1. Permeable Borders, Geographical Markers, and Ethnic Diversity in Dobrogea -- 2.Varieties of Socialist Tourism: Individual and Communal Vacations on the Southern Shores of the Black Sea -- 3. Locality and Community: Landscape, Temporality, and Transformation -- 4. Supervision, Transgression, and Co-Habitation: The Secret Lives of Liminal Spaces.
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In the first part of the project, a compilation of data on disinfection by-products (DBPs) as well as the biocidal active substances from product types (PTs) 1-5, 11 and 12 that are approved within the EU or within the approval process were compiled. The data on the DBPs resulted from a literature search in which 272 DBPs were identified. In addition to the substance data, the active substances used and the matrix treated were recorded in the tabular summary. A strong bias of the scientific literature on the investigation of highly reactive, especially chlorinating active substances in aqueous solution was determined. The list of biocidal active substances was compiled from the ECHA database (as of July 2019). A categorization of the biocidal active substances was developed and the DBP formation potential of each active ingredient was evaluated on the basis of this categorization. In a modeling approach, the distribution of selected DBPs and biocidal active substances in the water and air compartments for applications in solution and on surfaces and the distribution in water and sewage sludge in a sewage treatment plant was estimated. In most cases, there were significant differences between the distributions of the DBPs and the active ingredients. The formation of approximately 60 DBPs was investigated in laboratory simulations of disinfection applications in solution and on surfaces with different active substances. In addition, samples from real disinfection applications were analyzed. Based on the project results, the current procedure for risk assessment of the DBPs was analyzed in the last project phase and proposals for modifications were discussed, which aim to simplify and harmonize the risk assessment of the DBPs within the EU.
Das Anwendungshandbuch liefert eine Schritt-für-Schritt-Anleitung des Excel-basierten Bewertungswerkzeugs TRAFIS.NB. TRAFIS.NB ermöglicht die Nachhaltigkeitsbewertung von innovativen Infrastrukturlösungen. Es aktiviert lokal verfügbares Wissen und zeigt mögliche Stärken und Schwächen von Lösungsvarianten in den Dimensionen "Versorgungssicherheit", "Ressourcenschonung", "Wirtschaftlichkeit und Nutzerorientierung" auf. TRAFIS.NB kann für die Auswahl der bestgeeigneten Lösungsoption und die zielgerichtete Weiterentwicklung von Varianten genutzt werden. Nutzer*innen von TRAFIS.NB sind Betreiber*innen und Planer*innen von Infrastrukturen oder öffentliche Verwaltungen.
Chapter One: Understanding the Pursuit of Ethnic Identity in China -- Chapter Two: A Genealogy of Minzu in China -- Chapter Three: The Evolution of Minzu Among the Sibe -- Chapter Four: Reconceptualizing Minzu as a Discursive Tool in Computer Mediated Communication -- Chapter Five: Minzu as Technology and Beyond.
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Introduction -- Panic Watching: On the Function of Consuming Fictional Pandemics during a Real Pandemic -- When corporate biology gets caught up with Mother nature: An analysis of the Netflix viral horror The Rain -- Representations of environmental apocalyptic horror in Greenland -- From Haaa! To OOO: The New Cycle of Killer Objects: The New Cycle of Killer Objects -- Hereditary' s intergenerational curse -- Haunted Churches, Wicked Schools, Addressing Postcolonial History through Philippine Horror -- A Ghost Story and Micro-Cosmic Horror: Virginia Woolf's Indifferent Fear -- Shifting Subjectivities: Adopting the perspective of the Other in Mother and Get Out -- Pedophobiac Audiences: Mapping the presence of the child in horror cinema -- Good for Her; Ready or Not's Final Girl and the Rich, Patriarchal Family as Monster -- The It Duology: An Integrated Analysis of mainstream horror in the 2010s -- Why isn't There Anybody? Isolation and Loneliness in Kurosawa Kiyoshi's Pulse -- Paranormal Activity: The Marked Ones: A Failed Movie or a Movie Failed? -- The horror film and Donald trump: The revenge of minorities.
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Chapter 1 Introduction -- Chapter 2 Synopsis of fiscal policy in South Africa: 1994 – 2020 -- Part 1: Government debt -- Chapter 3 Effects of government debt on output, household consumption and gross fixed capital formation: Role of the credit conditions channel -- Chapter 4 Government debt and household consumption: the influence of the wealth channel -- Chapter 5 Government debt and capital formation nexus in South Africa: The role of the debt threshold -- Chapter 6 Government debt and fixed capital formation nexus: Effects of the interest rate and monetary policy credibility channels -- Chapter 7 Inflation targeting band, the government debt and capital formation nexus in South Africa -- Chapter 8 Do high government debt-to-GDP regimes propagate the adverse macro-economic effects of high budget deficit regimes? -- Chapter 9 Debt-to-GDP ratio, investment growth and employment growth, and their response to high nominal GDP growth regimes -- Chapter 10 The impact of the debt-to-GDP ratio on investment growth -- Part 2: Fiscal budget balance deficits -- Chapter 11 Budget deficit thresholds and their macroeconomic impact -- Chapter 12 The impact of a persistent increase in the budget deficit on real interest rates -- Chapter 13 What are the effects of budget deficit regimes on inflation and inflation expectations? -- Part 3: Interest rates -- Chapter 14 Widening budget deficits and investment growth dynamics -- Chapter 15 Do high debt service costs reduce the potency of accommodative fiscal policy in South Africa? -- Chapter 16 What are the macroeconomic effects of a positive interest rate-GDP growth differential shock? -- Part 4: Economic policy uncertainty -- Chapter 17 Economic policy uncertainty and the employment dynamics in South Africa under the inflation targeting regime -- Chapter 18 Economic policy uncertainty, employment dynamics and price stability in South Africa -- Chapter 19 The role of economic and policy uncertainty on the effects of widening budget deficits on yields and the credit default swap spreads -- Chapter 20 Summary of main findings and policy implications.
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1. Introduction: Reflectivity in philosophical, sociological, psychological and pedagogical contexts -- 2. The significance of reflectivity in professional social and health care in relation to changing socio-political contexts -- 3. Promoting reflective learning styles among social work and nursing students – a review -- 4. Supervision at the workplace as a unique space for reflection -- 5. Gender aspects of reflectivity in the social and healthcare field: forms of feminization of the caring profession as frames for reflexivity -- 6. Reflective approaches to professionalisation through legislation, structures and cultures: Example from Czech social and health services -- 7. Researching reflectivity by scales -- 8. The interaction between institutional cultures and individual dispositions to self-reflection – a hierarchical analysis -- 9. Levels of reflectivity – conditions and strategies for supporting reflectivity in health and social care services: Qualitative research -- 10. Towards an integrated approach to fostering reflectivity in social and health professions. .
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1. Introduction: 'An Exquisite Suffering' -- 2. Contextualizing Ambivalence: Intensive Mothering Under Neoliberalism -- 3. 'It Takes a Village': Resisting the Repudiation of the 'Bad' Mother -- 4. Embodying Ambivalence: Abjection and the Problematic Maternal Body -- 5. The Body in Extremis: Vocalizing Maternal Corporeality -- 6. Surviving Motherhood: From Maternal Ambivalence to Maternal Resilience -- 7. "Strange and Wild": Towards an Aesthetics of Ambivalence.
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Section 1: defining the poverty issue.-1 Introduction -- 2 Defining Poverty -- 3 A History of Poverty -- 4 The Stigmatisation of Poverty -- 5 Families in poverty -- 6 Addictions, Sexual Exploitation and Poverty -- 7 Poverty as a Public Health and Community Safety Concern -- 8 Welfare Reform: A Solution or Driver of Poverty? -- 9 Supply and demand: the need for debt advice specialists and how we create them -- 10 Poverty and precarious work -- 11 Lived experience of prison and probation and employment challenges -- 12 Experiencing homelessness and attempts to eliminate homelessness -- 13 Seeking asylum and refuge -- 14 Carbon pathways: The interplay between Poverty and climate change in the UK -- Section 2: anti-poverty work examples -- 15 The Hull We Want -- 16 The role Children's Hospices can play in tackling poverty in the UK -- 17 Addressing children's food poverty in a rural county -- 18 Trussell Trust – food poverty and Jo Hill Joanna Ralphs-Hill -- 19 Addressing digital poverty through community engagement -- 20 Housing First in England – an uncertain future -- 21 Preventing food poverty: light at the end of the tunnel? 22. 'Period poverty' in Stoke-on-Trent, UK: new insights into gendered poverty and the lived experiences of austerity -- 23 Raising Voices: Acting against poverty through lived experiences and creativity -- 24 Insight through experience: Who decides what positive practice looks like? -- 25 Faith Based Work to Tackle Poverty -- 26 The 100 Year Plan: Planning for Change, Long Term -- 27 Visioning for the Future. .
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Introduction: Artefacts in the making of digital mental health -- Apps and chatbots: The emergence of algorithmic subjectivity -- Wearable devices: Bodies living and becoming with vital artefacts -- Ingestible sensors: Embodied care with/for data -- Coda.
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Decision-Support for Additive Repair Processes with a Multi-Agent System -- AI Education for Middle/ High School Level: A Proposal of a System that Supports Teachers to Design their AI Lessons -- Sensor Data Restoration in Internet of Things Systems Using Machine Learning Approach -- Potential of eXtended Intelligence (XI) for Extending Human Expression from Digitization of Analog Elements -- ML-Based System Failur Prediction Using Resource Utilization -- Audio Streams Synchronization for Music Performances -- Development of an Image Processing Application that Represents Onomatopoeia -- Design of a Memory Palace Memory Aid Application Based on Trajectory Mnemonics.
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1. Introduction: When Leisure Studies met Childhood Studies, Utsa Mukherjee -- Part I Children's Rights and Social Justice -- 2. Whose leisure is it anyway? The challenges of providing children's leisure from a cross-cultural playwork perspective, Shelly Newstead and Qian Zheng -- 3. Play for All: Fostering Inclusive Play Spaces in India, Rajashree Srinivasan -- 4. "Social Justice" despite Sickness: Play and Leisure for Children and Young People in Hospital, Jessika Boles and Joan Turner -- Part II Social Identities and Cultural Politics -- 5: Hobby Horses: A Hobby, Sport or Pure Play? A Contemporary Plaything as Part of Girlhood Leisure Activities in Finland -- 6.Policing Pastime: Child Audiences, Cinemas and the Segregation of Leisure in South Africa -- Part III Space, Place and Meaning-Making -- 7: Children's Participation and Leisure Possibilities in an Institutionalized Leisure Arena: The Case of Swedish School-Age Educare Centres -- 8. Children's Meanings of Third Places for Leisure in Jakarta's Low-Income Neighbourhoods -- 9. Negotiating Informalities of Leisure: Leisure Among Slum-Dwelling Amidst the Coronavirus Pandemic in the Philippines -- 10. Playing, Working, and Learning in Flux: Perspectives from African Post-forager Childhoods -- .
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1. Introduction -- 2. Implications for Both Short and Long Term of Workplace Bullying on Organizational Success -- 3. Current Policies and Procedures in the Workplace Applied to Address Workplace Bullying -- 4. Overview of Needs Based Theories as Solution for Minimizing Workplace Bullying -- 5. Alfred Adler and Individual Psychology in Support of a Positive Work Environment and Victims of Workplace Bullying -- 6. Abraham Maslow and The Hierarchy of Needs in Support of a Positive Work Environment and Victims of Workplace Bullying -- 7. David McClelland and The Theory of Needs in Support of a Positive Work Environment and Victims of Workplace Bullying -- 8. Harry Stack-Sullivan and The Interpersonal Theory in Support of a Positive Work Environment and Victims of Workplace Bullying -- 9. Karen Horney and The Theory of Neurotic Needs in Support of a Positive Work Environment and Victims of Workplace Bullying -- 10. Comprehensive review of the theories and application scenarios including research and data to support application choices -- 11. Conclusion.
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