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Remembering women differently: refiguring rhetorical work
Introduction: Re-collection as feminist rhetorical practice / Letizia Guglielmo -- Social network as a powerful force for change : women in the history of medicine and computing / Gesa E. Kirsch and Patricia Fancher -- From erasure to restoration : Rosalind Franklin and the discovery of the DNA structure / Alice Johnson Myatt -- Taming Cerberus : against racism, sexism, and oppression in colonial and postcolonial Nigeria / Maria Martin -- Afterlives of Anna Komnene : moments in the history of the history of Byzantium / Ellen Quandahl -- Not simply "freeing the men to fight" : rewriting the reductive history of U.S. military women's achievements on and off the battlefield / Mariana Grohowski and Alexis Hart -- The Audubon-Martin collaboration : an exploration of rhetorical foreground and background / Henrietta Nickels Shirk -- "Please cherish my own ideals and dreams about the School of Expression" : the erasure of Anna Baright Curry / Suzanne Bordelon -- Remembering women : Florence Smalley Babbitt and the Victorian family photograph album / Kristie S. Fleckenstein -- "I have always had a significance for myself" : Alice James's pragmatic activism / Hephzibah Roskelly and Kate Ronald -- Defying stereotypes : an Indian woman freedom fighter / Gail M. Presbey -- The rhetorical reputation of forgotten feminist Lois Waisbrooker / Wendy Hayden -- Not so easily dismissed : the intellectual influences and rhetorical voice of Dorothy Day "servant of god" / Laurie A. Britt-Smith -- Activist, pacifist, mother, feminist, wife : private interventions and the public memory of Crystal Eastman / Amy Aronson -- Turning trends : Lockwood's and Emerson's rhetoric textbooks at the American fin de siècle / Nancy Myers -- Afterword / Lynée Lewis Gaillet.
Querying Theory and Politics: The Epistemic (Dis)Location of Bisexuality within Queer Theory
In: Journal of bisexuality, Band 9, Heft 3-4, S. 235-257
ISSN: 1529-9724
Your American Government: The Citizen's Approach
In: The Western political quarterly, Band 9, Heft 4, S. 1013
ISSN: 1938-274X
Modelling harbour seal habitat by combining data from multiple tracking systems
This work is supported by the Scottish Government, the Scottish Office and the DECC SEA programme. ; Technological developments over the last 20 years have meant that telemetry studies have used a variety of techniques, each with different levels of accuracy and temporal resolution. This presents a challenge when combining data from these different tracking systems to obtain larger sample sizes or to compare habitat use over time. In this study, we used a Bayesian state-space modelling approach to integrate tracking data from multiple tag types and standardise position estimates while accounting for location error. Harbour seal (Phoca vitulina) telemetry data for the Moray Firth, Scotland, were collated from three tag types: VHF, Argos satellite and GPS–GSM. Tags were deployed on 37 seals during 1989 to 2009 resulting in 37 tracks with a total of 2886 tracking days and a mean duration of 87 days per track. A state-space model was applied to all of the raw tracks to provide daily position estimates and a measure of the uncertainty for each position. We used this standardised tracking dataset to model their habitat use and preference, which was then scaled by the population size estimated from haul-out counts to give an estimate of the absolute number of harbour seals using different parts of the Moray Firth. As expected for a central place forager, harbour seals most frequently occurred in areas close to their inshore haul-out sites. However, our analyses also demonstrated consistent use of offshore foraging grounds, typically within 30 km of haul-out sites in waters < 50 m deep. The use of these statistical models to integrate and compare different datasets is especially important for assessing longer-term responses to environmental variation and anthropogenic activities, allowing management advice to be based upon datasets that integrate information from all available tracking technologies. ; Postprint ; Peer reviewed
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Framework for assessing impacts of pile-driving noise from offshore wind farm construction on a harbour seal population
Acknowledgements This work was supported by Moray Offshore Renewables Ltd. and Beatrice Offshore Wind Ltd. as part of their consent application. We thank all the colleagues from academic, regulatory and industrial organisations who contributed to the discussion and workshops that shaped this framework. ; Peer reviewed ; Publisher PDF
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Dynamic ocean management: Defining and conceptualizing real-time management of the ocean
In: Marine policy, Band 58, S. 42-50
ISSN: 0308-597X
Dynamic ocean management: Defining and conceptualizing real-time management of the ocean
In: Marine policy: the international journal of ocean affairs, Band 58, S. 42-50
ISSN: 0308-597X