Administrations et société - Le courage social
In: La revue administrative: histoire, droit, société, Band 53, Heft 315, S. 276
ISSN: 0035-0672
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In: La revue administrative: histoire, droit, société, Band 53, Heft 315, S. 276
ISSN: 0035-0672
Frontmatter -- Praise -- Acknowledgments -- About the Author -- Contents -- Introduction -- Part 1: Innovating How We Innovate -- Chapter 1. The Next Wave of Innovation -- Chapter 2. Fusion: A New Model of Radical Innovation -- Chapter 3. What I Learned, How, and From Whom -- Chapter 4. Five Habits of Highly Effective Fusioneers -- Part 2: Stories of Outward Openness -- Chapter 5. Schools for the Schoolless -- Chapter 6. Silk Vaccines -- Chapter 7. eCommerce and Globalization -- Chapter 8. Lime.com -- Chapter 9. The Tippling Club -- Chapter 10. The Advanced Biopolymer Pocket Watch -- Part 3: Stories of Inward Openness -- Chapter 11. Quantum Potential -- Chapter 12. Execu-Care -- Chapter 13. SensPD and BioHug -- Chapter 14. Chief Dream Igniter -- Chapter 15. Well-Being and Wealth-Building -- Chapter 16. The Science of Happiness . . . at Scale -- Part 4: Stories of Collecting -- Chapter 17. Quantum-Chemical Social Networks -- Chapter 18. Matt Mitcham and the Mathematician -- Chapter 19. DNAApp -- Chapter 20. Nokia Ringtones and Life Tools -- Chapter 21. SwineTech -- Chapter 22. Mr. Toilet and the BoP Hub -- Part 5: Stories of Sensing -- Chapter 23. KFC, Hungry Jack's, and Domino's Pizza Australia -- Chapter 24. Found8 -- Chapter 25. Mosquito Attractant and the Polyclone Chop -- Chapter 26. Urban Farming -- Chapter 27. The Swiss-South-African-Asian Joint Venture -- Chapter 28. The Human Face of Big Data -- Part 6: Stories of Fusing -- Chapter 29. Leading-Edge IoT and Integrative Thinking -- Chapter 30. Science is a Personal Business -- Chapter 31. Connectography -- Chapter 32. Jeiva -- Chapter 33. Killer Mystery Infections and the 24-in-1 Test -- Chapter 34. Forbidden Music of The Cultural Revolution -- Part 7: Your Journey -- Chapter 35. Exploring Your World -- Chapter 36. Exploring Yourself -- Chapter 37. Collecting the Dots -- Chapter 38. Seeing What Others Don't -- Chapter 39. Connecting the Dots -- Index
In: The entrepreneur's guide
"The final entry in this all-you-need-to-know series summarizes the best points in the previous 12 books, updates many of them, and integrates must-have knowledge into a unified, indispensable whole"--
In Food City, a companion piece to Smartcities and Eco-Warriors, innovative architect and urban designer CJ Lim explores the issue of urban transformation and how the creation, storage and distribution of food has been and can again become a construct for the practice of everyday life. Food City investigates the reinstatement of food at the core of national and local governance -- how it can be a driver to restructure employment, education, transport, tax, health, culture, communities, and the justice system, re-evaluating how the city functions as a spatial and political entity. Global in sco
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In: Real Property, Trust and Estate Law Journal (forthcoming 2024)
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In: Ideas in ecology and evolution, Band 15
ISSN: 1918-3178
Screens are an ineliminable component of contemporary society for most humans. Consequently, tools and ideas that provide a heuristic and support for conceptually mitigating and balancing the costs of screen times at an individual level are critical. Here, screen adaptation theory (SAT) is proposed as a shorthand tool to frame the wealth of research examining human-screen interactions. Screens are best conceptualized as a place. Adaptation (to screens) are acquired or cultivated traits that enable us to not only survive with screens but potentially thrive—provided that we leverage research on costs and benefits. Adaptive behavioral traits suggest that we approach these interactions with purposeful intent. Finally, the theory associated with humans with screens is rich and interdisciplinary. We must design and adopt principles from theory relevant to our work, leisure, and individual choices to use screens as we move from tolerance to adaptation.
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In: 48 ACTEC L.J. 289-360 (2023)
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In: 17 Harvard Law & Policy Review 1-41 (2022)
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Working paper
In: Cultural studies, Band 35, Heft 4-5, S. 996-1019
ISSN: 1466-4348
In: TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly, Band 8, Heft 1, S. 58-74
ISSN: 2328-9260
AbstractThis essay follows the social life of testosterone during a presentation at a USA Powerlifting national governing board meeting. While feminist and queer sports analyses focus on the implication of hormone levels for intersex athletes, much less scholarship analyzes how the hang-up on testosterone itself—whether endogenously produced or pharmaceutically regulated—unjustly targets transgender athletes. Paying attention to how testosterone delineates the boundary between "fair" and "unfair advantage" that consolidates antitrans contours of "female athlete," this essay seeks to model a closer collaboration between transgender studies and feminist sports studies to forge what the author calls transfeminist sports studies.
In: Portal: journal of multidisciplinary international studies, Band 17, Heft 1-2
ISSN: 1449-2490
'Heaven on earth' is a creative non-fiction piece which juxtaposes life under lockdown in Sydney 2020 with my experience of curfew in Kashmir in the 1990s. The COVID-19 crisis is explored from the resonances and dissonances across place and time. In this hybrid personal essay, I reflect on how a sense of space is constructed from wealth and community, and how a white, middle-class status benefits from lockdown, juxtaposed against the ongoing political and social isolation of Kashmir.
In September 2020, the Canadian federal government designated the residential school system as an event of national historic significance and two former residential school buildings as national historic sites. They joined over 2,150 other places, people, and events that have been certified as part of Canada's official historical narrative – the majority of which celebrate the nation's imperialist history and silence Indigenous peoples. However, public representations of historic injustices that honour victims have the power to disrupt laudatory versions of the past and foster reconciliation. This paper will examine the history of Canada's commemorative efforts and its effect on the nation's collective memory, before exploring how the heritage designation framework can be decolonized in a way that respects the needs and desires of Indigenous peoples.
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