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19510 items found
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Displaying Results 26 - 50 of 19510 on page 2 of 781
Marked
Mark
Bibliography of Irish Geography: 1987-1991
(1992)
Killen, James E.; Smyth, William J.
Bibliography of Irish Geography: 1987-1991
(1992)
Killen, James E.; Smyth, William J.
Abstract:
This report has been prepared under the auspices of the Royal Irish Academy's National Committee for Geography, a body which includes representatives of all university level geography departments in both the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland. The various colleges of education, the Irish Ordnance Survey, the Ordnance Survey (Northern Ireland), the Agriculture Institute and the Irish Planning Institute are represented also on the Committee. The primary purpose of the report is to communicate the diversity of the writings of geographers in Ireland for the period between the Sydney (1988) and Washington (1992) I.G.U. Congresses, but as this is the first such report to Congress the opportunity has been taken to include a brief review of the history of the departments of geography in Ireland. the report lists the publications of geographers employed in Ireland during the period 1987-1991 (Part Four) and includes a directory of existing geography departments and their current s...
http://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/4006/
Marked
Mark
Local Irish Names of Fishes
(1946)
Farran, G.
Local Irish Names of Fishes
(1946)
Farran, G.
Abstract:
A localised translation of common Irish fishes names into Irish, compiled by G. P. Farran.
http://hdl.handle.net/10793/1604
Marked
Mark
Proceedings of the Fourth Irish Marine Biotoxin Science Workshop
(2003)
Marine Institute; Bord Iascaigh Mhara; Irish Shellfish Association; Food Safety Authori...
Proceedings of the Fourth Irish Marine Biotoxin Science Workshop
(2003)
Marine Institute; Bord Iascaigh Mhara; Irish Shellfish Association; Food Safety Authority of Ireland
Abstract:
The workshop is part of the Marine Institute’s role as the National Reference Laboratory for Marine Biotoxins in Ireland. This workshop is an annual event, where scientists, regulators and shellfish farmers meet to review developments in the monitoring and research of Biotoxins in Ireland and internationally. Our specific objectives for the 2003 Workshop are: (1) Review the Irish Biotoxin Monitoring system and to assess the trends in toxicity during 2003; (2) Summarise current Irish research work in Harmful Algal Blooms and Phytoplankton; (3) Focus on research work in Killary Harbour under the BOHAB project; (4) Take stock of developments and provide a forum for debate/feedback.
http://hdl.handle.net/10793/586
Marked
Mark
Farmers, agriculture and politics in the Irish Free State area, 1919-1936
(2005)
Ryan, Raymond
Farmers, agriculture and politics in the Irish Free State area, 1919-1936
(2005)
Ryan, Raymond
Abstract:
Given the economic and social importance of agriculture in the early years of the Irish Free State, it is surprising that the development of organisations representing farmers has not received the attention it deserves from historians. While the issues of government agricultural policy and the land question have been extensively studied in the historiography, the autonomous response by farmers to agricultural policies and the detailed study of the farmers’ organisations has simply been ignored in spite of the existence of a range of relevant primary sources. Farmers’ organisations have only received cursory treatment in these studies; they have been presented as passive spectators, responding in a Pavlovian manner to outside events. The existing historiography has only studied farmers’ organisations during periods when they impinged on national politics, epecially during the War of Independence and the Economic War. Therefore chronological gaps exist which has led to much misinterpr...
http://hdl.handle.net/10468/1600
Marked
Mark
Effect of the 2008 economic crisis on the cardiovascular mortality of the Irish population: an ecological 12-year study of a heart-broken Celtic Tiger.
(2017)
Osman, Mugtaba; Osman, A
Effect of the 2008 economic crisis on the cardiovascular mortality of the Irish population: an ecological 12-year study of a heart-broken Celtic Tiger.
(2017)
Osman, Mugtaba; Osman, A
Abstract:
<p>The original article is available at www.imj.ie</p>
<p>Ireland has endured a substantial financial crisis in 2008 and we sought to explore the effect of economic recession on Irish cardiovascular mortality. We found an increase by 17.2% in CVA-deaths during the financial crisis years (95% CI 11.1% to 23.6%). In males, we found a notable rise in the annual IHD rate by 7.56% (95% CI 4.73% to 10.46%), in annual MI rate by 2.96% (95% CI 0.16% to 5.84%), and in annual CVA death rate by 20.07% (95% CI 16.13% to 24.14%). In females our findings indicated an increased rate of CVA-related deaths during the economic crisis by 15.54% (95% CI 6.67% to 25.16%). Irish CVA-related deaths increased during the economic crisis for males and females alike. Male IHD-related deaths have also risen indicating a potential differential effect for financial hardships on male gender mortality.</p>
https://epubs.rcsi.ie/psychart/49
Marked
Mark
J. J. O'Connell's memoir of the Irish Volunteers, 1914-16, 1917
(2016)
Ó Corráin, Daithí
J. J. O'Connell's memoir of the Irish Volunteers, 1914-16, 1917
(2016)
Ó Corráin, Daithí
Abstract:
No one had a longer high-ranking association with the Irish Volunteers and successor Irish armed forces than Jeremiah Joseph O’Connell, better known as ‘J. J.’ or ‘Ginger’ O’Connell. His unpublished memoir of his Volunteer activities is particularly valuable because it addresses the crucial period from the split in 1914 to the Rising, a timespan not well illuminated in the witness statements collected by the Bureau of Military History (BMH) between 1947 and 1957. The memoir gives a unique insight to the challenges of rebuilding the Volunteers after the split in September 1914 and moulding them into a properly disciplined and uniformly trained body with a capacity, should the need arrive, for meaningful military action
http://doras.dcu.ie/22048/
Marked
Mark
The Prevalence of Severe Sepsis or Septic Shock in an Irish Emergency Department.
(2018)
McNevin, Ciara; McDowell, Dermot; Fitzpatrick, Fidelma; O'Sullivan, R; Wakai, Abel
The Prevalence of Severe Sepsis or Septic Shock in an Irish Emergency Department.
(2018)
McNevin, Ciara; McDowell, Dermot; Fitzpatrick, Fidelma; O'Sullivan, R; Wakai, Abel
Abstract:
<p>The original article is available at www.imj.ie</p>
<p>Severe sepsis and septic shock are among the leading causes of death globally. Despite the central role the emergency department (ED) plays in the early identification of patients presenting to hospital with sepsis, the prevalence of severe sepsis and septic shock in the Irish ED setting has not been described. The primary aim of this study was to measure the prevalence of severe sepsis or septic shock in an Irish adult ED setting. The clinical records of patients presenting to the ED over a four-week period were retrospectively reviewed to determine if they met the current Health Service Executive (HSE) criteria for severe sepsis or septic shock. Overall, 3,585 adult patients attended the ED during the study period, with 42 patients meeting the criteria for severe sepsis or septic shock. The ED prevalence of severe sepsis or septic shock was 11.7 patients (95% CI 8.1 – 15.4%) per 1000 ED attendances.<...
https://epubs.rcsi.ie/gpart/120
Marked
Mark
The prevalence of severe sepsis or septic shock in an Irish emergency department
(2018)
McNevin, Ciara; McDowell, Dermot; Fitzpatrick, Fidelma; O'Sullivan, Ronan; Wakai, ...
The prevalence of severe sepsis or septic shock in an Irish emergency department
(2018)
McNevin, Ciara; McDowell, Dermot; Fitzpatrick, Fidelma; O'Sullivan, Ronan; Wakai, Abel
Abstract:
Severe sepsis and septic shock are among the leading causes of death globally. Despite the central role the emergency department (ED) plays in the early identification of patients presenting to hospital with sepsis, the prevalence of severe sepsis and septic shock in the Irish ED setting has not been described. The primary aim of this study was to measure the prevalence of severe sepsis or septic shock in an Irish adult ED setting. The clinical records of patients presenting to the ED over a four-week period were retrospectively reviewed to determine if they met the current Health Service Executive (HSE) criteria for severe sepsis or septic shock. Overall, 3,585 adult patients attended the ED during the study period, with 42 patients meeting the criteria for severe sepsis or septic shock. The ED prevalence of severe sepsis or septic shock was 11.7 patients (95% CI 8.1 – 15.4%) per 1000 ED attendances.
http://hdl.handle.net/10468/5566
Marked
Mark
The Book of Ballymote and the Irish book
(2018)
Ó Macháin, Pádraig
The Book of Ballymote and the Irish book
(2018)
Ó Macháin, Pádraig
Abstract:
An analysis of the history, composition and collation of an Irish manuscript of the fourteenth century.
http://hdl.handle.net/10468/7071
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Mark
We must guarantee a genuine Irish welcome for our returning diaspora (Pre-published version)
(2012)
Scully, Marc
We must guarantee a genuine Irish welcome for our returning diaspora (Pre-published version)
(2012)
Scully, Marc
Abstract:
We must guarantee a genuine Irish welcome for our returning diaspora
http://hdl.handle.net/10395/2447
Marked
Mark
'Turns wick low': Samuel Beckett's darkening vision and an Irish county (Pre-published Version)
(2017)
Clare, David
'Turns wick low': Samuel Beckett's darkening vision and an Irish county (Pre-published Version)
(2017)
Clare, David
Abstract:
'Turns wick low': Samuel Beckett's darkening vision and an Irish county
http://hdl.handle.net/10395/2265
Marked
Mark
Religion as factor in Irish town formation
(2018)
Swift, Catherine
Religion as factor in Irish town formation
(2018)
Swift, Catherine
Abstract:
Religion as factor in Irish town formation.
http://hdl.handle.net/10395/2778
Marked
Mark
Riverdance: Representing Irish Traditional Music
(2009)
Scahill, Adrian
Riverdance: Representing Irish Traditional Music
(2009)
Scahill, Adrian
Abstract:
As the archetypal example of the globalization and commodification of Ireland and Irish culture, Riverdance can justly be described as one of the emblems for the now rapidly fading Celtic Tiger. The show also was arguably one of the primary catalysts in the transformation of Irish traditional music from a primarily geographically (and ethnically) situated music into what Mark Slobin has described as an “affinity interculture.” Now, participation in the music is governed by choice, and the possibility of “becoming Irish music” is open to all. This connection between the show and the tradition has been utilized and emphasized in a range of contexts, from tourist promotional literature5 to academic course descriptions and writing.6 The link with tradition has also been adverted to by its composer Bill Whelan himself.7 In the show’s promotional material, Sam Smyth’s description of Riverdance as a “two-hour celebration of traditionalmusic and dance” appears to conflate the two.8 In the s...
http://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/1562/
Marked
Mark
Babel's Suburbs: Irish Verse Translation in the 1980's
(1991)
Cronin, Michael
Babel's Suburbs: Irish Verse Translation in the 1980's
(1991)
Cronin, Michael
Abstract:
Miklos Vadja, editor of the New Hungarian Quarterly and a distinguished translator, spoke to the Irish Translators' Association in 1987 on the essential paradox of Verse translation: "To believe in the possibility and viability of verse translation means, therefore, to acknowledge the paradox that a poem can lose its language and form, and then have the core of its non-lingual poetic substance, with most of its lost linguistic, cultural, prosodic, and other qualities coded into it, grafted onto another language, like some vital internal organ, with a certain hope for survival. "Translation is a paradox that Irish Writers have willingly embraced in the 1980s and one of the most striking literary phenomena of the decade has been the upsurge in verse translation.
http://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/835/
Marked
Mark
Edward Said and Irish Criticism
(2007)
McCarthy, Conor
Edward Said and Irish Criticism
(2007)
McCarthy, Conor
Abstract:
The work of Edward Said has been influential on a global scale, in a manner that very few scholars can ever hope to match. It can safely be asserted that no anti-imperialist writer since Frantz Fanon has successfully addressed so many audiences. This essay traces the response to Said’s work, including but not only his most famous work, Orientalism, in Irish criticism and debates over the last three decades.We will see, in the work of Said’s allies and emulators, and that of his detractors, a number of variations, turns, adaptations, and inflections on Said’s own books and essays. Surveying the archive of responses to Said is valuable in itself, but it also provides a barometer of Irish intellectual engagement with wider international geo-political issues and historical shifts.
http://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/11443/
Marked
Mark
Towards a Better Future: A Review of the Irish School System
(2017)
Coolahan, John; Drudy, Sheelagh; Hogan, Padraig; McGuiness, Seamus
Towards a Better Future: A Review of the Irish School System
(2017)
Coolahan, John; Drudy, Sheelagh; Hogan, Padraig; McGuiness, Seamus
Abstract:
Irish schooling faces significant challenges into the future. Ireland’s is not a perfect system, no more than any other schooling system in the world. While perfection is not achievable, it is incumbent on every society to apply its best efforts to ensuring that the school system is as good as possible so that that this and future generations are assisted at achieving their potentials. The thirteen chapters of this Review paint a very creditable picture of how Irish schooling policy and provision has been evolving and of the manner in which this is being achieved. The various stakeholders and educational partners, in this small island state, have focussed constructively in establishing the present structure. Each of the categories reviewed indicates that Ireland’s educational system is on the cusp of major attempts at reform. Building on a range of accumulated achievements, it is poised for qualitative breakthroughs on a range of fronts. The thirteen chapters consist of the followin...
http://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/10001/
Marked
Mark
Emergent Issues in Ethnic Youth Studies: A Historical and Ethnographic Study of the Vietnamese- Irish Experience
(2007)
Maguire, Mark
Emergent Issues in Ethnic Youth Studies: A Historical and Ethnographic Study of the Vietnamese- Irish Experience
(2007)
Maguire, Mark
Abstract:
This article traces the history of the Vietnamese-Irish minority ethnic community from their initial resettlement to the present day. Attention is paid to the structural dimensions of resettlement and the pattern of integration that emerged. The central focus is the second and third-generation Vietnamese-Irish. Through an analysis of schooling, family, identity and work/home life I suggest what life is like for minority young people in this context.However, the article aims beyond the specifics of the case study.The broader question is: what can we learn about ethnic minority youth issues in Ireland today through a close, longitudinal and ethnographic exploration of the Vietnamese-Irish example?
http://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/8354/
Marked
Mark
Learning from Minority: Exploring Irish Protestant Experience
(2015)
Walsh, Tony
Learning from Minority: Exploring Irish Protestant Experience
(2015)
Walsh, Tony
Abstract:
This paper, based on a narrative research inquiry, presents and explores a number of stories relating to the experience and identity of members of the small Irish Protestant minority. Drawing on these stories it uses Foucault‟s conceptualisation of power and discourse to consider community, social withdrawal, and two different but linked expressions of silence as acts of resistance. These were simultaneously utilised to preserve a culture and ethos diametrically opposed to the religious and political hegemony of the Irish Catholic state and to combat the threat of extinction. The article concludes that an exploration of Ireland‟s traditional religious minority not only raises awareness concerning a specific group‟s experience but extends an understanding of the issues with which minorities (in more general terms) may have to cope in order to survive.
http://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/7835/
Marked
Mark
Nuclear accents in four Irish (Gaelic) dialects
(2007)
NI CHASAIDE, AILBHE
Nuclear accents in four Irish (Gaelic) dialects
(2007)
NI CHASAIDE, AILBHE
Abstract:
In this paper the distribution of nuclear accents in declaratives of four major dialects of Irish is described. The findings show considerable variation, particular between northern and southern dialects. Speakers of the northern dialect of Donegal show a propensity for rising nuclear accents (L*+H) in declaratives, while speakers of the other, more southern, dialects of Mayo, South Connaught and Kerry Irish show a preference for falling nuclear (H*+L) accents. The findings are compared with results for varieties of English.
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/39402
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Mark
Negotiating boundaries in Irish step-dance performance practice: Colin Dunne and piano one (i)
(2010)
Foley, Catherine E.
Negotiating boundaries in Irish step-dance performance practice: Colin Dunne and piano one (i)
(2010)
Foley, Catherine E.
Abstract:
The cultural construction of Irish step dance embodies diverse performative meanings: meanings which are shared by different communities of step dancers. From informal, improvisatory performances to formal, stylised and highly structured performances, step dance adapts, is adapted and appropriated to give meaning and kinaesthetic expression to both the individual step dancer and the group within these diverse dance communities. In this paper I look at notions of conceptual and aesthetic boundaries in Irish competitive step dance and at how step dancers attempt at negotiating these boundaries.
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/4297
Marked
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Irish Medical Students’ Understanding of the Intern Year
(2016)
Gouda, Pishoy; Kitt, Kevin; Evans, David S; Goggin, Deirdre; McGrath, Deirdre; Last, Ja...
Irish Medical Students’ Understanding of the Intern Year
(2016)
Gouda, Pishoy; Kitt, Kevin; Evans, David S; Goggin, Deirdre; McGrath, Deirdre; Last, Jason; Hennessy, Martina; Arnett, Richard; O'Flynn, Siun; Dunne, Fidelma PM; O'Donovan, Diarmuid
Abstract:
<p>The original article is available at www.imj.ie</p>
<p>Upon completion of medical school in Ireland, graduates must make the transition to becoming interns. The transition into the intern year may be described as challenging as graduates assume clinical responsibilities. Historically, a survey of interns in 1996 found that 91% felt unprepared for their role. However, recent surveys in 2012 have demonstrated that this is changing with preparedness rates reaching 52%. This can be partially explained by multiple initiatives at the local and national level. Our study aimed evaluate medical student understanding of the intern year and associated factors. An online, cross-sectional survey was sent out to all Irish medical students in 2013 and included questions regarding their understanding of the intern year. Two thousand, two hundred and forty-eight students responded, with 1224 (55.4%) of students agreeing or strongly agreeing that they had a good understanding...
https://epubs.rcsi.ie/mededart/9
Marked
Mark
There was none died around here with hunger in the Famine : oral traditions of the Great Irish Famine
(2003)
Brennan, Laura
There was none died around here with hunger in the Famine : oral traditions of the Great Irish Famine
(2003)
Brennan, Laura
Abstract:
THESIS 7194.1
THESIS 7194.2
This thesis is an examination of seven oral tradition reports, resulting from the distribution of the Famine questionnaire, by the Irish Folklore Commission, in 1945. The aim is to assess the validity of oral tradition as a source on the Great Irish Famine. The seven reports are analysed and compared with other relevant sources, including relief commission papers, outrage reports, contemporary newspapers, travellers? accounts, estate records and contemporary writings. The study includes statistical tables classifying the oral tradition references by content. The seven chapters encompass seven different aspects of the Famine, covered in the reports. The introduction examines the ethodological issues concerning oral sources, particularly oral tradition. It also provides information on the collection of the oral tradition reports. Finally, it introduces an outline of previous work on the subject. Chapter one examines oral tradition references to pre-...
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/76999
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What Proportion of Patients Meet the Criteria for Uncomplicated Sepsis in an Irish Emergency Department?
(2016)
McNevin, C; McDowell, Ronald; Fitzpatrick, Fidelma; Gilligan, Peadar; Wakai, Abel
What Proportion of Patients Meet the Criteria for Uncomplicated Sepsis in an Irish Emergency Department?
(2016)
McNevin, C; McDowell, Ronald; Fitzpatrick, Fidelma; Gilligan, Peadar; Wakai, Abel
Abstract:
<p>The original article is available at www.imj.ie</p>
<p><em>Emergency medicine plays a central role in the early recognition of patients presenting to hospital with sepsis. However, the epidemiology of sepsis in the Irish Emergency Department (ED) setting has not been described. The primary aim of this study was to determine the proportion of adult ED patients who meet the current criteria for uncomplicated sepsis. This cross-sectional study was performed in the ED of Beaumont Hospital, Dublin. The clinical records of all patients presenting to the ED over a four-week period were retrospectively screened to determine if they met the current Health Service Executive (HSE) criteria for uncomplicated sepsis. Overall, 3,585 adult patients attended the ED during the study period, with 152 patients meeting the criteria for uncomplicated sepsis. The proportion of ED patients who met the criteria for uncomplicated sepsis was 4.24% (95% CI 3.57-4.91%).</em>...
https://epubs.rcsi.ie/gpart/99
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The triangular sign, a useful diagnostic marker for biliary atresia: A case series of three Irish infants.
(2018)
Smith, Aisling; Shankar, A; Collins, A; Tarrant, A; Boyle, Michael A
The triangular sign, a useful diagnostic marker for biliary atresia: A case series of three Irish infants.
(2018)
Smith, Aisling; Shankar, A; Collins, A; Tarrant, A; Boyle, Michael A
Abstract:
<p>The original article is available at <a href="http://imj.ie/">www.imj.ie</a></p>
<p><strong>Background</strong></p> <p>The triangular cord (TC) sign is the appearance of a triangular shaped echogenic density visualised immediately cranial to the portal vein bifurcation on ultrasonographic examination. Several studies have reported that this ultrasonographic sign is a reliable and helpful marker in identifying Biliary Atresia (BA). Aims To report the identification of the TC sign in three infants with BA in the Rotunda Hospital, Dublin. Methods A retrospective chart review was performed to evaluate the clinical presentation and imaging of the three patients with positive TC sign and BA. Discussion Timely, accurate diagnosis of BA is essential to minimise morbidity and optimise patient outcome. The TC is a valuable ultrasonographic sign to aid early diagnosis of BA. © 2018, Irish Medical Association. All rights res...
https://epubs.rcsi.ie/paedart/11
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A Cross-Sectional Study of Antibiotic Prescribing for Childhood Upper Respiratory Tract Infections in Irish General Practice
(2018)
Maguire, Fiachra; Murphy, Mark E; Rourke, M; Morgan, F; Brady, G; Byrne, E; O’Callaghan...
A Cross-Sectional Study of Antibiotic Prescribing for Childhood Upper Respiratory Tract Infections in Irish General Practice
(2018)
Maguire, Fiachra; Murphy, Mark E; Rourke, M; Morgan, F; Brady, G; Byrne, E; O’Callaghan, Michael E
Abstract:
<p>The original article is available at <a href="http://imj.ie/">www.imj.ie </a></p>
<p>Introduction This study aimed to analyse antibiotic prescribing in cases of upper respiratory tract infection (URTI) in children under 6 years attending Irish daytime and out-of-hours General Practice (GP) services. There have been large scale changes in entitlements for free GP care for this group in recent years. Methods A cross-sectional study of children under 6 years with URTI presentations was performed, over a two-week period for three years from 2015 to 2017. Factors associated with antibiotic prescription and preferred antibiotic compliance were examined using multivariate logistic regression. Results 1,007 Under-6 patients presented with an URTI in our sample over the study period. Following introduction of free GP care, patients were 50% less likely to receive an antibiotic prescription. Overall antibiotic prescribing fell from 70% to 50% in ...
https://epubs.rcsi.ie/gpart/128
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