A World of Flows: Labour Mobility, Capital and Knowledge in an Age of Global Reversal and Regional Revival 2018 Annual Conference 3Rd –6Th June 2018

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

A World of Flows: Labour Mobility, Capital and Knowledge in an Age of Global Reversal and Regional Revival 2018 Annual Conference 3Rd –6Th June 2018 Regional Studies Association - A Leading and Impactful Community A World of Flows: Labour Mobility, Capital and Knowledge in an Age of Global Reversal and Regional Revival 2018 Annual Conference 3rd –6th June 2018 Università della Svizzera italiana Lugano, Switzerland This volume has been compiled by Wanda Miczorek ISBN: 978-1-897721-66-7 HISTORICAL PRODUCTION OF THRACE REGION BY MEANS OF SETTLER URBANISM IN TURKEY 1 Eda Acara UNDERSTANDING FUNCTIONAL CHANGES AND THE BOUNDARIES OF POLYCENTRIC 1 METROPOLITAN AREAS WITH NEW TOOLS: THE CASE OF FLORENCE Chiara Agnoletti Leonardo Piccini Claudia Ferretti Patrizia Lattarulo THE LOCATION DETERMINANTS OF EMERGING WORKPLACES: AN EMPIRICAL STUDY OF 2 COWORKING SPACES IN ITALY Mina Akhavan Ilaria Mariotti A MIXED METHOD APPROACH IN MAPPING AND EXPLORING TRANSNATIONALISM IN 2 ARCHITECTURE AND URBANISM Mina Akhavan Davide Ponzini A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF URBAN OCCUPATIONAL STRUCTURES: 3 BRAZIL AND UNITED STATES Pedro Amaral Clauber EM Scherer David C Folch GEOSPATIAL MODELING OF MICROCEPHALY AND ZIKA VIRUS SPREAD PATTERNS IN BRAZIL 3 Pedro Amaral Thiago Rocha Lucas Carvalho João Vissoci GEOGRAPHIC CLUSTERS OF CANCER MORTALITY IN THE USA 4 Raid Amin LOCATION CHOICES OF CREATIVE WORKERS AND CREATIVE INDUSTRIES 4 Sveta Angelopoulos Ashton De Silva THE DETERMINANTS OF RELATED AND UNRELATED VARIETY IN ITALIAN PROVINCES 4 Roberto Antonietti Chiara Burlina ACTORS, NETWORKS AND DEVELOPMENT TRANSLATIONS; THE CASE OF A LOCAL ECONOMIC 5 DEVELOPMENT INTERVENTION IN GHANA Benedict Arko I WORKPLACES AS POST-PUBLIC URBAN SPACE? 5 Simonetta Armondi Stefano Di Vita Corinna Morandi FOREGROUNDING THE URBAN AGENDA FOR THE EU: SPATIALITY, KNOWLEDGE, POWERS 6 Simonetta Armondi MULTINATIONAL ENTERPRISES, SERVICE OUTSOURCING AND REGIONAL STRUCTURAL 6 CHANGE Andrea Ascani Simona Iammarino SUPPORTING TECHNOLOGY DIFFUSION? THE CASE FOR RURAL DIGITAL HUBS 7 Fiona Ashmore Liz Price A PLACE-BASED DEVELOPMENTAL REGIONAL INDUSTRIAL STRATEGY AND/FOR SUSTAINABLE 8 CAPTURE OF CO-CREATED VALUE David Bailey Christos Pitelis Philip Tomlinson OXFORD AND GRENOBLE: KNOWLEDGE ORGANISATIONS IN LOCAL DEVELOPMENT 8 REVISITED Nabhassorn Baines Dimitris Assimakopoulos Helen Lawton-Smith Saverio Romeo Maria Tsouri WHAT IS PLURI-REGIONALITY AND HOW DOES IT HELP US UNDERSTAND GLOBAL REVERSAL 9 AND REGIONAL REVIVAL? Joerg Balsiger Elena Koritchenko MEASURING POLYCENTRICITY OF URBAN REGIONS IN POLAND 9 Bartosz Bartosiewicz Szymon Marcińczak THE EFFECT OF MARKET REFORMS ON UNEMPLOYMENT DYNAMICS 10 Moreno BarufFini Luzius Stricker WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO BE CENTRAL IN THE PERIPHERY AND PERIPHERAL IN THE CENTRE? 10 THE CASES OF THE UNIVERSITIES OF EVORA, CAMPINAS AND BRASILIA Ana Paula Bastos Maria Conceição Rego Mauricio Serra II REGIONALISING “THE 2018 AGEING REPORT” SOCIOECONOMIC PROJECTIONS USING AN 11 EXPLANATORY FRAMEWORK Filipe Batista e Silva Carlo Lavalle Nicola Pontarollo Pilar Vizcaino HOUSING POLICY IN RUSSIA: DEVELOPMENT DRIVER OR REINFORCER OF URBAN SHRINKAGE 11 Elena Batunova Maria Gunko RECOVERY OR STAGNATION? BRITAIN’S OLDER INDUSTRIAL TOWNS SINCE THE RECESSION 12 Christina Beatty Steve Fothergill INVOLVING LOCAL AUTHORITIES: THE INCLUSION OF CDPS IN SPATIAL PLANNING 12 Joris Beckers BEYOND OLD INDUSTRY: TOWARDS A RESEARCH AGENDA FOR THE NEW ECONOMY 13 Andrew Beer CAN THE EURASIAN ECONOMIC UNION BECOME ONE OF THE PILLARS OF THE NEW 13 INTERNATIONAL WORLD ORDER? Anton Bendarzsevszkij LOCATION CHOICES OF PRIVATE HOUSEHOLDS IN THE MUNICH METROPOLITAN REGION 13 AND FUTURE DEVELOPMENT OPTIONS Michael Bentlage Mariana Avezum GOVERNANCE OF REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT AT A MESO SCALE AND THE ROLE OF 14 TERRITORIALITY AND POLITICS: THE CASE OF THE MIDLANDS ENGINE AND THE NORTHERN POWERHOUSE Gill Bentley John Shutt GLOBAL PIPELINES OF TRANSNATIONAL ENTREPRENEURS; A CRITICAL SURVEY OF THE 15 LITERATURE Su-Hyun Berg BRIDGING THE GAP BETWEEN DECISION MAKERS AND CITIES. NOTES FROM CAMPANIA’S 15 WASTELANDS (ITALY) Gilda Berruti Maria Federica Palestino TOWARDS A LESS EXPERIMENTALIST MULTI-LEVEL GOVERNANCE: HOW TO EMBED MACRO- 16 REGIONAL STRATEGIES INTO EU FUNDING PROGRAMMES? THE CASE OF EUSALP Davide Gianluca Bianchi THE POTENTIAL IMPACT OF BREXIT ON THE UK AEROSPACE SECTOR 16 III Chloe Ashton Billing Raquel Ortega Argiles AFRICAN DEVELOPMENT: ‘HOPELESS AFRICA’, ‘AFRICA RISING’, OR SOMEWHERE IN- 17 BETWEEN? Tony Binns Etienne Nel HEADQUARTERS RELOCATION, ADVANCED BUSINESS SERVICES AND FIRM PERFORMANCE: 17 EVIDENCE FROM CHINA Hong Bo Xiaosheng Ju IDENTIFYING ENTREPRENEURIAL COUNTERURBANISERS 18 Gary Bosworth Leanne Townsend ZograFia Bika Robert Newbery DEEP ECONOMIC INTEGRATION, FOREIGN INVESTMENT AND INTERNATIONAL TRADE: THE 18 EFFECTS OF MEMBERSHIP OF THE EUROPEAN UNION Randolph Luca Bruno Nauro Campos Saul Estrin Meng Tian BROADENING THE ENTREPRENEURIAL ECOSYSTEM CONCEPT INTO THE CREATIVE 19 INDUSTRIES: AN EXAMINATION OF THE FASHION INDUSTRY IN TORONTO, CANADA Taylor Brydges Rhiannon Pugh “BUILD IT AND THEY WILL COME”: PLACE-MAKING AND PLACE-MARKETING FOR REGIONAL 19 REVIVAL Amma Buckley A NIGERIAN EXPERIENCE ECONOMY: THE NOLLYWOOD HOUSE SCENE 20 Alexander Bud IMAGE OF RUSSIAN REGIONS FUTURE IN REGIONAL STRATEGIC DOCUMENTS 20 Ksenia Budaeva REGIONAL DISPARITIES IN LABOR PRODUCTIVITY IN THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION 21 Anna Bufetova ASSESSING THE EFFECTIVENESS OF POLYCENTRICITY FOR SMART, INCLUSIVE AND 21 SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT: A FRAMEWORK AND SOME EVIDENCE FROM THE ITALIAN URBAN REGIONS David Burgalassi DOES IT PAY TO BE NEAR? THE EFFECT OF BANK PROXIMITY ON ITALIAN FIRM'S 22 PERFORMANCE DURING THE ECONOMIC CRISIS IV Chiara Burlina Daniela Bragoli Flavia Cortelezzi Giovanni Marseguerra GROWING SOCIAL SPATIAL DIFFERENTIATION AND MIGRATION PATTERNS IN LITHUANIA 22 Donatas Burneika Rūta Ubarevičienė SETTLEMENT SYSTEM DENSITY AS A BASIS FOR CULTURAL REGENERATION IN THE URAL'S 23 SMALL INDUSTRIAL TOWNS Tatiana Bystrova THE IMPACT OF EVENT TOURISM ON URBAN AND LOCAL ECONOMIES: THE CASE OF THE 23 KNAVESMIRE FESTIVAL IN YORK, UNITED KINGDOM Ignazio Cabras Nadine Waehning EU REGIONAL CONVERGENCE IN THE AGRICULTURAL SECTOR: ARE THERE SYNERGIES 24 BETWEEN AGRICULTURAL AND REGIONAL POLICIES? Elena Calegari Enrico Fabrizi Gianni Guastella Francesco Timpano HUMAN DEVELOPMENT AND LAND TENURE IN BRAZIL 25 Bernardo Campolina Alexandre Arbex Valadares Fernando Gaiger Silveira Nikolas de Camargo Pirani "WHATEVER YOU HIT CALL IT A TARGET": ON SEGMENTATION AND TARGETING OF 25 INVESTMENT PROMOTION POLICY Pawel Capik BORDERING DYNAMICS IN CROSS-BORDER REGIONAL INNOVATION SYSTEMS Francesco Cappellano 26 Christophe Sohn Teemu Makkonen DETERMINANTS OF GROWTH DIFFERENCES BETWEEN EASTERN AND SOUTHERN EU 26 COUNTRIES: A PANEL-DATA APPROACH Helen Caraveli Ioannis Chatzigiatroudakis Evangelos Paravalos THE GREAT CITIES VERSUS THE REST: PROBING INTO A POLITICAL DIVIDE 27 Rodrigo Cardoso SMART CITY RESEARCH AND THE GEOGRAPHY OF INNOVATION 27 V Luis Carvalho Willem van Winden Mário Vale EMERGING MARKET MULTINATIONAL ENTERPRISES TAKING OVER UNITED STATES 28 TRADEMARKS: PREDATING OR LEVERAGING? Carolina Castaldi Arianna Martinelli Elisa Giuliani INTEGRATED TERRITORIAL APPROACHES: HOW EU ACTS SOFT OVER HARD NATIONAL 29 PLANNING Cristina Cavaco João Pedro Costa SPATIAL BEHAVIOURS OF EMPLOYEES IN WARSAW BUSINESS DISTRICTS - CENTRE VS. 29 PERIPHERIES Dorota Celinska-Janowicz DIFFERENT TRENDS IN THE RE-INDUSTRIALISATION OF THE POST-SOCIALIST SMALL AND 30 MEDIUM INDUSTRIAL TOWNS IN ROMANIA Andreea-Loreta Cercleux Ioan Ianos Florentina-Cristina Merciu PARTNERSHIP BUILDING FOR SMART SPECIALISATION: CONSTRUCTING A REGIONAL 30 BIOECONOMY David Charles Sara Davies Stephen Miller Keith Clement THE EU AS A SAVIOUR AND A SAINT? CORRUPTION AND PUBLIC SUPPORT FOR EU 31 COHESION Nicholas Charron Monika Bauhr CHINA’S MOVING SLUMS: A HIDDEN GEOGRAPHY OF RECYCLING AND HOUSING INJUSTICE 31 ON THE EDGE OF BEIJING Guo Chen Jia Feng AGENCY IN REGIONAL ENERGY TRANSITION: TOWARDS A MORE DETAILED UNDERSTANDING 32 OF INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE Camilla Chlebna Jannika Mattes Meike Löhr Sebastian Rohe THE WHOLE EARTH TECHNOSPHERE SUSTAINABILITY CHALLENGE AND WORLDWIDE CITY- 32 REGIONS NETWORK RESPONSE: AN URBAN PLANET THEORY VI Tom ChristofFel THE DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION OF TRADITIONAL MANUFACTURING SYSTEMS: A 33 COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF DIFFERENT UPGRADING PATHS Simona Ciappei Lisa De Propris Paulina Ramirez Erica Santini UNPACKING THE ‘TERRITORIAL POLICY COMMUNITY’: WALES (UK) AS AN ILLUSTRATIVE 34 CASE Nick CliFton David Pickernell Celia Netana COHESION POLICY’S CONTRIBUTION TO DIGITALISATION: AN ADEQUATE APPROACH? 35 Louis Colnot Julie Pellegrin EXPLORING SMART MOBILITIES, ASSEMBLAGES AND ALIGNMENTS 35 Matthew Cook Alan-Miguel Valdez LAND USE AND SPATIAL PLANNING IN THE LISBON METROPOLITAN AREA: A GAP BETWEEN 36 STATUTORY AND SOFT PLANNING PROCESSES? João Pedro Costa Cristina Cavaco SMART CITIES AND ECONOMIC RESILIENCE 36 Adam Cox Gianpiero Torrisi THE NEW GEOGRAPHIES OF URBAN PRODUCTION: THE CASE OF CHINA’S CONTEMPORARY 37 URBANIZATION Olivier Crevoisier Thierry Theurillat Delphine Rime Nelson Vera THE POTENTIAL OF PARTICIPATORY DEVELOPMENT IN SLUM UPGRADING PROCESSES 37 Ráhel Czirják LABOUR MOBILITY, HIGHER EDUCATION, AND URBAN CENTRALITY IN BRAZIL 38 Ana Carolina da Cruz Lima VII DOWNLOADING EUROPE ON A REGIONAL LEVEL – THE PROCESS OF EUROPEANIZATION IN 38 THE REGIONS OF EASTERN POLAND Anna Dabrowska CIRCLING THE SQUARE: GOVERNANCE OF THE CIRCULAR ECONOMY IN THE AMSTERDAM 39 METROPOLITAN AREA Marcin Dabrowski Erwin Heurkens IMPACT OF MIGRATION OF RESIDENTS ON THE LOCATION OF CLUSTERS WITH HIGH LEVEL 39 OF DEMOGRAPHIC
Recommended publications
  • Changing Perspectives in Australian Archaeology, Part VII. Aboriginal
    AUSTRALIAN MUSEUM SCIENTIFIC PUBLICATIONS Robertson, Gail, 2011. Changing perspectives in Australian archaeology, part VII. Aboriginal use of backed artefacts at Lapstone Creek rock-shelter, New South Wales: an integrated residue and use-wear analysis. Technical Reports of the Australian Museum, Online 23(7): 83–101. doi:10.3853/j.1835-4211.23.2011.1572 ISSN 1835-4211 (online) Published online by the Australian Museum, Sydney nature culture discover Australian Museum science is freely accessible online at http://publications.australianmuseum.net.au 6 College Street, Sydney NSW 2010, Australia Changing Perspectives in Australian Archaeology edited by Jim Specht and Robin Torrence photo by carl bento · 2009 Papers in Honour of Val Attenbrow Technical Reports of the Australian Museum, Online 23 (2011) ISSN 1835-4211 Changing Perspectives in Australian Archaeology edited by Jim Specht and Robin Torrence Specht & Torrence Preface ........................................................................ 1 I White Regional archaeology in Australia ............................... 3 II Sullivan, Hughes & Barham Abydos Plains—equivocal archaeology ........................ 7 III Irish Hidden in plain view ................................................ 31 IV Douglass & Holdaway Quantifying cortex proportions ................................ 45 V Frankel & Stern Stone artefact production and use ............................. 59 VI Hiscock Point production at Jimede 2 .................................... 73 VII Robertson Backed artefacts Lapstone
    [Show full text]
  • NATO and Earth Scientists: an Ongoing Collaboration to Assess Geohazards and Contribute to Societal Security in Central Asia and the Caucasus
    Article 193 by Alessandro Tibaldi1*, Andrey M. Korzhenkov2, Federico Pasquarè Mariotto3, Derek Rust4, and Nino Tsereteli5 NATO and earth scientists: an ongoing collaboration to assess geohazards and contribute to societal security in Central Asia and the Caucasus 1 Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Milano-Bicocca, P. della Scienza 4, 20126 Milan, Italy; *Corresponding author, E-mail: [email protected] 2 Laboratory of modelling of seismic processes, Institute of Communication and Information Technologies, Kyrgyz-Russian Slavic University, Kievskaya str. 44, Bishkek 720000, Kyrgyz Republic 3 Department of Theoretical and Applied Sciences, University of Insubria, Via Mazzini 5, 21100 Varese, Italy 4 School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Portsmouth, Barnaby Building, Portsmouth PO1 2UP, UK 5 M. Nodia Institute of Geophysics, M. Javakhishvili Tbilisi State University, 1, Alexidze str. 0171 T, Georgia (Received: July 18, 2017; Revised accepted: February 26, 2018) https://doi.org/10.18814/epiiugs/2018/018011 Geological features and hazards have no geographical and political boundaries. The North Atlantic Treaty Introduction Organization (NATO) has been funding several interna- tional Earth Science research projects in Central Asia Several areas on Earth are subject to natural hazards that threaten and the Caucasus over the last ten years. The projects are human life, settlements and infrastructures. One of the natural haz- ards that may severely affect local areas and communities is an earth- aimed at improving the security of people and the safety quake, as seen, for instance, in the recent sequence of seismic events of infrastructures, and fostering peaceful scientific col- that struck the Caucasus: the 1988 earthquake in Spitak, Armenia laboration between scientists from NATO and non-NATO (Griffin et al., 1991), the 1991 and 2009 Racha (Georgia) earthquakes countries.
    [Show full text]
  • Repositioning of the Global Epicentre of Non-Optimal Cholesterol
    Article Repositioning of the global epicentre of non-optimal cholesterol https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-020-2338-1 NCD Risk Factor Collaboration (NCD-RisC)* Received: 18 October 2019 Accepted: 2 April 2020 High blood cholesterol is typically considered a feature of wealthy western 1,2 Published online: 3 June 2020 countries . However, dietary and behavioural determinants of blood cholesterol are changing rapidly throughout the world3 and countries are using lipid-lowering Open access medications at varying rates. These changes can have distinct effects on the levels of Check for updates high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol and non-HDL cholesterol, which have different effects on human health4,5. However, the trends of HDL and non-HDL cholesterol levels over time have not been previously reported in a global analysis. Here we pooled 1,127 population-based studies that measured blood lipids in 102.6 million individuals aged 18 years and older to estimate trends from 1980 to 2018 in mean total, non-HDL and HDL cholesterol levels for 200 countries. Globally, there was little change in total or non-HDL cholesterol from 1980 to 2018. This was a net effect of increases in low- and middle-income countries, especially in east and southeast Asia, and decreases in high-income western countries, especially those in northwestern Europe, and in central and eastern Europe. As a result, countries with the highest level of non-HDL cholesterol—which is a marker of cardiovascular risk— changed from those in western Europe such as Belgium, Finland, Greenland, Iceland, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland and Malta in 1980 to those in Asia and the Pacific, such as Tokelau, Malaysia, The Philippines and Thailand.
    [Show full text]
  • Positions, and Serve but to Mislead Those Who, Ill Search of Such Information, Should Draw Conclusions from Them
    550 SUPERSTITION.-EVIL SPIRIT. - AMULETS. positions, and serve but to mislead those who, ill search of such information, should draw conclusions from them. The Buperstition of the Bachapins, for it cannot be called reli­ gion, is of the weakest and most absurd kind; and, as before re­ marked -, betrays the low state of their intellect. These people have no outward worship, nor, if one may judge from their never alluding to them, any private devotions; neither could it be dis­ covered that they possessed any very defined or exalted notion of a supreme and beneficent Deity, or of a great and first Creator. Those whom I questioned, asserted that every thing made itself; and that trees and herbage grew by their own will. Although they do not worship a good Deity, they fear a bad one, whom they name Mulzimo (Mooleemo), a word which my interpreter translated by the Dutch word for Devil j and are ready to attribute to his evil dis­ position and power, all which happens contrary to their wishes or convenience. How degraded a condition of the human heart, bow deplorable a degree of ignorance of itself and of its final cause, does this pic­ ture exhibit! But it may, perhaps, be more common than we suspect. Instead of turning with cheerful gratitude towards the Author and Giver of all good, they forget to be thankful for what they receive, and think only of what is withheld j they consider Beneficence as dormant; and are insensible to the sun "rhich daily shines upon tllem, while they behold no active spirit but l\lalignity, and feel only the passing storm.
    [Show full text]
  • Ucp013-012.Pdf
    INDEX* Titles of papers in bold face. Achomawi, 264, 267, 268, 283, £92, Arrow release, 120-122, 272, 334, 388. 293, 296, 299, 301, 314, 315, 320; Arrows and bullets, comparison, 373. basketry, 272. Aselepias, 281. Achomawi language, radical elements, Ash, used for bows, 106. 3-16; verb stems, secondary, 18; Astronomy, 323. suffixes, local, 19-21; pronouns, Athabascan groups, 313, 319, 326; 25-26; phonology, 28-33. bow, 336. Acknowledgments, 69. Atsugewi, 268, 293. Acorns, storage of, 282. Atsugewi language, radical elements, lAdiantum, in basketry, 273. 3-16; suffixes, local, 20; other Adolescence ceremony, girls', 306, verb and noun suffixes, 23; phon- 311-313, 314. ology, 28-33. boys', 314. Badminton, 350, 351, 355, 357, 358. African bow, 343, 384. Balsa (tule balsa, rush raft), 267, Alaskan bow, 338, 380. 268-269. Alcatraz island, 50. Bannerman, Francis, 350. Algonkin groups, 326. Barnes, bow maker, 356. Amelanchier alnifolia (serviceberry), Barton, R. F., 390. 361. Basket, "canoe," 250; as granary, Andaman islands, bow, 343, 384. 282-283. Anderson, R. A., quoted, 42, 44, 45, Basketry, complexes, 272; character- 47, 52-53. istics of, among the tribal groups, Apache bow, 340, 382; arrow, 382. 272-275; materials and tech- Apocynum cannabinum, 281. niques, 273-275; types: bottle- Archery, rounds in: English or York, neck, 273; coiled, 250, 263, 273, 123; American, 123; English, 332, 274; twined, 263, 272-273. See 351. also under names of tribes. Archery, Yahi, 104. Basketry cap, woman 's, 262-263; cap Armor, 299, 357. and hopper, 273; leggings, 262; Arrowheads, plates showing, opp. 103, moccasin, 262; traps, 248.
    [Show full text]
  • In Tune! for Details
    INN TUUNNEE! I T ! Newsletter of the Piano Technicians Guild, San Francisco Chapter May 2010 Calendar of Events President's Message Next Chapter Meeting 7:30pm Tuesday, May 4 Israel Stein Piedmont Piano (the new one) 1728 San Pablo Ave. (at 18th St.) Oakland, CA 94612 510-547-8188 I wish to thank San Francisco PTG chapter members for voting in the recent election, and for entrusting me Business Meeting: with the Presidency of the chapter. I will work hard to Overview and explanation of future chapter fulfill your expectations. This was the first contested technicals and stand-alone technical events – election within anyone’s memory – and I hope that we we'll be looking for feedback from you, the will have more such in the future. Competition forces members. the candidates to put their best foot forward – and We'll vote on whether or not to reimburse a many good ideas were advanced by all. I believe that chapter alternate at PTG Annual Conventions, good ideas and good intentions expressed by a and if yes - what to cover. (The chapter member willing to stand for election should not be delegate is reimbursed for round trip airfare or wasted just because the chapter chose someone else. car mileage, 2 days' hotel stay, convention So I invited Frank French and Zhi Wei Huang to a registration and 2 days' per diem @ $35 ea.) planning meeting held at my house recently, and Vote on 2010 chapter dues remission for offered them the opportunity to make their ideas a Golden Gate chapter members wishing to join reality.
    [Show full text]
  • BSG 50Th Annual Conference, 7
    BSG 2021 50th Annual Conference 7 - 9 July 2021 Hosted online by Lancaster University Ageing Past, Present and Future: Innovation and Change Conference Programme Image courtesy of Tom Morbey British50th Annual Society Conference of Gerontology / 7 - 9 July 2021 AnnualHosted online Conference by Lancaster 2017 University SEARCH DOCUMENT To search this document you can click the button above or bring up the Search window by pressing Ctrl-F (Windows) or Command+F (Mac). © Copyright Author 2 2britishgerontology.orgbritishgerontology.org Contents Welcome from the BSG President ........................... 4 Flagship Symposium ................................................. 19 Welcome from the Vice Chancellor, The Averil Osborn Symposium .............................. 20 Lancaster University ..................................................... 5 Sponsors and Exhibitors .......................................... 21 Welcome from the Conference Chair ..................... 5 BSG Emergening Researchers in Ageing ........... 22 Thanks ............................................................................... 7 Conference Ceremonies ........................................... 23 Conference Committee ................................................ 8 Social Events ................................................................ 23 About the Conference ............................................... 10 Join the BSG ................................................................. 27 Timetable at a Glance ..............................................
    [Show full text]
  • Evolving Performance Practice of Debussy's Piano Preludes Vivian Buchanan Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College, [email protected]
    Louisiana State University LSU Digital Commons LSU Master's Theses Graduate School 6-4-2018 Evolving Performance Practice of Debussy's Piano Preludes Vivian Buchanan Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_theses Part of the Musicology Commons Recommended Citation Buchanan, Vivian, "Evolving Performance Practice of Debussy's Piano Preludes" (2018). LSU Master's Theses. 4744. https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_theses/4744 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at LSU Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in LSU Master's Theses by an authorized graduate school editor of LSU Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. EVOLVING PERFORMANCE PRACTICE OF DEBUSSY’S PIANO PRELUDES A Thesis Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of the Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music in The Department of Music and Dramatic Arts by Vivian Buchanan B.M., New England Conservatory of Music, 2016 August 2018 Table of Contents Abstract……………………………………………………………………………..iii Chapter 1. Introduction………………………………………………………………… 1 2. The Welte-Mignon…………………………………………………………. 7 3. The French Harpsichord Tradition………………………………………….18 4. Debussy’s Piano Rolls……………………………………………………....35 5. The Early Debussystes……………………………………………………...52 Bibliography………………………………………………………………………...63 Selected Discography………………………………………………………………..66 Vita…………………………………………………………………………………..67 ii Abstract Between 1910 and 1912 Claude Debussy recorded twelve of his solo piano works for the player piano company Welte-Mignon. Although Debussy frequently instructed his students to play his music exactly as written, his own recordings are rife with artistic liberties and interpretive freedom.
    [Show full text]
  • Howe Collection of Musical Instrument Literature ARS.0167
    http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8cc1668 No online items Guide to the Howe Collection of Musical Instrument Literature ARS.0167 Jonathan Manton; Gurudarshan Khalsa Archive of Recorded Sound 2018 [email protected] URL: http://library.stanford.edu/ars Guide to the Howe Collection of ARS.0167 1 Musical Instrument Literature ARS.0167 Language of Material: Multiple languages Contributing Institution: Archive of Recorded Sound Title: Howe Collection of Musical Instrument Literature Identifier/Call Number: ARS.0167 Physical Description: 438 box(es)352 linear feet Date (inclusive): 1838-2002 Abstract: The Howe Collection of Musical Instrument Literature documents the development of the music industry, mainly in the United States. The largest known collection of its kind, it contains material about the manufacture of pianos, organs, and mechanical musical instruments. The materials include catalogs, books, magazines, correspondence, photographs, broadsides, advertisements, and price lists. The collection was created, and originally donated to the University of Maryland, by Richard J. Howe. It was transferred to the Stanford Archive of Recorded Sound in 2015 to support the Player Piano Project. Stanford Archive of Recorded Sound, Stanford University Libraries, Stanford, California 94305-3076”. Language of Material: The collection is primarily in English. There are additionally some materials in German, French, Italian, and Dutch. Arrangement The collection is divided into the following six separate series: Series 1: Piano literature. Series 2: Organ literature. Series 3: Mechanical musical instruments literature. Series 4: Jukebox literature. Series 5: Phonographic literature. Series 6: General music literature. Scope and Contents The Howe Musical Instrument Literature Collection consists of over 352 linear feet of publications and documents comprising more than 14,000 items.
    [Show full text]
  • Wintjer and SUMMER ANCE SERIES'
    :t WINNTjER AND SUMMER ANCE SERIES' IN ZUF4 I",N 1918: By .,,,ELSIE CLEWS PARSONS UNIVIERSITY OF CALFORNA PUB-iCATIONS ZIs AMPRI(AI LARcTiAEOLOGY AND.E"NOLOGY. VOl 17, No. 3; PP. 171-216 E; r ,7,N UNIVERSITY ,OF CA4.AFORN1A,PE ;ER CALIFORNIA UN-VERSITY OF CALIFGORNA PUBLICATIONS TDEP.ARTENT- OP ANTHROPOLOGY - e following publica1iiona dealingwitSh&rchaeogical and etbllIogical subjcssed : nder the direition of-th Department of Athrpoogyare sen ii ech;ang fobhes publ- cations of anth log'cal 0daents and museus, add. for jouraLs &evoed to general anthropology or to archaolog edetiology. They arek for sale at the prices ttaed.- .Exchan.ges should be'lrectd to The Ebha4ge Deptn U ty ibry, Berleley eCalifia, U. S. A. All eorderssand rextances sould be addessed to the Universi of califoa Press." AM RICAN ARCHAZOLOGY A"P ETHNOLOGY.-A,'. E:iober, -Editr. PriCS :-Volume ll, $4.25; Volumes 2 -ot11, Inclusive :$3.50 eacb; Volue :12 ad followin,- $5.00 each. Ci-Oted.- aF---Unbiv. L tPubL Am.-Arch- Ethn : , e VoL 1. i. Life and- & u1re of t Hupa, by P3?ny arle Goddr. Pp. 1%8, plates 19031I30.Sepe _.. ....... .......... ....$1.2 >f2. UipaWexta by Pliny Eazle Goddd.. Pp. 89-368. March, 1904 ,....- . 3.00 Index, pp. 369478. 0 - VoL 2. 1. The Exploration of the Potter Crtek Cave, by William J. Sinclair. P. --..2--; plates 1-14. April, 1904Ar -- .40 2. The Languages of the oastof CAliforni South o-a Fnc1isc0o by A. L. Kroeborer. Pply.,29-8- wth a map. June, 1904 .. ..... so 3.' typesof Indian cult1*6in orni, by A.
    [Show full text]
  • Evergreen Broad-Leaved Woody Species : Indicators of Climate Change
    Evergreen broad-leaved woody species – indicators of climate change Von der Naturwissenschaftlichen Fakultät der Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Universität Hannover zur Erlangung des Grades Doktorin der Naturwissenschaften Dr. rer. nat genehmigte Dissertation von Dipl.-Biol. Silje Berger geboren am 28. März 1978 in Oslo, Norwegen 2008 Referent: Prof. Dr. Richard Pott Korreferent: PD Dr. Gian-Reto Walther Tag der Promotion: 19. November 2007 Abstract Evergreen broad-leaved species are at their northern boundary of distribution in Cen- tral Europe. On the global scale, low winter temperatures play an important role limiting the distribution of evergreen broad-leaved vegetation towards the poles. In recent years, a global warming trend has been observed; the increase in annual mean temperature in Europe is mainly due to rising winter temperatures. In this study it is documented that the ranges of indigenous as well as introduced evergreen broad-leaved species are expanding northward in Central and Northern Europe. Furthermore, limiting parameters of single species are identi- fied and the recent range shifts of some of the cold-hardiest evergreen broad-leaved species, such as Ilex aquifolium, Prunus laurocerasus and Trachycarpus fortunei, are analysed, based on historical and updated field data, measured climate data and output from bioclimatic mod- els. Within the group of evergreen broad-leaved species addressed in this study, different biological mechanisms are demonstrated to play a role in limiting the single species’ distribu- tion at their northern range margins. However, the northern ranges of the investigated species are all limited by low winter temperatures in general, though at different threshold values and due to specific biological traits.
    [Show full text]
  • The Politics and Poetics of Morbus Gallicus in the German Lands
    Doctoral Dissertation for Defense The Politics and Poetics of Morbus Gallicus in the German Lands (1495 - 1520) by IRINA SAVINETSKAYA Supervisor: GERHARD JARITZ Submitted to the Medieval Studies Department, and the Doctoral School of History Central European University, Budapest CEU eTD Collection in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Medieval Studies Budapest 2016 Table of Contents ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 3 LIST OF FIGURES 4 INTRODUCTION 5 REVIEW OF SCHOLARSHIP 7 PRIMARY SOURCES 14 APPROACHES AND NOTIONS 19 BODY 19 SYPHILIS 20 “NATIONAL” AND “GERMAN” 20 AUTO- AND HETERO-IMAGE 22 FRAMING DISEASE 23 DESCRIPTION OF CHAPTERS 23 CHAPTER 1 | WHAT’S IN A NAME? 26 THE NEAPOLITAN EXPEDITION OF CHARLES VIII 28 FIRST REACTIONS 29 MEDICAL DISCUSSIONS OF THE NAME 32 THE LEIPZIG DISPUTE 37 CHAPTER 2 | THE FRENCH DISEASE AND ITS MANIFOLD CAUSES 62 “DEUS OPERATUR SEDIS CAUSIS CONCURRENTIBUS” 63 THE POLITICS OF GOD’S WRATH 66 THE FRENCH ARE TO BLAME 82 JUPITER’S CHILDREN 90 THE YEAR 1484 97 BODIES PRONE TO DISEASES 108 CHAPTER 3 | POETICS OF THE FRENCH DISEASE 118 DIFFERENTIA GALLORUM ET GERMANORUM 118 INNOCENT GERMANS, LUXURIOUS OTHERS 124 FOREIGN GOODS, VICES, AND DISEASES 135 MORBUS GALLICUS AND ITS KING 153 CONCLUSION 157 BIBLIOGRAPHY 160 CEU eTD Collection PRINTED SOURCES 160 MODERN EDITIONS OF PRIMARY SOURCES 162 TRANSLATIONS OF PRIMARY SOURCES 166 SECONDARY LITERATURE 168 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I have been fortunate to receive all kinds of support from various institutions and individuals in the past seven years, and it is a pleasure to express my gratitude here. First of all, I would like to thank my supervisor, Gerhard Jaritz, who has always been most helpful and supportive in every way, even after I moved to a different continent.
    [Show full text]