172 resultados para prompting
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A life of piracy offered marginal men a profession with a degree of autonomy, despite the brand of “outlaw” and the fear of prosecution. At various times throughout history, governments and crowned heads suspended much of their piracy prosecution, licensing men to work as “privateers” for the state, supplementing naval forces. This practice has a long history, but in sixteenth-century England, Elizabeth I (1558-1603) significantly altered this tradition. Recognizing her own weakness in effectively prosecuting these men and the profit they could contribute to the government, Elizabeth began incorporating pirates into the English naval corps in peacetime—not just in war. This practice increased English naval resources, income, and presence in the emerging Atlantic World, but also increased conflict with the powerful Spanish empire. By 1605, making peace with Spain, James VI/I (1603-1625) retracted Elizabeth’s privateering promotion, prompting an emigration of English seamen to the American outposts they had developed in the previous century. Now exiles, no longer beholden to the Crown, seamen reverted back to piracy. The Carolinas and Jamaica served as bases for these rover communities. In 1650, the revolutionary leader Oliver Cromwell (1649-1658) once again recognized the merits of such policies. Determined to demonstrate his authority and solidify his rule, Cromwell offered citizenship and state support to Caribbean exiles in exchange for their aiding of his navy in the taking of Spanish Jamaica. Official chartering of Port Royal, Jamaica served as reward for these men’s efforts and as the culmination of a century-long cycle of piracy legislation, creating one of England’s most lucrative colonies in the middle of a traditionally Spanish Caribbean empire. Through legal and diplomatic records, correspondence, and naval and demographic records from England and Spain, this dissertation explores early modern piracy/privateering policy and its impact on the development of the Atlantic World. European disputes and imperial competition converged in these piracy debates with significant consequences for the definitions of criminality and citizenship and for the development of Atlantic empire.
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AIMS: In the UK, people tend to have poor knowledge of government guidelines for alcohol use, and lack the motivation and skills required to use them to monitor their drinking. The study aim was to determine whether using glasses marked with such guidelines would improve knowledge and attitudes, increase frequency of counting units and lower alcohol intake. METHODS: A total of 450 adults in the UK participated in an intervention vs control study with 1-month follow-up. The intervention group was encouraged to use glasses supplied by the researchers that indicated the unit content of drinks of different strengths and volumes, and stated the intake guidelines. Data were collected online. A further more in-depth interview with 13 intervention group participants enquired into their experiences of using the glasses. RESULTS: Analyses adjusted for baseline variables showed that the intervention improved the following: knowledge of unit-based guidelines, ability to estimate the unit content of drinks, attitudes toward the guidelines and frequency of counting unit intake. However, there was no significant difference in alcohol consumption between the groups at follow-up. Interviews suggested that the glasses encouraged people to think about their drinking and to discuss alcohol with other people. The design of the glasses was not appealing to all, and their initial impact did not always persist. CONCLUSION: Use of unit-marked glasses led to changes in people's reported use of unit-based guidelines to monitor their drinking but, in the short term, no change in consumption. Qualitative data suggested that the glasses could have an impact at the individual level (on knowledge and attitudes) and at a broader level (by prompting discussion of alcohol use).
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Thesis (Master, Kinesiology & Health Studies) -- Queen's University, 2016-10-03 07:59:09.638
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Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to propose a theoretical framework, based on contemporary philosophical aesthetics, from which principled assessments of the aesthetic value of information organization frameworks may be conducted.Design/methodology/approach – This paper identifies appropriate discourses within the field of philosophical aesthetics, constructs from them a framework for assessing aesthetic properties of information organization frameworks. This framework is then applied in two case studies examining the Library of Congress Subject Headings (LCSH), and Sexual Nomenclature: A Thesaurus. Findings – In both information organization frameworks studied, the aesthetic analysis was useful in identifying judgments of the frameworks as aesthetic judgments, in promoting discovery of further areas of aesthetic judgments, and in prompting reflection on the nature of these aesthetic judgments. Research limitations/implications – This study provides proof-of-concept for the aesthetic evaluation of information organization frameworks. Areas of future research are identified as the role of cultural relativism in such aesthetic evaluation and identification of appropriate aesthetic properties of information organization frameworks.Practical implications – By identifying a subset of judgments of information organization frameworks as aesthetic judgments, aesthetic evaluation of such frameworks can be made explicit and principled. Aesthetic judgments can be separated from questions of economic feasibility, functional requirements, and user-orientation. Design and maintenance of information organization frameworks can be based on these principles.Originality/value – This study introduces a new evaluative axis for information organization frameworks based on philosophical aesthetics. By improving the evaluation of such novel frameworks, design and maintenance can be guided by these principles.Keywords Evaluation, Research methods, Analysis, Bibliographic systems, Indexes, Retrieval languages
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Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to propose a theoretical framework, based on contemporary philosophical aesthetics, from which principled assessments of the aesthetic value of information organization frameworks may be conducted.Design/methodology/approach – This paper identifies appropriate discourses within the field of philosophical aesthetics, constructs from them a framework for assessing aesthetic properties of information organization frameworks. This framework is then applied in two case studies examining the Library of Congress Subject Headings (LCSH), and Sexual Nomenclature: A Thesaurus. Findings – In both information organization frameworks studied, the aesthetic analysis was useful in identifying judgments of the frameworks as aesthetic judgments, in promoting discovery of further areas of aesthetic judgments, and in prompting reflection on the nature of these aesthetic judgments. Research limitations/implications – This study provides proof-of-concept for the aesthetic evaluation of information organization frameworks. Areas of future research are identified as the role of cultural relativism in such aesthetic evaluation and identification of appropriate aesthetic properties of information organization frameworks.Practical implications – By identifying a subset of judgments of information organization frameworks as aesthetic judgments, aesthetic evaluation of such frameworks can be made explicit and principled. Aesthetic judgments can be separated from questions of economic feasibility, functional requirements, and user-orientation. Design and maintenance of information organization frameworks can be based on these principles.Originality/value – This study introduces a new evaluative axis for information organization frameworks based on philosophical aesthetics. By improving the evaluation of such novel frameworks, design and maintenance can be guided by these principles.Keywords Evaluation, Analysis, Bibliographic systems, Indexes, Retrieval languages, Philosophy
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A internacionalização assume um papel central na agenda do ensino superior, influenciando a missão e condicionando, de forma deliberada ou emergente, as opções assumidas pelas Instituições. Embora vários estudos e análises internacionais de referência confirmem esta evidência, a reflexão sobre o contributo da internacionalização para o desenvolvimento das Instituições de Ensino Superior remete-nos para duas questões: como é que a internacionalização pode ser gerida pelas Instituições? e qual o contributo dos Gabinetes de Relações Internacionais? Recorrendo ao estudo de caso e à análise bibliográfica, esta investigação desenvolve e confirma que para recorrerem à internacionalização como ferramenta para alcançar determinados fins, as Instituições de Ensino Superior têm de alicerçar a gestão dessa internacionalização em dois pressupostos, nomeadamente: reconhecer a transversalidade e promover uma abordagem estratégica do fenómeno. Neste contexto, e de acordo com os resultados da investigação empírica, os Gabinetes de Relações Internacionais emergem como centros privilegiados de inspiração para a internacionalização das Instituições que integram. Não apenas porque efectivamente implementam uma actividade que promove a internacionalização, a mobilidade internacional, mas principalmente porque a gestão dessa actividade é susceptível de evolução e sofisticação, despoletando novos desafios ao nível das abordagens institucionais para com a internacionalização. ABSTRACT: lnternationalisation is now a central agenda for higher education, shaping the mission and influencing, deliberately or emergently, the institutional decisions. Although several international studies and analysis of reference confirm this fact, when thinking about the contribution of the internationalisation to the development of the Higher Education lnstitutions, two questions arise: how can internationalisation be managed by the lnstitutions? And what is the role played by the lnternational Relations Office? By using a case study and a bibliographical analysis, the research points out that to use the internationalisation as a means to achieve certain goals, the Higher Education lnstitutions must base the management of internationalisation on two major assumptions: recognizing the transversality and promoting a strategic approach to the phenomenon. ln this context, and according to the empirical research results, the lnternational Relations Offices emerge as privileged units, inspiring the internationalisation process of the institutions in which they operate. Not only because the offices operationalize an activity that effectively promotes internationalisation, the international mobility, but mainly because the management of this activity is likely to develop and improve, prompting new challenges in terms of institutional approaches to internalionalisation.
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El desarrollo tecnológico posibilita el desarrollo de la educación y de América Latina. Internet ha generado una universidad de nuevo tipo, impulsando un desarrollo cultural y social sin precedentes, que debe ser universal y equitativo con pleno respeto a la diversidad cultural y a los derechos humanos.AbstractThe technological development enables the development of education and development of Latin America. Internet has generated a University of new type, prompting an unprecedented social and cultural development that should be universal and fair, with full respect to the cultural diversity and human rights.