993 resultados para Swift, Gustavus Franklin, 1839-1903.


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Esta investigación constituye un acercamiento a los estudios de la ciudad desde el control de los individuos. A propósito del proceso de modernización agenciado en Cartagena entre 1903 y 1927, se realiza una aproximación a las formas con las que se definió, ubicó y trató de disciplinar a los sujetos vagos. De allí que se preste mayor atención a las dinámicas de la modernización de la ciudad en cuanto a los aspectos que implicaron el gobierno de la población. En el primer capítulo, distanciándonos de la visión de la historiografía inicial que, sobre los hechos modernizantes se produjeron en torno a los resultados de las acciones del ex - presidente Rafael Nuñez, fundamentalmente se da cuenta de la conformación del régimen de vigilancia que se inauguró para garantizar la sanidad del puerto. En este apartado centramos la atención -más allá de las modificaciones espaciales experimentadas en la ciudad-, en la creación del cuerpo de policía sanitaria, marítima y terrestre: el cuerpo de vigilancia y control encargado de suprimir el desorden de esta urbe para desde ahí, situarnos, en un primer momento, en el control del alcoholismo y la prostitución. El segundo capítulo hace especial énfasis en una variable que se desplegó en los intentos de modernización de la ciudad: se trata de un tipo de higienismo práctico que denominamos higienismo social. Aquí se centra la atención en la definición, ubicación y aproximación numérica sobre los sujetos vagos. Finalmente, en el tercer capítulo, se presentan las acciones disciplinantes que implicó el proyecto de ciudad moderna. En esta parte, se presta especial importancia, tanto a los dispositivos de policía como a las medidas nacionales de confinamiento a las colonias penales y agrícolas que se implementaron para hacer de los sujetos vagos seres productivos y funcionales al orden moderno pretendido. Se concluye con los problemas que se presentaron para concretar este proyecto.

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To identify the causes of population decline in migratory birds, researchers must determine the relative influence of environmental changes on population dynamics while the birds are on breeding grounds, wintering grounds, and en route between the two. This is problematic when the wintering areas of specific populations are unknown. Here, we first identified the putative wintering areas of Common House-Martin (Delichon urbicum) and Common Swift (Apus apus) populations breeding in northern Italy as those areas, within the wintering ranges of these species, where the winter Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI), which may affect winter survival, best predicted annual variation in population indices observed in the breeding grounds in 1992–2009. In these analyses, we controlled for the potentially confounding effects of rainfall in the breeding grounds during the previous year, which may affect reproductive success; the North Atlantic Oscillation Index (NAO), which may account for climatic conditions faced by birds during migration; and the linear and squared term of year, which account for nonlinear population trends. The areas thus identified ranged from Guinea to Nigeria for the Common House-Martin, and were located in southern Ghana for the Common Swift. We then regressed annual population indices on mean NDVI values in the putative wintering areas and on the other variables, and used Bayesian model averaging (BMA) and hierarchical partitioning (HP) of variance to assess their relative contribution to population dynamics. We re-ran all the analyses using NDVI values at different spatial scales, and consistently found that our population of Common House-Martin was primarily affected by spring rainfall (43%–47.7% explained variance) and NDVI (24%–26.9%), while the Common Swift population was primarily affected by the NDVI (22.7%–34.8%). Although these results must be further validated, currently they are the only hypotheses about the wintering grounds of the Italian populations of these species, as no Common House-Martin and Common Swift ringed in Italy have been recovered in their wintering ranges.

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(from author) One of the first papers in the peer-review literature to discuss an OSSE to evaluate future wind observations in the stratosphere. Provides key evidence to justify the construction of the SWIFT instrument (currently planned to be built by the Canadian Space Agency for launch on ~ 2010).

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Changes in the cultures and spaces of death during the Victorian era reveal the shifting conceptualisations and mobilisations of class in this period. Using the example of Brookwood Necropolis, established 1852 in response to the contemporary burial reform debate, the paper explores tensions within the sanitary reform movement, 1853–1903. Whilst reformist ideology grounded the cemetery's practices in a discourse of inclusion, one of the consequences of reform was to reinforce class distinctions. Combined with commercial imperatives and the modern impulse towards separation of living and dead, this aspect of reform enacted a counter-discourse of alienation. The presence of these conflicting strands in the spaces and practices of the Necropolis and their changes during the time period reflect wider urban trends.

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The razors, knives and “tools for cutting” that appear so often in Jonathan Swift’s writings represent linguistic instruments for the performance of speech acts. Swift often imagines them being deployed for some identifiable purpose, typically the discouragement of “fools” or “knaves” by anatomization. Their sharpness is associated with linguistic acuity, and specifically with the refinement, keenness and power of Swift’s own writing. The focus of this article, however, is on another set of associations that Swift attaches to his blades. They tend also to involve ideas of latency, divagation, bluntness, and misappropriation.

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We see today many efforts to quantify biodiversity in different biomes. It is very important then to develop and to apply other methodologies that allow us to assess biodiversity. Here we present an example of application of three tools with this goal. We analyzed two populations of Plebeia remota from two distinct biomes that already showed several differences in morphology and behavior. Based on these differences, it has been suggested that the populations of Cunha and Prudentopolis do not represent a single species. In order to verify the existence or absence of gene flow between these two groups, we characterized the patterns of mtDNA through RFLP, the patterns of wing venation through geometric morphometry, and the cuticular hydrocarbons through gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. We used bees collected in these two locations and also from colonies which have being kept for around 9 years at Sao Paulo University. We found six different haplotypes in these specimens, of which three of them occurred exclusively in the population of Cunha and three only in the Prudentopolis population. The fact that the populations do not share haplotypes suggests no maternal gene flow between them. The two populations were differentiated by the pattern of the wing veins. They also had different mixtures of cuticle hydrocarbons. Furthermore it was shown that the colonies kept at the university did not hybridize. These two groups may constitute different species. We also show here the importance of using other methodologies than traditional taxonomy to assess and understand biodiversity, especially in bees.