nAasen, A.J., Berge, K.L., Skaftun, A. & Hoem, T.F. (2014). Innspill til\nFremtidens skole, Ludvigsen-utvalget fra Lese- og skrivesenteret.\nLese- og skrivekompetanse i fremtidens samfunn. Hentet 15. januar, 2016\nfra https://nettsteder.regjeringen.no/fremtidensskole/files/2014/05/\nInnspill-til-Fremtidens-skole-Skrivesenteret-og-Lesesenteret.pdf\nAasen, P., Møller, J., Rye, E., Ottesen, E., Prøitz, T.S. & Hertzberg, F.\n(2012). Kunnskapsløftet som styringsreform – et løft eller et løfte?\nForvaltningsnivåene og institusjonenes rolle i implementeringen av\nreformen. NIFU-rapport 20/2012. Hentet 11. januar, 2016 fra http://\nwww.udir.no/Upload/Rapporter/2012/FIRE_slutt.pdf\n255",
""
] |
[
1,
2,
3,
4,
5,
254,
255,
256
] | 256 |
DOAB Open Access Books - Metadata Extraction Dataset
Dataset Description
This dataset contains 9,363 open access books with page images and rich bibliographic metadata extracted from MARC21 records, curated specifically for training and evaluating Vision Language Models (VLMs) on automatic metadata extraction from scholarly monographs.
The dataset is derived from the Penn State ScholarSphere DOAB collection (Directory of Open Access Books), focusing on books with Creative Commons licenses that permit research and machine learning applications.
Note: This version contains extracted images from the first few pages of each book to reduce dataset size and facilitate ML applications. Open an issue if a raw version with full PDFs would be of use.
Key Features
- 9,363 open access books with page images and metadata
- Page images extracted from the first few pages of each book
- Rich metadata including title, subtitle, authors, editors, publisher, publication year, ISBN, subjects, abstracts, and language
- Full MARC21 records preserved for comprehensive bibliographic information
- License tracking with specific Creative Commons license types (CC BY, CC BY-NC-ND, etc.) enabling filtering by usage rights
- Predominantly CC BY licensed (71.5%) - most permissive for ML applications
- Predominantly English with some German, Italian, French, and Spanish books
Use Cases
This dataset is designed for:
- Training VLMs to extract bibliographic metadata from book title pages and front matter
- Evaluating document understanding models on structured metadata extraction tasks
- Benchmarking VLM performance against ground-truth MARC21 catalog records
- Developing automated cataloging tools for libraries and digital repositories
- Research in scholarly communication and open access publishing patterns
Dataset Structure
Format
The dataset contains book metadata with images from the first few pages of each book.
Data Fields
Each record contains the following fields:
Core Bibliographic Metadata:
record_id
(string): Unique DOAB record identifiertitle
(string): Main title of the worksubtitle
(string, nullable): Subtitle if presentstatement_of_responsibility
(string, nullable): Statement of responsibility from title fieldauthors
(list[string], nullable): List of authorseditors
(list[string], nullable): List of editorspublisher
(string): Publisher namepublication_year
(string): Year of publicationisbn
(list[string], nullable): ISBN numberslanguage
(string): ISO 639-2/3 language code
Subject and Description:
subjects
(list[string], nullable): Subject headings (LCSH, BISAC, keywords)abstract
(string, nullable): Book description/abstractseries
(string, nullable): Series title if part of a seriesphysical_description
(string, nullable): Physical details (page count, etc.)
Access and Rights:
license_type
(string): Specific Creative Commons license (e.g., "CC BY", "CC BY-NC-ND")license_url
(string): Full URL to license deedlicense_version
(string): License version (e.g., "4.0")license_text
(string): Original license text from MARC record
URLs:
url_doab_handle
(string, nullable): DOAB catalog record URLurl_pdf
(string): Direct PDF download URLurl_doi
(string, nullable): DOI URL if availableurl_oapen_viewer
(string, nullable): OAPEN viewer URLurl_other
(list[string]): Other related URLs
Images:
images
(list[Image]): Images from the first few pages of the book
Technical:
raw_marc
(string): Complete MARC21 record in JSON format preserving all original cataloging information. This field contains the full bibliographic record and can be used for advanced applications requiring access to MARC fields not extracted into the structured metadata fields above.
Data Splits
Split | Records |
---|---|
Train | 9,363 |
Total | 9,363 |
License Distribution
The dataset includes books under various Creative Commons licenses, allowing users to filter by usage rights:
License Type | Books | Commercial Use | Derivatives Allowed |
---|---|---|---|
CC BY | 6,693 (71.5%) | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes |
CC BY-NC-ND | 1,046 (11.2%) | ❌ No | ❌ No |
CC BY-NC-SA | 879 (9.4%) | ❌ No | ✅ Yes (ShareAlike) |
CC BY-NC | 532 (5.7%) | ❌ No | ✅ Yes |
CC BY-SA | 147 (1.6%) | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes (ShareAlike) |
CC (Unspecified) | 37 (0.4%) | ⚠️ Varies | ⚠️ Varies |
CC BY-ND | 29 (0.3%) | ✅ Yes | ❌ No |
Note: Filter by license_type
to ensure compliance with your use case (e.g., use only CC BY for commercial applications).
Loading the Dataset
Basic Loading
from datasets import load_dataset
# Load full dataset
dataset = load_dataset("biglam/doab-metadata-extraction")
# Access train split
train = dataset['train']
# View first record
print(train[0])
Accessing Images and Metadata
# Get a single record
record = train[0]
# Access metadata
print(f"Title: {record['title']}")
print(f"Authors: {record['authors']}")
print(f"Publisher: {record['publisher']}")
print(f"Abstract: {record['abstract']}")
print(f"License: {record['license_type']}")
# Access page images
images = record['images'] # List of PIL Images
print(f"Number of pages: {len(images)}")
# Display first page
images[0].show()
Filtering by License
# Filter to only commercially-usable books (CC BY, CC BY-SA, CC BY-ND)
commercial_ok = train.filter(
lambda x: x['license_type'] in ['CC BY', 'CC BY-SA', 'CC BY-ND']
)
# Filter to only most permissive license
cc_by_only = train.filter(lambda x: x['license_type'] == 'CC BY')
# Filter to derivative-allowed licenses
derivatives_ok = train.filter(
lambda x: x['license_type'] in ['CC BY', 'CC BY-SA', 'CC BY-NC', 'CC BY-NC-SA']
)
Filtering by Language
# English books only
english_books = train.filter(lambda x: x['language'] == 'eng')
# Non-English books
non_english = train.filter(lambda x: x['language'] != 'eng')
# Specific languages
german_books = train.filter(lambda x: x['language'] == 'ger')
italian_books = train.filter(lambda x: x['language'] == 'ita')
Dataset Creation
Source Data
This dataset is derived from the Penn State ScholarSphere collection of DOAB (Directory of Open Access Books) MARC21 records:
- Source: Penn State ScholarSphere
- Original MARC Records: 65,307 records with Creative Commons licenses
- PDFs with Direct URLs: 37,673 records
- Successfully Downloaded: ~9,400 PDFs
- Dataset Records: 9,363 books with extracted page images
Processing Pipeline
- MARC Parsing: Extracted structured metadata from MARC21 records using
pymarc
- License Extraction: Parsed Creative Commons license types from MARC 540 field
- URL Classification: Categorized URLs into PDF downloads, DOI links, catalog records
- PDF Download: Asynchronous download with retry logic and resume capability
- Image Extraction: Extracted first few pages from each PDF as images
- Dataset Preparation: Organized with metadata and page images
Curation Rationale
The dataset focuses on:
- Books with direct PDF download URLs (not just catalog records)
- Creative Commons licenses
- Successfully downloadable PDFs (quality control through actual downloads)
- Professional cataloging metadata from DOAB/OAPEN library networks
- Page images instead of full PDFs to reduce dataset size while maintaining utility for metadata extraction
Quality Notes
- All records include successfully extracted page images
- MARC metadata is professional library cataloging quality
- Page images may vary in quality (mix of born-digital PDFs and scanned images)
- Language distribution reflects DOAB's European academic publishing focus
Limitations and Considerations
Coverage Limitations
- European/Academic Bias: Strong representation of European academic publishers due to DOAB/OAPEN network
- Open Access Only: Does not represent commercial scholarly publishing
- Language Distribution: Heavily English-dominant; limited representation of other languages
- Subject Areas: Reflects open access publishing patterns (humanities and social sciences more common)
Ethical Considerations
- All content is legally published as open access with Creative Commons licenses
- Users should filter by
license_type
to ensure compliance with their use case - Attribution should be provided as per CC license requirements
- Commercial users should filter to exclude NC (Non-Commercial) licenses
Citation and Attribution
Dataset Citation
@dataset{doab_metadata_extraction_2024,
title={DOAB Open Access Books - Metadata Extraction Dataset},
author={van Strien, Daniel},
year={2024},
publisher={HuggingFace},
url={https://huggingface.co/datasets/biglam/doab-metadata-extraction}
}
Source Data Citation
@dataset{penn_state_doab_2024,
title={MARC files of DOAB metadata (May 2024)},
author={{Penn State University Libraries}},
year={2024},
publisher={ScholarSphere},
doi={10.26207/f917-840a},
url={https://scholarsphere.psu.edu/resources/f917840a-5ee8-4f08-b3b0-e985e2638380}
}
DOAB Acknowledgment
This dataset is built on bibliographic metadata from the Directory of Open Access Books (DOAB), a community-driven discovery service for open access books coordinated by OAPEN Foundation.
Additional Resources
- MARC21 Format Documentation: Library of Congress
License
This dataset contains content under multiple licenses. The metadata and dataset structure are provided as-is, but individual book content retains the original Creative Commons licenses as specified in the license_type
field. Users must comply with the specific license of each book:
- CC BY: Free use with attribution
- CC BY-NC: Free use with attribution, non-commercial only
- CC BY-ND: Free use with attribution, no derivatives
- CC BY-SA: Free use with attribution, share-alike
- CC BY-NC-ND: Most restrictive - non-commercial, no derivatives
- CC BY-NC-SA: Non-commercial, share-alike
Filter by license_type
to ensure compliance with your use case.
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