International Out-Of-Delivery-Area and Out-Of-Pickup-Area Surcharges
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Ukraine Media Assessment and Program Recommendations
UKRAINE MEDIA ASSESSMENT AND PROGRAM RECOMMENDATIONS VOLUME I FINAL REPORT June 2001 USAID Contract: AEP –I-00-00-00-00018-00 Management Systems International (MSI) Programme in Comparative Media Law & Policy, Oxford University Consultants: Dennis M. Chandler Daniel De Luce Elizabeth Tucker MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS INTERNATIONAL 600 Water Street, S.W. 202/484-7170 Washington, D.C. 20024 Fax: 202/488-0754 USA TABLE OF CONTENTS VOLUME I Acronyms and Glossary.................................................................................................................iii I. Executive Summary............................................................................................................... 1 II. Approach and Methodology .................................................................................................. 6 III. Findings.................................................................................................................................. 7 A. Overall Media Environment............................................................................................7 B. Print Media....................................................................................................................11 C. Broadcast Media............................................................................................................17 D. Internet...........................................................................................................................25 E. Business Practices .........................................................................................................26 -
Annoucements of Conducting Procurement Procedures
Bulletin No�24(98) June 12, 2012 Annoucements of conducting 13443 Ministry of Health of Ukraine procurement procedures 7 Hrushevskoho St., 01601 Kyiv Chervatiuk Volodymyr Viktorovych tel.: (044) 253–26–08; 13431 National Children’s Specialized Hospital e–mail: [email protected] “Okhmatdyt” of the Ministry of Health of Ukraine Website of the Authorized agency which contains information on procurement: 28/1 Chornovola St., 01135 Kyiv www.tender.me.gov.ua Povorozniuk Volodymyr Stepanovych Procurement subject: code 24.42.1 – medications (Imiglucerase in flasks, tel.: (044) 236–30–05 400 units), 319 pcs. Website of the Authorized agency which contains information on procurement: Supply/execution: 29 Berezniakivska St., 02098 Kyiv; during 2012 www.tender.me.gov.ua Procurement procedure: open tender Procurement subject: code 24.42.1 – medications, 72 lots Obtaining of competitive bidding documents: at the customer’s address, office 138 Supply/execution: at the customer’s address; July – December 2012 Submission: at the customer’s address, office 138 Procurement procedure: open tender 29.06.2012 10:00 Obtaining of competitive bidding documents: at the customer’s address, Opening of tenders: at the customer’s address, office 138 economics department 29.06.2012 12:00 Submission: at the customer’s address, economics department Tender security: bank guarantee, deposit, UAH 260000 26.06.2012 10:00 Terms of submission: 90 days; not returned according to part 3, article 24 of the Opening of tenders: at the customer’s address, office of the deputy general Law on Public Procurement director of economic issues Additional information: For additional information, please, call at 26.06.2012 11:00 tel.: (044) 253–26–08, 226–20–86. -
Impact of Disturbances on the Carbon Cycle of Forest Ecosystems in Ukrainian Polissya
Article Impact of Disturbances on the Carbon Cycle of Forest Ecosystems in Ukrainian Polissya Petro Lakyda 1, Anatoly Shvidenko 2, Andrii Bilous 1 , Viktor Myroniuk 1, Maksym Matsala 1, Sergiy Zibtsev 1, Dmitry Schepaschenko 2 , Dmytrii Holiaka 3, Roman Vasylyshyn 1 , Ivan Lakyda 1,*, Petro Diachuk 1 and Florian Kraxner 2 1 Education and Research Institute of Forestry and Landscape-Park Management, National University of Life and Environmental Sciences of Ukraine, 03041 Kyiv, Ukraine; [email protected] (P.L.); [email protected] (A.B.); [email protected] (V.M.); [email protected] (M.M.); [email protected] (S.Z.); [email protected] (R.V.); [email protected] (P.D.) 2 International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, A-2361 Laxenburg, Austria; [email protected] (A.S.); [email protected] (D.S.); [email protected] (F.K.) 3 Ukrainian Institute of Agricultural Radiology, 08162 Chabany, Ukraine; [email protected] * Correspondence: [email protected]; Tel.: +38-067-771-6818 Received: 11 February 2019; Accepted: 9 April 2019; Published: 15 April 2019 Abstract: Climate change continues to threaten forests and their ecosystem services while substantially altering natural disturbance regimes. Land cover changes and consequent management entail discrepancies in carbon sequestration provided by forest ecosystems and its accounting. Currently there is a lack of sufficient and harmonized data for Ukraine that can be used for the robust and spatially explicit assessment of forest provisioning and regulation of ecosystem services. In the frame of this research, we established an experimental polygon (area 45 km2) in Northern Ukraine aiming at estimating main forest carbon stocks and fluxes and determining the impact caused by natural disturbances and harvest for the study period of 2010–2015. -
Science C Author(S) 2020
Discussions https://doi.org/10.5194/essd-2019-174 Earth System Preprint. Discussion started: 23 January 2020 Science c Author(s) 2020. CC BY 4.0 License. Open Access Open Data 1 Spatial radionuclide deposition data from the 60 km area around the 2 Chernobyl nuclear power plant: results from a sampling survey in 1987. 3 4 Valery Kashparov1,3, Sviatoslav Levchuk1, Marina Zhurba1, Valentyn Protsak1, Nicholas A. 5 Beresford2, and Jacqueline S. Chaplow2 6 7 1 Ukrainian Institute of Agricultural Radiology of National University of Life and Environmental Sciences of 8 Ukraine, Mashinobudivnykiv str.7, Chabany, Kyiv region, 08162 Ukraine 9 2 UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology, Lancaster Environment Centre, Library Avenue, Bailrigg, Lancaster, 10 LA1 4AP, UK 11 3 CERAD CoE Environmental Radioactivity/Department of Environmental Sciences, Norwegian University of 12 Life Sciences, 1432 Aas, Norway 13 Correspondence to: Jacqueline S. Chaplow ([email protected]) 14 Abstract. The dataset “Spatial radionuclide deposition data from the 60 km area around the 15 Chernobyl nuclear power plant: results from a sampling survey in 1987” is the latest in a series of data 16 to be published by the Environmental Information Data Centre (EIDC) describing samples collected 17 and analysed following the Chernobyl nuclear power plant accident in 1986. The data result from a 18 survey carried out by the Ukrainian Institute of Agricultural Radiology (UIAR) in April and May 19 1987 and include information on sample sites, dose rate, radionuclide (zirconium-95, niobium-95, 20 ruthenium-106, caesium-134, caesium-137 and cerium-144) deposition, and exchangeable caesium- 21 134 and 137. -
Jewish Cemetries, Synagogues, and Mass Grave Sites in Ukraine
Syracuse University SURFACE Religion College of Arts and Sciences 2005 Jewish Cemetries, Synagogues, and Mass Grave Sites in Ukraine Samuel D. Gruber United States Commission for the Preservation of America’s Heritage Abroad Follow this and additional works at: https://surface.syr.edu/rel Part of the Religion Commons Recommended Citation Gruber, Samuel D., "Jewish Cemeteries, Synagogues, and Mass Grave Sites in Ukraine" (2005). Full list of publications from School of Architecture. Paper 94. http://surface.syr.edu/arc/94 This Report is brought to you for free and open access by the College of Arts and Sciences at SURFACE. It has been accepted for inclusion in Religion by an authorized administrator of SURFACE. For more information, please contact [email protected]. JEWISH CEMETERIES, SYNAGOGUES, AND MASS GRAVE SITES IN UKRAINE United States Commission for the Preservation of America’s Heritage Abroad 2005 UNITED STATES COMMISSION FOR THE PRESERVATION OF AMERICA’S HERITAGE ABROAD Warren L. Miller, Chairman McLean, VA Members: Ned Bandler August B. Pust Bridgewater, CT Euclid, OH Chaskel Besser Menno Ratzker New York, NY Monsey, NY Amy S. Epstein Harriet Rotter Pinellas Park, FL Bingham Farms, MI Edgar Gluck Lee Seeman Brooklyn, NY Great Neck, NY Phyllis Kaminsky Steven E. Some Potomac, MD Princeton, NJ Zvi Kestenbaum Irving Stolberg Brooklyn, NY New Haven, CT Daniel Lapin Ari Storch Mercer Island, WA Potomac, MD Gary J. Lavine Staff: Fayetteville, NY Jeffrey L. Farrow Michael B. Levy Executive Director Washington, DC Samuel Gruber Rachmiel -
142-2019 Yukhnovskyi.Indd
Original Paper Journal of Forest Science, 66, 2020 (6): 252–263 https://doi.org/10.17221/142/2019-JFS Green space trends in small towns of Kyiv region according to EOS Land Viewer – a case study Vasyl Yukhnovskyi1*, Olha Zibtseva2 1Department of Forests Restoration and Meliorations, Forest Institute, National University of Life and Environmental Sciences of Ukraine, Kyiv 2Department of Landscape Architecture and Phytodesign, Forest Institute, National University of Life and Environmental Sciences of Ukraine, Kyiv *Corresponding author: [email protected] Citation: Yukhnovskyi V., Zibtseva O. (2020): Green space trends in small towns of Kyiv region according to EOS Land Viewer – a case study. J. For. Sci., 66: 252–263. Abstract: The state of ecological balance of cities is determined by the analysis of the qualitative composition of green space. The lack of green space inventory in small towns in the Kyiv region has prompted the use of express analysis provided by the EOS Land Viewer platform, which allows obtaining an instantaneous distribution of the urban and suburban territories by a number of vegetative indices and in recent years – by scene classification. The purpose of the study is to determine the current state and dynamics of the ratio of vegetation and built-up cover of the territories of small towns in Kyiv region with establishing the rating of towns by eco-balance of territories. The distribution of the territory of small towns by the most common vegetation index NDVI, as well as by S AVI, which is more suitable for areas with vegetation coverage of less than 30%, has been monitored. -
Jewish Cemeteries, Synagogues, and Mass Grave Sites in Ukraine
JEWISH CEMETERIES, SYNAGOGUES, AND MASS GRAVE SITES IN UKRAINE United States Commission for the Preservation of America’s Heritage Abroad 2005 UNITED STATES COMMISSION FOR THE PRESERVATION OF AMERICA’S HERITAGE ABROAD Warren L. Miller, Chairman McLean, VA Members: Ned Bandler August B. Pust Bridgewater, CT Euclid, OH Chaskel Besser Menno Ratzker New York, NY Monsey, NY Amy S. Epstein Harriet Rotter Pinellas Park, FL Bingham Farms, MI Edgar Gluck Lee Seeman Brooklyn, NY Great Neck, NY Phyllis Kaminsky Steven E. Some Potomac, MD Princeton, NJ Zvi Kestenbaum Irving Stolberg Brooklyn, NY New Haven, CT Daniel Lapin Ari Storch Mercer Island, WA Potomac, MD Gary J. Lavine Staff: Fayetteville, NY Jeffrey L. Farrow Michael B. Levy Executive Director Washington, DC Samuel Gruber Rachmiel Liberman Research Director Brookline, MA Katrina A. Krzysztofiak Laura Raybin Miller Program Manager Pembroke Pines, FL Patricia Hoglund Vincent Obsitnik Administrative Officer McLean, VA 888 17th Street, N.W., Suite 1160 Washington, DC 20006 Ph: ( 202) 254-3824 Fax: ( 202) 254-3934 E-mail: [email protected] May 30, 2005 Message from the Chairman One of the principal missions that United States law assigns the Commission for the Preservation of America’s Heritage Abroad is to identify and report on cemeteries, monuments, and historic buildings in Central and Eastern Europe associated with the cultural heritage of U.S. citizens, especially endangered sites. The Congress and the President were prompted to establish the Commission because of the special problem faced by Jewish sites in the region: The communities that had once cared for the properties were annihilated during the Holocaust. -
Geocoding of Worldwide Patent Data Descriptor Data Gaétan De Rassenfosse 1, Jan Kozak1 & Florian Seliger 2*
www.nature.com/scientificdata OPEN Geocoding of worldwide patent DATA DESCRIPTOR data Gaétan de Rassenfosse 1, Jan Kozak1 & Florian Seliger 2* The dataset provides geographic coordinates for inventor and applicant locations in 18.8 million patent documents spanning over more than 30 years. The geocoded data are further allocated to the corresponding countries, regions and cities. When the address information was missing in the original patent document, we imputed it by using information from subsequent flings in the patent family. The resulting database can be used to study patenting activity at a fne-grained geographic level without creating bias towards the traditional, established patent ofces. Background & Summary Patents are jurisdictional rights, and applicants willing to protect an invention internationally must fle individ- ual patent applications in all countries where they seek protection. Te patent document that frst describes the invention is usually called the ‘priority fling’ or ‘frst fling’ (or priority patent application) and the patent doc- uments subsequently fled in other jurisdictions are called ‘second flings.’ In 2010, there were 2.5 million patent applications fled worldwide. About 1 million of these were frst flings, i.e. new inventions submitted for patent protection—the rest was second flings. Te goal of this project has been to produce a dataset of frst flings fled across the globe and to allocate them by inventor and applicant location. Te patent data relate exclusively to invention patents, and exclude, e.g., plant patents and designs (sometimes called utility models or petty patents). For example, the database allows identify- ing all patented inventions by inventors located in Switzerland (or in a specifc region in Switzerland), regardless of the patent ofce at which the applications are fled. -
Official Journal L 256 of the European Union
Official Journal L 256 of the European Union Volume 64 English edition Legislation 19 July 2021 Contents II Non-legislative acts INTERNATIONAL AGREEMENTS ★ Council Decision (EU) 2021/1172 of 18 June 2021 on the conclusion, on behalf of the European Union, of the Agreement with Respect to Time Limitations on Arrangements for the Provision of Aircraft with Crew between the European Union, the United States of America, Iceland, and the Kingdom of Norway . 1 REGULATIONS ★ Council Regulation (EU) 2021/1173 of 13 July 2021 on establishing the European High Performance Computing Joint Undertaking and repealing Regulation (EU) 2018/1488 . 3 ★ Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) 2021/1174 of 12 July 2021 approving non-minor amendments to the specification for a name entered in the register of protected designations of origin and protected geographical indications ‘Asparago di Badoere’ (PGI) . 52 ★ Commission Regulation (EU) 2021/1175 of 16 July 2021 amending Annex II to Regulation (EC) No 1333/2008 of the European Parliament and of the Council as regards the use of polyols in certain energy-reduced confectionery products (1) . 53 ★ Commission Regulation (EU) 2021/1176 of 16 July 2021 amending Annexes III, V, VII and IX to Regulation (EC) No 999/2001 of the European Parliament and of the Council as regards genotyping of positive TSE cases in goats, the determination of age in ovine and caprine animals, the measures applicable in a herd or flock with atypical scrapie and the conditions for imports of products of bovine, ovine and caprine origin (1) . 56 ★ Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) 2021/1177 of 16 July 2021 amending Implementing Regulation (EU) 2015/408 as regards the deletion of propoxycarbazone from the list of active substances to be considered as candidates for substitution (1) . -
Research Notes /Аналітичні Записки ЦПД Науоа/Аналитические Записки ЦПИ Науоа
Research Notes /Аналітичні записки ЦПД НаУОА/Аналитические записки ЦПИ НаУОА Research Note #4, 2019 Political Developments in Kyiv Oblast Prior 2019 Presidential Elections Ivan Gomza Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science at the National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy Senior Fellow at the School for Policy Analysis National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy Yuriy Matsiyevsky Series editor Center for Political Research Ostroh Academy National University Center for Political Research Ostroh Academy National University 2019 Research Notes /Аналітичні записки ЦПД НаУОА/Аналитические записки ЦПИ НаУОА At first glance Kyiv oblast, with its 1 754 949 inhabitants, barely impresses as a valuable prize in electoral campaign. After all, the oblast consists of 9 single-member districts that translate in 9 seats at the national parliament. When compared with 17 seats allocated to Dnipropetrovsk oblast, 13 – to Kharkiv, 12 to Donetsk, or Lviv oblast, and 11 to Odessa oblast, this does not look impressive. The power struggle in Kyiv oblast might seem of limited strategic importance. Such a conclusion is, however, erroneous as Kyiv oblast has several distinctive features, which makes it central in power competition and power distribution after each election. Firstly, the oblast is adjacent to the ultimate powerhouse of national politics, the city of Kyiv. The nine above-mentioned electoral districts comprise regional town areas which encircle the capital, set its administrative boundaries, contain its growth, limit the city’s capabilities to manage logistics and to provide infrastructural services. In fact, the lack of capacities forced the mayor of Kyiv to initiate the program to create a “Kyiv metropolitan area” which should bring closer housing, transportation, and administration across the city of Kyiv and the oblast emulating the Metropolis of Greater Paris. -
Journal of Forest Science
JOURNAL OF FOREST SCIENCE VOLUME 66 ISSUE 6 (On–line) ISSN 1805-935X Prague 2020 (Print) ISSN 1212-4834 Journal of Forest Science continuation of the journal Lesnictví-Forestry An international peer-reviewed journal published by the Czech Academy of Agricultural Sciences and supported by the Ministry of Agriculture of the Czech Republic Aims and scope: The journal publishes original results of basic and applied research from all fields of forestry related to European forest ecosystems. Papers are published in English. The journal is indexed in: • Agrindex of AGRIS/FAO database • BIOSIS Citation Index (Web of Science) • CAB Abstracts • CNKI (China National Knowledge Infrastructure) • CrossRef • Czech Agricultural and Food Bibliography • DOAJ (Directory of Open Access Journals) • EBSCO Academic Search • Elsevier Sciences Bibliographic Database • Emerging Sources Citation Index (Web of Science) • Google Scholar • J-Gate • Scopus • TOXLINE PLUS Periodicity: 12 issues per year, volume 66 appearing in 2020. Electronic open access Full papers from Vol. 49 (2003), instructions to authors and information on all journals edited by the Czech Academy of Agricultural Sciences are available on the website: https://www.agriculturejournals.cz/web/jfs/ Online manuscript submission Manuscripts must be written in English. All manuscripts must be submitted to the journal website (https://www. agriculturejournals.cz/web/jfs/). Authors are requested to submit the text, tables, and artwork in electronic form to this web address. It is to note that an editable file is required for production purposes, so please upload your text files as MS Word (.doc) files (pdf files will not be considered). Submissions are requested to include a cover letter (save as a separate file for upload), manuscript, tables (all as MS Word files – .doc), and photos with high (min 300 dpi) resolution (.jpg, .tiff and graphs as MS Excel file with data), as well as any ancillary materials. -
Impact Evaluation of Participatory Budgeting in Ukraine
See discussions, stats, and author profiles for this publication at: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/337783495 Impact Evaluation of Participatory Budgeting in Ukraine Research · December 2019 DOI: 10.13140/RG.2.2.11468.36485 CITATIONS READS 0 229 2 authors, including: Dmytro Khutkyy University of California, Riverside 16 PUBLICATIONS 19 CITATIONS SEE PROFILE All content following this page was uploaded by Dmytro Khutkyy on 06 December 2019. The user has requested enhancement of the downloaded file. Impact Evaluation of Participatory Budgeting in Ukraine Dmytro Khutkyy, Kristina Avramchenko Kyiv 2019 Reference Khutkyy, D., & Avramchenko, K. (2019). Impact Evaluation of Participatory Budgeting in Ukraine. Kyiv. Authors Dmytro Khutkyy, PhD in Sociology, independent expert www.khutkyy.com, [email protected] Kristina Avramchenko, independent expert [email protected] Acknowledgements Reviewing Kateryna Borysenko, Product Manager, Tech NGO “SocialBoost” Oleksandra Ivanenko, Business Analyst, Tech NGO “SocialBoost” Serhii Karelin, E-democracy Component Coordinator, the Swiss-Ukrainian program E-Governance for Accountability and Participation (EGAP) Kostiantyn Ploskyi, PhD in Public Administration, Deputy Director, Polish-Ukrainian Cooperation Foun- dation PAUCI Proofreading Orysia Hrudka Design Denys Averyanov Funding This research has been conducted with the support of the Open Society Foundations. All thoughts, conclusions and recommendations belong to the authors of this publication and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the project donor. Copyright Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 license. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ Contents Summary 4 1. Introduction 6 1.1 National context 6 1.2 Impact model 7 1.3 Research methodology 12 2. The overall impact of participatory budgeting in Ukraine 15 2.1 Participatory budgeting trends 15 2.2 The factors of participatory budgeting impact 18 3.