Pharmazie in Düsseldorf: Vorträge des Pharmaziehistorischen Vorsymposiums der DPhG-Jahrestagung am 22. September 2015 in Düsseldorf
In: Stätten pharmazeutischer Praxis, Lehre und Forschung Band 15
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In: Stätten pharmazeutischer Praxis, Lehre und Forschung Band 15
In: Kartell- und Regulierungsrecht Band 19
Cover -- Big Data: Eine ökonomische Perspektive -- "Industrie 4.0" - Rechtsrahmen für eine Datenwirtschaft im digitalen Binnenmarkt -- Kartellrecht und Datenschutzrecht - Verhältnis einer "Hass-Liebe"? -- Ist Wissen Marktmacht? - Überlegungen zum Verhältnis von Datenschutz, "Datenmacht" und Kartellrecht -- Die Bedeutung von Daten für den Wettbewerb zwischen Suchmaschinen -- Daten und Wettbewerb in der digitalen Ökonomie (Tagungsbericht) -- Autorenverzeichnis
"Westerners tend to divide the political world into 'good' democracies and 'bad' authoritarian regimes. But the Chinese political model does not fit neatly in either category. Over the past three decades, China has evolved into a political system that can best be described as 'political meritocracy.' [This work] seeks to understand the ideals and the reality of this unique political system"--
In: Actes de colloques no 25
In: Dokumentationen 08/2016
In: Environmental Research of the Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation, Building and Nuclear Safety
In 2016 the German Environment Agency (UBA) and the German Federal Institute of Hydrology (BfG) organised a conference on plastics in freshwater environments on behalf of the Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation, Building and Nuclear Safety (BMUB). 220 attendants from 20 European and two non-European countries attended the conference. The objective was to exchange knowledge on plastics in European freshwater environments and to discuss its environmental and societal implications. In preparation of the conference an informal questionnaire was sent to water management agencies in Europe with questions on monitoring, risk awareness and management options. This publication contains the abstracts of the oral presentations.
It is now almost 25 years since the fall of the Berlin Wall, the fragmentation of the Soviet Union into a series of republics and the rejection of communist politics in much of the former Eastern Bloc. Seen by many as a victory for the capitalist West over the communist East, the geopolitics of this period was far more complicated than this. Across a series of essays and artist contributions, Red Africa explores the crosscurrents of international solidarity and friendship. The aesthetic experience of the works and the exhibition is also an invitation for the visitor to explore what Leila Ghandi and others have described as a politics of affective community. Red Africa is the culmination of a two-year research programme and exhibition project at Calvert 22, London, and Iwalewa House, Bayreuth. This traced the work of African artists and filmmakers who studied in the Soviet Union and Eastern Bloc under free education schemes originally offered under the Third International, discontinued during Stalin's reign, then brought back during Khruschev's thaw. Connections were particularly strong with countries such as Mozambique, Ghana, Ethiopia and Angola that were conducting liberation struggles or which, post-independence, were part of the Non-Aligned Movement which held its first Summit conference in Belgrade in 1961. Red Africa is beautifully illustrated with film stills, artworks and archival images drawing on the extensive research of the contributing artists, researchers and curators. Contributors include Onejoon Che, Radovan Cukic and Ivan Manojlovic, Ros Gray, Ana Balona de Oliveira, Burt Cesar, Filipa Cesar, Angela Ferreira, Yevgenyi Fiks, Kiluanji Kia Henda, Isaac Julien, Alexander Markov, Jo Ratcliffe, Polly Savage, Nadine Siegert, Manuela Ribeiro Sanches, The Travelling Communique Group, Milica Tomic, Tonel and Vanessa Vasic-Janekovic.
In: Veröffentlichungen der Hanns Martin Schleyer-Stiftung Band 87
Ist die Zukunft des Lernens und Forschens digital? Und wie verändert der demografische Wandel die Universität? Gibt es anstatt überfüllter Hörsäle bald nur noch Online-Kurse? Und welche Auswirkungen hat es, wenn Forschungsergebnisse unmittelbar auf der ganzen Welt verfügbar sind? Darüber diskutierten vom 22. bis 23. Oktober 2015 Verantwortliche aus Politik, Wissenschaft und Praxis. Das XI. Hochschulsymposium "Die Universität der Zukunft" veranstalten die Hanns Martin Schleyer-Stiftung und die Heinz Nixdorf-Stiftung in diesem Jahr gemeinsam mit der LMU.
In: Timaş yayınları 4107
In: Tarih inceleme araştırma 86