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Displaying Results 76 - 100 of 9932 on page 4 of 398
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"The universities". I - University College, Dublin
(1946)
Meenan, James
"The universities". I - University College, Dublin
(1946)
Meenan, James
Abstract:
University education has ceased to excite more than passing interest since the Irish Universities Act of 1908. The University of Dublin, indeed, has been examined by a Royal Commission since that date; but there has been no inquiry into the developments in University education as a whole or into the degree to which the arrangements made in 1908 have justified the hopes reposed in them. The present paper, it is hoped, will be the first of a series in which the progress of the five University institutions will be examined.
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/5698
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"We Will Always Be One Step Ahead of Them" A Case Study on the Economy of Cheating in MMORPGs
(2010)
De Paoli, Stefano; Kerr, Aphra
"We Will Always Be One Step Ahead of Them" A Case Study on the Economy of Cheating in MMORPGs
(2010)
De Paoli, Stefano; Kerr, Aphra
Abstract:
Massive Multiplayer Online Role-Playing Games (MMORPGs) are a sub-sector of virtual worlds that share with other worlds the characteristics of both complex technological systems and complex societies. The success of several MMORPGs makes them a vibrant area for research from different points of view, including their economic aspects (Castronova, 2005). Our research is mainly concerned with the practice of cheating in MMORPGs and its consequences. In this paper we explore the economic dimensions of cheating in MMORPGs as they relate to the business activities of companies that offer cheating software, in particular programs called 'bots'. Specifically, we address the following question: "How do cheating practices shape economic interactions around MMORPGs?" We characterize the economy of cheating (as it is carried out by cheating companies) as an answer to breakdowns in the relationship between cheaters and cheating companies (Winograd and Flores, 1987; Akrich, 19...
http://eprints.nuim.ie/2418/
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"What matters more than white or black, east or west, is faith": the Sudanese writer, Leila Aboulela.
(2004)
Fallon, Helen
"What matters more than white or black, east or west, is faith": the Sudanese writer, Leila Aboulela.
(2004)
Fallon, Helen
Abstract:
This review article explores the life and writing of Sudanese writer Leila Aboulela.
http://eprints.nuim.ie/947/
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“Collaborative production” and the Irish boom: work organisation, partnership and direct involvement in Irish workplaces
(2000)
Roche, William K.; Geary, John F.
“Collaborative production” and the Irish boom: work organisation, partnership and direct involvement in Irish workplaces
(2000)
Roche, William K.; Geary, John F.
Abstract:
A significant strand of recent social-scientific writing on Ireland has assigned great importance to various forms of “collaborative production”: new forms of work organisation, partnership and direct employee involvement — even suggesting that their growing diffusion might have played a major role in Ireland’s exceptional economic performance during the 1990s. This paper draws on the University College Dublin national workplace survey of employee relations to present an assessment of the degree to which new modes of collaborative production have gained ground in Ireland during the 1990s. While collaborative production is undoubtedly significant in many Irish workplaces, “exclusionary” forms of decision-making are shown to dominate the postures of establishments towards the handling of change. Arguments pointing to the “transformation”, actual or imminent, of work practices and employment relations in Ireland are rejected. Change in Ireland is shown to have much in common with devel...
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/62651
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“Hearts with one purpose alone”? Thinking personal sustainability in social movements
(2009)
Cox, Laurence
“Hearts with one purpose alone”? Thinking personal sustainability in social movements
(2009)
Cox, Laurence
Abstract:
While attention is now being paid to emotions and personal sustainability in social movements, relatively little attention has been paid to difference between social movement situations or broader cultural contexts. This paper locates the question in the broader history of thinking about ordinary people’s political engagement since the French Revolution. It explores various literatures relating to the topic, arguing that emotional sustainability is only one aspect of personal sustainability in social movements. Using the example of WB Yeats’ response to the 1916 Easter Rising, it highlights the importance of locating this in place, time and culture. The paper offers a typological approach as a counter-strategy to the assumption of uniformity, focussing on difference in social situation, organising contexts and background cultures.
http://eprints.nuim.ie/1538/
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“Insufficient for the support of a family”: wages on the public works during the Great Irish Famine
(2004)
McGregor, Pat
“Insufficient for the support of a family”: wages on the public works during the Great Irish Famine
(2004)
McGregor, Pat
Abstract:
This paper presents a model of the money wage paid on the public works during the Irish Famine. The administrators are assumed to minimise a cost function that includes the divergence from the target as well as the increase compared to the wage that current information is available on. Estimation reveals a lag of four weeks existed between price changes occurring and adjustment to the money wages. Most seriously, the administrators systematically failed to take full account of the extent of price changes.
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/60517
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“Man the fisher”: salmon fishing and the expression of community in a rural Irish settlement
(1981)
Taylor, Lawrence J.
“Man the fisher”: salmon fishing and the expression of community in a rural Irish settlement
(1981)
Taylor, Lawrence J.
Abstract:
This paper analyzes the significance of the summer salmon fishery of Teelin, a small coastal settlement in county Donegal, Ireland. Although not of great economic importance to most Teelin families, the salmon pursuit is the subject of considerable cultural attention, providing a source of communal and personal identity. An explanation for the disproportionate cultural strength of the fishery is sought in its contribution to the maintenance of the local community as a bounded social entity in a region where historical disincorporations have made the existence and nature of such communities problematic. The ways in which the interactional and experiential aspects of this fishery contribute to Teelin’s “local culture” are examined as a sample case of the relation between any such socially definitive activity and the structure of a local system of social relations or ideology.
http://eprints.nuim.ie/2015/
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“New” and “old” social risks: life cycle and social class perspectives on social exclusion in Ireland
(2008)
Whelan, Christopher T.; Maitre, Bertrand
“New” and “old” social risks: life cycle and social class perspectives on social exclusion in Ireland
(2008)
Whelan, Christopher T.; Maitre, Bertrand
Abstract:
The life cycle concept has come to have considerable prominence in Irish social policy debate. However, this has occurred without any systematic effort to link its usage to the broader literature relating to the concept. Nor has there been any detailed consideration of how we should set about operationalising the concept. In this paper we argue the need for “macro” life cycle perspectives that have been influenced by recent challenges to the welfare state to be combined with “micro” perspectives focusing on the dynamic and multidimensional nature of social exclusion. We make use of Irish EU-SILC 2005 data in developing a life cycle schema and considering its relationship to a range of indicators of social exclusion. At the European level renewed interest in the life cycle concept is associated with the increasing emphasis on the distinction between “new” and “old” social risks and the notion that the former are more “individualised”. Inequality and poverty rather than being differen...
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/60843
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“The Cabinet of Irish Literature”: a Historical Perspective on Irish Anthologies
(2003)
Kelleher, Margaret
“The Cabinet of Irish Literature”: a Historical Perspective on Irish Anthologies
(2003)
Kelleher, Margaret
Abstract:
AMONG the flurry of reviews and commentaries that followed the publication of volumes I to III of the Field DayAnthology of lrish Writing in iggi, those of most enduring interest moved beyond the heat of the moment to a more general reflection on the role of anthologies themselves. Francis Mulhern's 1993 essay, "A Nation, Yet Again" began, for example, with the cautionary pronouncement, by then all too evident, that "[a]nthologies are strategic weapons in literary politics."' Mulhern acknowledged that "authored texts of all kinds-poems, novels, plays, reviews, analyses-play more or less telling parts in a theatre of shifting alliances and antagonisms," but he argued for the special rhetorical force of anthologies in their "simulation of self evidence."
http://eprints.nuim.ie/1954/
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“There are two things that people don’t like to hear about themselves”: the anthropology of Ireland and the Irish view of anthropology
(1996)
Taylor, Lawrence J.
“There are two things that people don’t like to hear about themselves”: the anthropology of Ireland and the Irish view of anthropology
(1996)
Taylor, Lawrence J.
Abstract:
My title is derived from a quip by the late John Maloney, a wise publican of southwest Donegal. The year was 1973, and we had been discussing the public relations problems of anthropologists in Ireland. No doubt exaggerating, he told me that, according to his sources, neither of two ethnographers of small islands off the west coast could safely return to his research site. I asked him about a rather technical kinship article by another anthropologist who had conducted fieldwork close by in west Donegal; surely that had not upset anyone? His answer: “There are two things that people don’t like to hear about themselves; one of them is lies and the other’s the truth.”
http://eprints.nuim.ie/2043/
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“Whether the white people like it or not ” Edmund Burke’s speeches on India - Caoineadh’s Cáinte 5/120
(2002)
O'Donnell, Katherine
“Whether the white people like it or not ” Edmund Burke’s speeches on India - Caoineadh’s Cáinte 5/120
(2002)
O'Donnell, Katherine
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/2458
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(1,3-Butadiynyl-C¹)(η⁵-cyclopentadienyl)(triphenylphosphine-P)nickel(II)
(1998)
Gallagher, John F.; Butler, Peter; Manning, Anthony R.
(1,3-Butadiynyl-C¹)(η⁵-cyclopentadienyl)(triphenylphosphine-P)nickel(II)
(1998)
Gallagher, John F.; Butler, Peter; Manning, Anthony R.
Abstract:
The title compound, [Ni(Cp)(PPh₃)(C≡C-C≡C-H)] or [Ni(C₄H)(C₅H₅)(C₁₈H₁₅P)], has metal-ligand dimensions of Ni--P 2.1410(4), Ni--C 1.8383 (15)Å and P--Ni--C 93.47 (5)°, and principal oalkyne dimensions of C≡C 1.212(2) and 1.187(3)Å, and C≡C-C 177.94(19) and 179.5(2)°. Intra- and intermolecular C--H...C≡C interactions are present with the shortest C...C distance being 3.198 Å.
http://doras.dcu.ie/290/
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(1'-Benzoylferrocenyl)diphenylmethanol; a Centrosymmetric R⁴₄(16) Dimer Generated by C-H...O Hydrogen Bonding
(1997)
Glidewell, Christopher; Ahmed, S. Zaka; Gallagher, John F.; Ferguson, George
(1'-Benzoylferrocenyl)diphenylmethanol; a Centrosymmetric R⁴₄(16) Dimer Generated by C-H...O Hydrogen Bonding
(1997)
Glidewell, Christopher; Ahmed, S. Zaka; Gallagher, John F.; Ferguson, George
Abstract:
In (1'-benzoylferrocenyl)diphenylmethanol, [(PhCOC₅H₄)Fe(C₅H₄)]CPh₂OH, (C₃₀H₂₄FeO₂), there is an intramolecular O-H...O hydrogen bond with O...O 2.891 (2) Å: the ferrocenyl unit adopts an eclipsed conformation and the molecules are linked into centrosymmetric dimers by C-H...O hydrogen bonds with C...O 3.357 (3) Å, to generate a cyclic R⁴₄(16) motif.
http://doras.dcu.ie/567/
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(1) The Statistical Abstract; (2) the 24th session of the International Institute of Statistics
(1939)
Lyon, Stanley
(1) The Statistical Abstract; (2) the 24th session of the International Institute of Statistics
(1939)
Lyon, Stanley
Abstract:
Some remarks may perhaps be expected in explanation of the two-fold title of my inaugural address. A consideration of the Statistical Abstract, which is a compendium not only of statistics published by the Department responsible for the statistical service of this country but of other Government Offices as well, should I think encourage such expressions of opinion not only on the Abstract itself but perhaps on Government statistical publications in general. My method has been to select certain of the more important figures which appear regularly in the Abstract, particularly to illustrate the principles and scope of the volume, but incidentally to indicate some of the great changes which have taken place in the economic and the social state of the country between the years 1926 and 1936, which happened to have been Census of Population years. As to the second part of this address, my object is simply to place on record a short account of the proceedings of the Twenty-fourth Sessi...
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/5181
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(1R,2R)-1,2-Diphenyl-1,2-ethanediamine monohydrobromide
(1992)
Ferguson, George; Gallagher, John F.; Fullwood, Russell; Parker, David
(1R,2R)-1,2-Diphenyl-1,2-ethanediamine monohydrobromide
(1992)
Ferguson, George; Gallagher, John F.; Fullwood, Russell; Parker, David
Abstract:
The cation in (1R,2R)- 1,2-diphenyl- 1,2-ethanediamine monohydrobromide has approximate twofold symmetry and is involved in a three-dimensional hydrogen-bond network with the bromide anion [H...Br 2.51 (4)-2.82(3), N...Br 3.279(2)-3.560(3) A]. Principal bond lengths include Csp3--Csp 3 1.535(4), Csp3--NH~ 1.489(3), Csp3--NH2 1.469(4), and Csp3--Car 1.517(3) and 1.528(3) A. The main torsion angles defining the conformation are NH~--Csp3--Csp3--NH2 -44.3(2) and Car--Csp3--Csp3--Car 64.3(2) °. The absolute stereochemistry (known on chemical grounds) was confirmed by the analysis.
http://doras.dcu.ie/3614/
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(1RS,2SR,7RS,8RS)-N-Benzoyltricyclo[6.2.2.0²,⁷]dodeca-9,11-diene-1,10-dicarboximide
(2005)
McSweeney, Nigel; Pratt, Albert C.; Long, Conor; Howie, R. Alan
(1RS,2SR,7RS,8RS)-N-Benzoyltricyclo[6.2.2.0²,⁷]dodeca-9,11-diene-1,10-dicarboximide
(2005)
McSweeney, Nigel; Pratt, Albert C.; Long, Conor; Howie, R. Alan
Abstract:
The title 1,4-photoadduct, C₂₁H₁₉NO₃, was formed on irradiation of N-benzoylphthalimide in dichloromethane containing cyclohexene. The bond lengths and angles are generally within the normal ranges. A notable feature of the molecule is the presence within it of four contiguous chiral centres.
http://doras.dcu.ie/116/
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(2,3,7,8,12,13,17,18-Octa-ethyl-5-phenyl-porphyrinato)platinum(II).
(2011)
SENGE, MATHIAS
(2,3,7,8,12,13,17,18-Octa-ethyl-5-phenyl-porphyrinato)platinum(II).
(2011)
SENGE, MATHIAS
Abstract:
The title compound, [Pt(C42H48N4)], was obtained through metallation of the corresponding free base with PtCl2, followed by crystallization from methylene chloride/methanol. The molecule exhibits an almost planar macrocycle with an average deviation of the 24 macrocyclic atoms from their least-squares plane (24) of 0.04 Å and an average Pt-N bond length of 2.022 Å. Despite the unsymmetrical substitution pattern, there is no significant difference between distortion of the geometry at the phenyl substituted meso position and those of unsubstituted meso positions.
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/60823
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(2RS)-3-(4-Hydroxyphenyl)-2-(1-oxo-1H-2,3-dihydroisoindol-2-yl)propanoic acid monohydrate
(2007)
Gallagher, John F.; Brady, Fiona
(2RS)-3-(4-Hydroxyphenyl)-2-(1-oxo-1H-2,3-dihydroisoindol-2-yl)propanoic acid monohydrate
(2007)
Gallagher, John F.; Brady, Fiona
Abstract:
The title compound, C₁₇H₁₅NO₄·H₂O, derived from DL-tyrosine crystallizes as an unusual hydrogen-bonded acid-monohydrate dimer. The asymmetric unit contains two organic molecules and two water molecules. Dimers link through (aryl)O-H...O=C hydrogen bonds along the [101] direction, forming a one-dimensional chain of rings, and further associated via inversion centres (forming a chain of rings aligned in the opposite direction) generating columns. Ruffled sheets arise from interlocking of isoindole rings via π-π(arene) stacking and C-H...π(arene) interactions; C-H...O interactions generate a three-dimensional network.
http://doras.dcu.ie/304/
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(2S)-4-Methyl-2-(1-oxo-1H-2,3-dihydroisoindol- 2-yl)pentanoic acid.
(2006)
Brady, Fiona; Gallagher, John F.
(2S)-4-Methyl-2-(1-oxo-1H-2,3-dihydroisoindol- 2-yl)pentanoic acid.
(2006)
Brady, Fiona; Gallagher, John F.
Abstract:
The title compound, C14H17NO3, exhibits carboxylic acid group disorder about the C—CO2 axis, with site occupancies of 0.79 (5):0.21 (5). Molecules are linked by intermolecular O—H O Ciso, C—H O Ciso and C—H (arene) interactions (iso = isoindolinone).
http://doras.dcu.ie/25/
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(5,15-Dianthracen-9-yl-10,20-dihexyl-porphyrinato)nickel(II): A planar nickel(II) porphyrin
(2010)
SENGE, MATHIAS
(5,15-Dianthracen-9-yl-10,20-dihexyl-porphyrinato)nickel(II): A planar nickel(II) porphyrin
(2010)
SENGE, MATHIAS
Abstract:
The title compound, [Ni(C60H52N4)], is an example of a meso tetrasubstituted nickel(II) porphyrin with both meso aryl and alkyl residues. The molecule exhibits a planar macrocycle with an average deviation of the 24 macrocycle atoms from their least-squares plane ([Delta]24) of 0.01 Å and an average Ni-N bond length of 1.960 (2) Å. The NiII atom lies on a center of inversion. The structure presents a rare example for a planar nickel(II) porphyrin, as meso-substituted nickel(II) porphyrins with either only meso-aryl or with meso-alkyl residues typically exhibit a ruffled conformation.
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/41236
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(Le)agility in Humanitarian Aid Supply Chains
(2010)
Scholten, Kirstin; Sharkey Scott, Pamela; Fynes, Brian
(Le)agility in Humanitarian Aid Supply Chains
(2010)
Scholten, Kirstin; Sharkey Scott, Pamela; Fynes, Brian
Abstract:
Purpose - This paper explores the concept of agility in the context of supply chains of humanitarian aid (HA) organizations, particularly Non Government Organizations (NGOs). This responds to the increasing pressure on NGOs to use their resources more strategically if they are to gain donor trust and long term commitment. Design/ Methodology/Approach - A literature based approach that extends the commercial supply chain concept of agility to NGOs is combined with the first exploratory semi structured interviews of these concepts with five NGO supply chain directors. Findings – The commercial concept of agility when responding to disaster relief holds strong potential for increasing efficiency and effectiveness, but this application is restrained by the absence of supporting Information Technology (IT) and the relegation of supply chain management (SCM) to the ‘back office’ by NGOs. This has potential implications for NGOs and other humanitarian aid agencies. Research Limitations - ...
http://arrow.dit.ie/buschmanart/3
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(Re)placing the new urbanism debates: towards an interdisciplinary research agenda
(2001)
Falconer Al-Hindi, Karen; Till, Karen E.
(Re)placing the new urbanism debates: towards an interdisciplinary research agenda
(2001)
Falconer Al-Hindi, Karen; Till, Karen E.
Abstract:
New Urbanism (NU) is a complex planning paradigm and social movement that has recently become influential in planning, residential development, and government housing circles. To introduce this special issue on NU, we describe the history and important figures of the movement and provide a brief literature review of popular, academic, and professional presses. Because NU is a multifaceted phenomenon, we advocate an interdisciplinary approach to understanding it, one that would promote constructive dialogue and a range of perspectives (and choices) within and between disciplines, professions, and communities. From the vantage point of the academic community (in particular, geography), we argue that various theoretical and methodological perspectives can contribute to a more progressive understanding and implementation of NU practices at various scales. We conclude by outlining three areas for future research: documenting how NU is understood and implemented by urban professionals, an...
http://eprints.nuim.ie/2728/
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(S)-N-(1-Benzyl-2-hydroxyethyl)phthalamic acid
(2005)
McCormac, Paul B.; Pratt, Albert C.; Long, Conor; Howie, R. Alan
(S)-N-(1-Benzyl-2-hydroxyethyl)phthalamic acid
(2005)
McCormac, Paul B.; Pratt, Albert C.; Long, Conor; Howie, R. Alan
Abstract:
A feature of the structure of the title compound, C₁₇H₁₇NO₄, is the three-dimensional connectivity generated by intermolecular hydrogen bonds.
http://doras.dcu.ie/84/
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(η5-Cyclopentadienyl)(2-naphthylethynyl)(triphenylphosphine-κP)nickel(II)
(2007)
Butler, Peter; Gallagher, John F.; Lough, Alan J.; Manning, Anthony R.
(η5-Cyclopentadienyl)(2-naphthylethynyl)(triphenylphosphine-κP)nickel(II)
(2007)
Butler, Peter; Gallagher, John F.; Lough, Alan J.; Manning, Anthony R.
Abstract:
The title compound, [Ni(C₅H₅)(C₁₂H₇)(C₁₈H₁₅P)], does not contain strong hydrogen-bond donors or acceptors and the primary interactions are limited to those of the weak C-H...π(arene) type and mainly involving the arene rings.
http://doras.dcu.ie/305/
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(η⁵-Cyclopentadienyl){[3-(2,2-dicyanoethenyl)bicyclo[2.2.1]hepta-2,5-dien-2-yl]ethynyl}(triphenylphosphine)nickel(II)
(2008)
Gallagher, John F.; Butler, Peter; Manning, Anthony R.
(η⁵-Cyclopentadienyl){[3-(2,2-dicyanoethenyl)bicyclo[2.2.1]hepta-2,5-dien-2-yl]ethynyl}(triphenylphosphine)nickel(II)
(2008)
Gallagher, John F.; Butler, Peter; Manning, Anthony R.
Abstract:
The title compound, [Ni(C₅H₅)(C₁₃H₇N₂)(C₁₈H₁₅P)] or (η⁵- C₅H₅)(PPh₃)Ni—C C—C₇H₆—C(H) C(CN)₂, contains an unusual disubstituted norbornadienyl (NBD) ligand containing ethynyl (–C C–) and dicyanovinyl [–C(H) C(CN)₂] groups. Disorder is present in the NBD group with site occupancies of 0.636 (10) and 0.364 (10) for two distinct orientations. There are no strong hydrogen bonds and the primary interactions are weak C—H...π(arene) interactions.
http://doras.dcu.ie/202/
Displaying Results 76 - 100 of 9932 on page 4 of 398
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