982 resultados para Alpine biodiversity in Europe
Resumo:
Hamburger Institut für Sozialforschung
Resumo:
Resumen tomado de la publicación. Monográfico con el título: El proceso de Bolonia : dinámicas y desafíos de la enseñanza superior en Europa a comienzos de una nueva época
Resumo:
Resumen tomado de la publicaci??n. Monogr??fico con el t??tulo: El proceso de Bolonia : din??micas y desaf??os de la ense??anza superior en Europa a comienzos de una nueva ??poca
Resumo:
El proyecto quiere que los alumnos practiquen los conocimientos adquiridos y desarrollen la competencia comunicativa oral, tanto de comprensión como de producción, en el proceso enseñanza-aprendizaje de Francés e Inglés en Secundaria. Los objetivos son identificar las connotaciones de tipo sociocultural propias de los intercambios orales en lengua extranjera; indentificar los distintos esquemas discursivos de los documentos de televisión; participar en intercambios orales; producir materiales didácticos con apoyo de vídeo; e intercambiar experiencias didácticas a través de Internet. Para ello se produce un documento con tipología variada y soporte en vídeo en francés e inglés y poder así contactar con otros centros europeos mediante Internet. Primero se elabora una ficha con la descripción de la actividad que luego se graba, y que consiste en presentaciones personales, visitas-presentaciones del centro o del barrio, problemas y opiniones. También se analizan los modelos discursivos de los documentos orales de televisión y se producen documentos a partir de una matriz de producción. Mediante cuestionarios, se evalúa la experiencia, las dificultades planteadas y la participación. Incluye las fichas didácticas elaboradas por los departamentos de Inglés y Francés.
Resumo:
Resumen basado en el de la publicaci??n
Resumo:
Resumen basado en el de la publicaci??n
Resumo:
The origins of early farming and its spread to Europe have been the subject of major interest for some time. The main controversy today is over the nature of the Neolithic transition in Europe: the extent to which the spread was, for the most part, indigenous and animated by imitatio (cultural diffusion) or else was driven by an influx of dispersing populations (demic diffusion). We analyze the spatiotemporal dynamics of the transition using radiocarbon dates from 735 early Neolithic sites in Europe, the Near East, and Anatolia. We compute great-circle and shortest-path distances from each site to 35 possible agricultural centers of origin—ten are based on early sites in the Middle East and 25 are hypothetical locations set at 58 latitude/longitude intervals. We perform a linear fit of distance versus age (and vice versa) for each center. For certain centers, high correlation coefficients (R . 0.8) are obtained. This implies that a steady rate or speed is a good overall approximation for this historical development. The average rate of the Neolithic spread over Europe is 0.6–1.3 km/y (95% confidence interval). This is consistent with the prediction of demic diffusion(0.6–1.1 km/y). An interpolative map of correlation coefficients, obtained by using shortest-path distances, shows that the origins of agriculture were most likely to have occurred in the northern Levantine/Mesopotamian area
Resumo:
The work developed in LUDA’s project has clearly showed that, in a European economic and cultural diversified frame, crossed by recent and not so recent historical challenging processes, the issues of the urban affairs certainly have different layouts, but, as a matter of fact, we can assume that in their essence they are common to all regions. Identifying a set of common problems is not difficult: the Luda’s; the disadjustment between people and goods mobility, the difficult articulation between space and development sustainability the fragile features of the urban space in its complexity, the responsible social management of current migrations etc.
Resumo:
This Policy Brief provides a preliminary diagnosis of the proposed regulatory reforms contained in the Capital Requirements Directive and Regulation (CRD IV-CRR), which translate into EU law the Basel III standards adopted by the Basel Committee for Banking Supervision, and suggests avenues for improvement. The main criticism is that the proposal is not ambitious enough. In some crucial areas, such as the leverage ratio and the long-term liquidity requirements adopted under the Basel III framework, the CRD IV-CRR proposal stops short of making a strict commitment to introduce binding requirements and instead is contented with weaker (and possibly divergent) disclosure requirements.
Resumo:
Two stark reminders of the difficulties that people on the move encounter in the Mediterranean have been grabbing headlines recently: the so-called ‘left-to-die’ boat report and the ground-breaking Hirsi judgment. These two instances present the worst of both worlds: the first concerns a migrant boat that was ignored altogether, resulting in many deaths, whereas the second concerns a migrant boat being intercepted but subsequently dealt with in a way that contradicts Europe’s human rights standards. These two cases are neither isolated nor incidental. Instead they are of wider concern to the EU and reminders of structural deficiencies in Europe’s approach to people on the move in the Mediterranean. This paper identifies those cross-cutting deficiencies and proposes recommendations to correct them.