2020 Specific Contracts on the Basis of Framework Contracts
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Italian Architects and Modern Egypt
1 AKPIA @ MIT - Studies on ARCHITECTURE, HISTORY & CULTURE Italian Architects and Modern Egypt Cristina Pallini “Exiles who, fleeing from the Pope or the Bourbons, had embarked at night in fishing boats from Barletta, or Taranto, or from the coast of Sic- ily, and after weeks at sea disembarked in Egypt. I imagined them, the legendary fugitives of the last century, wrapped in their cloaks, with wide-brimmed hats and long beards: they were mostly professional men or intellectuals who, after a while, sent for their wives from Italy or else married local girls. Later on their children and grandchildren . founded charitable institutions in Alexandria, the people’s university, the civil cem- etery. .” To the writer Fausta Cialente,1 these were the first Italians who crossed the Mediterranean in the first half of the nineteenth century to reach what had survived of trading outposts founded in the Middle Ages. Egypt, the meeting point between Africa and Asia, yet so accessible from Europe, was at that time the scene of fierce European rivalry. Within only a few years Mohamed Ali2 had assumed control of the corridors to India, pressing forward with industrial development based on cotton. Having lost no time in inducing him to abandon the conquered territories and revoke his monopoly regime, the Great Powers became competitors on a 1 Fausta Cialente (Cagliari 1898 – London 1994), Ballata levantina (Milan: Feltrinelli, 1961), 127–128. 2 Mohamed Ali (Kavala, Macedonia 1769 – Cairo 1849) is considered to be the founder of modern Egypt. His mark on the country’s history is due to his extensive political and military action, as well as his administrative, economic, and cultural reforms. -
Student Movements: 1968, 1981 and 1997 the Impact Of
Student Movements: 1968, 1981 and 1997 The impact of students in mobilizing society to chant for the Republic of Kosovo Atdhe Hetemi Thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of East European Languages and Cultures Supervisor Prof. dr. Rozita Dimova Department of East European Languages and Cultures Dean Prof. dr. Gita Deneckere Rector Prof. dr. Rik Van de Walle October 2019 i English Summary This dissertation examines the motives and central visions of three student demonstrations, each taking place within different historical and political contexts and each organized by a different generation of Kosovo Albanian students. The years 1968, 1981 and 1997 witnessed a proliferation of student mobilizations as collective responses demanding more national rights for Albanians in Kosovo. I argue that the students' main vision in all three movements was the political independence of Kosovo. Given the complexity of the students' goal, my analysis focuses on the influence and reactions of domestic and foreign powers vis-à-vis the University of Prishtina (hereafter UP), the students and their movements. Fueled by their desire for freedom from Serbian hegemony, the students played a central role in "preserving" and passing from one generation to the next the vision of "Republic" status for Kosovo. Kosova Republikë or the Republic of Kosovo (hereafter RK) status was a demand of all three student demonstrations, but the students' impact on state creation has generally been underestimated by politicians and public figures. Thus, the primary purpose of this study is to unearth the various and hitherto unknown or hidden roles of higher education – then the UP – and its students in shaping Kosovo's recent history. -
Diario 12 De Octubre.Indd
DIARIOREPUBLICA OFICIAL. DE - SanEL SALVADOR Salvador, EN 12 LA de AMERICA Octubre CENTRAL de 2005. 11 DIARIO OFI CIAL DIRECTOR: Lic. René O. Santamaría C. TOMO Nº 369 SAN SALVADOR, MIERCOLES 12 DE OCTUBRE DE 2005 NUMERO 189 "La Dirección de la Imprenta Nacional hace del conocimiento que toda publicación en el Diario Ofi cial será literalmente conforme al documento original, por consiguiente los errores impresos en la publicación son de exclusiva responsabilidad de la persona o institución que lo presentó". (Arts. 21, 22 y 23 Reglamento de la Imprenta Nacional). S U M A R I O ORGANO LEGISLATIVO Pág. MINISTERIO DE EDUCACION Pág. RAMOCONSULTA DE EDUCACIÓN Decretos Nos. 808, 809 y 810.- Modifi caciones en la Ley de Presupuesto General. ............................................................ 4-14 Acuerdos Nos. 15-0923 y 15-1145.- Se reconocen Directoras de dos centros educativos.......................................................... Decretos Nos. 814, 815, 816, 817, 818 y 819.- Se establecen LEGAL 80-81 límites entre diferentes municipios del departamento de San PARA Salvador. .................................................................................. 15-73 Acuerdo No. 15-1160.- Se reconoce validez académica de estudios realizados por Marcela Zamora Chamorro.................. 81 Decreto No. 830.- Declárase al Excelentísimo Doctor Jean- Philippe Rondeau, de nacionalidad francesa, “Noble Amigo de El Salvador”. ............................................................................. 74 Acuerdo No. 15-1165.- Equivalencia de estudios a favor SOLOde Rodrigo José Gadala María Bahaia. ..................................... 82 ORGANO EJECUTIVO VALIDEZ MINISTERIO DE GOBERNACION Acuerdo No. 15-1185.- Se autorizan carreras nuevas a ser RAMO DE GOBERNACIÓN impartidas por la Universidad Tecnológica de El Salvador. ..... 82 Estatutos de la Iglesia Ministerios Judá de El Salvador y Nuevos Estatutos de la Universidad Leonardo Da Vinci y Acuerdo Ejecutivo No. -
Albanian Catholic Bulletin Buletini Katholik Shqiptar
ISSN 0272 -7250 ALBANIAN CATHOLIC BULLETIN PUBLISHED PERIODICALLY BY THE ALBANIAN CATHOLIC INFORMATION CENTER Vol.3, No. 1&2 P.O. BOX 1217, SANTA CLARA, CA 95053, U.S.A. 1982 BULETINI d^M. jpu. &CU& #*- <gP KATHOLIK Mother Teresa's message to all Albanians SHQIPTAR San Francisco, June 4, 1982 ALBANIAN CATHOLIC PUBLISHING COUNCIL: ZEF V. NEKAJ, JAK GARDIN, S.J., PJETER PAL VANI, NDOC KELMENDI, S.J., BAR BULLETIN BARA KAY (Assoc. Editor), PALOK PLAKU, RAYMOND FROST (Assoc. Editor), GJON SINISHTA (Editor), JULIO FERNANDEZ Volume III No.l&2 1982 (Secretary), and LEO GABRIEL NEAL, O.F.M., CONV. (President). In the past our Bulletin (and other material of information, in cluding the book "The Fulfilled Promise" about religious perse This issue has been prepared with the help of: STELLA PILGRIM, TENNANT C. cution in Albania) has been sent free to a considerable number WRIGHT, S.J., DAVE PREVITALE, JAMES of people, institutions and organizations in the U.S. and abroad. TORRENS, S.J., Sr. HENRY JOSEPH and Not affiliated with any Church or other religious or political or DANIEL GERMANN, S.J. ganization, we depend entirely on your donations and gifts. Please help us to continue this apostolate on behalf of the op pressed Albanians. STRANGERS ARE FRIENDS News, articles and photos of general interest, 100-1200 words WE HAVEN'T MET of length, on religious, cultural, historical and political topics about Albania and its people, may be submitted for considera tion. No payments are made for the published material. God knows Please enclose self-addressed envelope for return. -
Kosovo Police Service School
DETAILS Newsletter published by the OSCE Mission in Kosovo Volume 2 - Edition 5 - June 2005 Kosovo Police Service School - an academy for public safety education and development The Kosovo Police Service School (KPSS) was established by the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) in September 1999, with an aim to create a modern democratic police force that will restore confi dence in law enforcement and effectively apply community-based policing principles. Hasan Sopa, OSCE To date, the KPSS has provided education and training for approximately 7000 police offi cers. Given that it began its work at the time when no other institution was func- tional it can easily be considered as one of the biggest successes in post-confl ict Kosovo. Without a ny doubt, it is a tribute to the OSCE’s institution building eff orts. We started from zero According to Steve Benne , who has been School Director from the outset, KPSS stared with li le more than the commitment and vision of the early members of the staff , international and national. With the time it evolved into a successful and professional educational institution. “An institution defi ned by practices, protocols, services, curriculum, and a full range of supporting activities, was needed to accomplish our mandate,” he said. It is anticipated that over 7,500 cadets will graduate from the KPSS with the end of 2005. “The OSCE, as an organization made a seri- ous commitment of resources to make the While the OSCE’s commitment and invest- IN THIS ISSUE: school a reality, including the investments in ment is signifi cant in terms of the results the school’s property to make it suitable for achieved, in Benne ’s view, it is important Community based training. -
ACLED) - Revised 2Nd Edition Compiled by ACCORD, 11 January 2018
EGYPT, YEAR 2015: Update on incidents according to the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project (ACLED) - Revised 2nd edition compiled by ACCORD, 11 January 2018 National borders: GADM, November 2015b; administrative divisions: GADM, November 2015a; Hala’ib triangle and Bir Tawil: UN Cartographic Section, March 2012; Occupied Palestinian Territory border status: UN Cartographic Sec- tion, January 2004; incident data: ACLED, undated; coastlines and inland waters: Smith and Wessel, 1 May 2015 Conflict incidents by category Development of conflict incidents from 2006 to 2015 category number of incidents sum of fatalities battle 314 1765 riots/protests 311 33 remote violence 309 644 violence against civilians 193 404 strategic developments 117 8 total 1244 2854 This table is based on data from the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project This graph is based on data from the Armed Conflict Location & Event (datasets used: ACLED, undated). Data Project (datasets used: ACLED, undated). EGYPT, YEAR 2015: UPDATE ON INCIDENTS ACCORDING TO THE ARMED CONFLICT LOCATION & EVENT DATA PROJECT (ACLED) - REVISED 2ND EDITION COMPILED BY ACCORD, 11 JANUARY 2018 LOCALIZATION OF CONFLICT INCIDENTS Note: The following list is an overview of the incident data included in the ACLED dataset. More details are available in the actual dataset (date, location data, event type, involved actors, information sources, etc.). In the following list, the names of event locations are taken from ACLED, while the administrative region names are taken from GADM data which serves as the basis for the map above. In Ad Daqahliyah, 18 incidents killing 4 people were reported. The following locations were affected: Al Mansurah, Bani Ebeid, Gamasa, Kom el Nour, Mit Salsil, Sursuq, Talkha. -
Opening of Albanian Schools for Learning the Albanian Language in Kosovo During 1941-45
ISSN 2411-9563 (Print) European Journal of Social Science September -December 2019 ISSN 2312-8429 (Online) Education and Research Volume 6, Issue 3 Opening of Albanian Schools for Learning the Albanian Language in Kosovo During 1941-45 Ragip Gjoshi University of Prizren “Ukshin Hoti” Abstract Difficult, long and troublesome was the journey of Albanian letters in all Albanian lands, especially in Kosovo. The marking of the 75th anniversary of the Albanian school, being commemorated this year in all Albanian lands, is a good opportunity to see the long-lasting path of Albanian education. There are many reasons, but some are more necessary to be written and spoken about. It is rare that nations had to pay dearly for the right to write on their own language compared to Albanian people. So much blood has been shed to escape assimilation. However, when World War II had spread largely over Europe, the Nazi-fascist powers had invaded other countries including all Albanian-inhabited areas. After Albania, Yugoslavia succumbed as well. At that time, the territories of today’s Republic of Kosovo were also occupied. At that point, Kosovo was divided into three occupation zones: Italian, German and Bulgarian. Almost most of Kosovo's lands belonged to the Italian occupation zone. Thus, most of Kosovo and Western Macedonia joined Albania with Royal Decree and King of Vicar Decree no. 264, dated 12. VIII. 1941.1 In all three areas of occupation, the administration of governance was established in the service of the occupiers. The long and harsh oppression had an impact that Albanians would experience and perceive the new circumstances in every aspect as a resemblance of a real freedom, because the tyranny of the 1918-1941 period had exceeded all genocidal dimensions.2 With the initiative of Albanian Minister E. -
Analysis of the Retailer Value Chain Segment in Five Governorates Improving Employment and Income Through Development Of
Analysis of the retailer value chain segment in five governorates Item Type monograph Authors Hussein, S.; Mounir, E.; Sedky, S.; Nour, S.A. Publisher WorldFish Download date 30/09/2021 17:09:21 Link to Item http://hdl.handle.net/1834/27438 Analysis of the Retailer Value Chain Segment in Five Governorates Improving Employment and Income through Development of Egypt’s Aquaculture Sector IEIDEAS Project July 2012 Samy Hussein, Eshak Mounir, Samir Sedky, Susan A. Nour, CARE International in Egypt Executive Summary This study is the third output of the SDC‐funded “Improving Employment and Income through Development of Egyptian Aquaculture” (IEIDEAS), a three‐year project being jointly implemented by the WorldFish Center and CARE International in Egypt with support from the Ministry of Agriculture and Land Reclamation. The aim of the study is to gather data on the retailer segment of the aquaculture value chain in Egypt, namely on the employment and market conditions of the women fish retailers in the five target governorates. In addition, this study provides a case study in Minya and Fayoum of the current income levels and standards of living of this target group. Finally, the study aims to identify the major problems and obstacles facing these women retailers and suggest some relevant interventions. CARE staff conducted the research presented in this report from April to July 2012, with support from WorldFish staff and consultants. Methodology The study team collected data from a variety of sources, through a combination of primary and secondary data collection. Some of the sources include: 1. In‐depth interviews and focus group discussions with women retailres 2. -
Anthropogenic Enhancement of Egypt's Mediterranean Fishery
Anthropogenic enhancement of Egypt’s Mediterranean fishery Autumn J. Oczkowskia,1, Scott W. Nixona, Stephen L. Grangera, Abdel-Fattah M. El-Sayedb, and Richard A. McKinneyc aGraduate School of Oceanography, University of Rhode Island, Narragansett, RI 02882; bOceanography Department, Faculty of Science, Alexandria University, Alexandria, Egypt; and cUnited States Environmental Protection Agency, Atlantic Ecology Division, Narragansett, RI 02882 Communicated by Peter Vitousek, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, December 10, 2008 (received for review September 8, 2008) The highly productive coastal Mediterranean fishery off the Nile River delta collapsed after the completion of the Aswan High Dam in 1965. But the fishery has been recovering dramatically since the mid-1980s, coincident with large increases in fertilizer application and sewage discharge in Egypt. We use stable isotopes of nitrogen (␦15N) to demonstrate that 60%–100% of the current fishery production may be from primary production stimulated by nutri- ents from fertilizer and sewage runoff. Although the establish- ment of the dam put Egypt in an ideal position to observe the impact of rapid increases in nutrient loading on coastal productiv- ity in an extremely oligotrophic sea, the Egyptian situation is not unique. Such anthropogenically enhanced fisheries also may occur along the northern rim of the Mediterranean and offshore of some rapidly developing tropical countries, where nutrient concentra- tions in the coastal waters were previously very low. fisheries ͉ Nile delta ͉ nutrient enrichment ͉ stable isotope n contrast to many of the world’s fisheries, which are in serious Idecline (1, 2), Egypt’s Mediterranean fishery offshore of the Nile River delta has been expanding dramatically in recent decades and at rates higher than can be explained by fishing Fig. -
Dimension Data Managed Hosting Dimension Data Managed Hosting
Dimension Data Managed Hosting Dimension Data Managed Hosting Faced with intensifying competition, How would your business benefit increases in costs of operations, Key facts from our Managed Hosting? Managed Hosting from as well as a desire for more stable Dimension Data Managed Hosting includes Dimension Data: revenue streams, many businesses, management of the network, colocation, including independent software • Combine highly scalable servers, networking equipment and the vendors (ISVs) and enterprises, are infrastructure and technical expertise operating system and applications. to deliver a scalable, flexible, and increasingly turning to the software- Dimension Data’s Managed Hosting services, reliable platform for mission-critical as a-service (SaaS) delivery model. enable businesses such as SaaS ISVs, and hosted applications enterprises to launch new SaaS applications However, the complex nature of web • Provide and maintain all the more quickly, reduce cost of managing a application delivery presents unique infrastructure assets required SaaS application in-house and overall reduce challenges. The data centre infrastructure to bring a client’s web-based complexity, that comes with building and and ongoing operations required to deliver applications to market are provided managing in-house applications. on-demand SaaS, with high performance network connectivity, security, 24x7 • Assets covered include the data Dimension Data’s Managed Hosting monitoring, storage and backup can divert centre, Internet connectivity, platforms provide the security, control, resources from the strategic objectives of private network, servers, storage, performance and ease of integration that the business. In addition, these activities firewalls, load balancers, and backup SaaS ISVs, and enterprise cleints demand. infrastructure tend to lie outside the core competency of With availability SLAs, strong encryption, • Provides a superior, robust platform most businesses. -
Partnering for Good Marketing Society Excellence Awards
Partnering for good Marketing Society Excellence Awards Connected Conservation: We believe our children deserve a world in which animals roam free Partnering for good Marketing Society Excellence Awards Executive Summary Rhino poaching has reached crisis proportions in South Africa: one rhino gets poached every eight hours, and if this rate of poaching continues, the rhino could be non-existent by 2025. As a company that holds conservation close to our hearts, we knew that there had to be a way to use our technological expertise to find a solution. In 2015, we partnered with Cisco and a private game reserve in South Africa to launch the Connected Conservation programme – the first partnership of its kind. The aim of the initiative is to use technology to tackle the problem of rhino poaching and, at the same time, raise global awareness around the bigger issue of poaching endangered species. Together with Cisco, and with the expert local knowledge from the reserve, we used sensors, cameras and software to track the movement of people in and out of the park, rather than trying to track the location of the rhinos. The pilot project resulted in a 96% reduction in rhino poaching in 2016. To celebrate, once the pilot project proved successful, we launched an integrated marketing programme using global print, online, and broadcast media. This included a media trip to the game reserve where the solution was rolled out, a video collaboration with CNN, and an augmented reality app, which was featured in The Economist. We also created a worldwide internal engagement campaign targeting our 28,000 employees. -
Aruba Global Partners
GLOBAL PARTNERS ARUBA GLOBAL PARTNERS Region Country Account Name Address Phone 2680 Skymark Ave Americas Canada Dimension Data Canada Inc Mississauga 8554972301 L4W 5L6 11006 RUSHMORE DR STE 300 Dimension Data North Americas United States CHARLOTTE 7049692200 America, Inc. 28277 Dimension Data Comércio e Av. Dr. Chucri Zaidan, 1240 Americas Brazil +55 11 3878 6500 Serviços de Tecnologia Ltda Santo Amaro, Sao Paulo 04711-130 Reyes Lavalle 3350 Las Condes Americas Chile Dimension Data Chile S.A. Santiago +1-562-2408-230 7550121 Bolsa Mexicana de Valores, Avenida Paseo de la Dimensión Data Commerce Reforma 255 Piso 6, Colonia Cuauhtémoc, 52 55 5141 0470 Americas Mexico Centre México, S.A. de C.V. Delegacion Cuauhtémoc, Ciudad de México 06500 Ground Floor, Tower3 Darling Park 201 Sussex Street Asia Pacific Australia NTT Australia Pty Ltd 02 82495000 Sydney 2000 5A, Tower A, Pacific Century Place,2A Gong Ti 达科信息科技(北京)有限公 Asia Pacific China Bei Lu Chaoyang District, Beijing 100027 86 10 5737 1800 司 "Blk 3, 3/F, Cityplaza" 14 Taikoo Wan Road DIMENSION DATA Taikoo Shing Asia Pacific Hong Kong 852 2513 3164 CHINA/HONG KONG LIMITED Hong Kong 1701 to 1704, Part B & C Wing One BKC, Plot DIMENSION DATA INDIA No.C-66, Asia Pacific India PRIVATE LIMITED Mumbai 400051 3333 Scott Blvd. | Santa Clara, CA 95054 1.844.472.2782 | T: 1.408.227.4500 | FAX: 1.408.227.4550 | [email protected] 1 www.arubanetworks.com GLOBAL PARTNERS Region Country Account Name Address Phone Gedung DBS Bank Tower Ciputra World 1 Lantai 22 Jl. Prof.