Refine
Year of publication
- 2010 (2875) (remove)
Document Type
- Article (1009)
- Doctoral Thesis (378)
- Part of Periodical (340)
- Book (338)
- Part of a Book (264)
- Review (145)
- Contribution to a Periodical (144)
- Working Paper (84)
- Report (71)
- Conference Proceeding (31)
Language
- German (1762)
- English (856)
- mis (105)
- Portuguese (62)
- French (32)
- Croatian (29)
- Multiple languages (12)
- Italian (7)
- dut (3)
- Spanish (3)
Keywords
- Mosambik (114)
- Mozambique (114)
- Moçambique (113)
- Filmmusik (96)
- Deutsch (80)
- Christentum (65)
- Bibel (63)
- bible (63)
- christianity (63)
- Literatur (48)
Institute
- Extern (316)
- Medizin (295)
- Präsidium (235)
- Gesellschaftswissenschaften (99)
- Biowissenschaften (98)
- Biochemie und Chemie (97)
- Physik (87)
- Geschichtswissenschaften (68)
- Geowissenschaften (59)
- Wirtschaftswissenschaften (55)
Heft 9 von WLN (Waldökologie, Landschaftsforschung und Naturschutz – Forest Ecology, Landscape Research and Nature Conservation) bietet ein breites, facettenreiches Themenspektrum aus den Bereichen Standorts- und Vegetationskunde, Modellierung, Biodiversitätsforschung sowie Artenschutz. In der neuen Ausgabe werden einmal mehr vielseitige Möglichkeiten aufgezeigt, aktuellen Fragestellungen im In- und Ausland mit innovativen Methodenansätzen nachzugehen.
Das Untersuchungsgebiet wurde ausgewählt, da die Harpener Teiche eine lokale Kuriosität darstellen. Sie wurden einst als Klärteiche für die Bergbauabwässer der nahegelegenen Zeche Robert Müser genutzt. Heute dient der Schacht der zentralen Wasserhaltung. Hier wird Grubenwasser gehoben und in die Harpener Teiche geleitet, damit die Grubenbaue der weit entfernten Zechen, in denen heute noch Kohle gefördert wird, nicht unkontrolliert voll laufen. Das Grubenwasser enthält gelöste Mineralien, welche die grauweißen Ablagerungen im Bereich des Ausflusses bilden und das Wasser türkisblau färben.
Die Einleitung des salzhaltigen Wassers bedingte früher das Auftreten einiger Halophyten (salztolerante Pflanzenarten, vgl. GALHOFF & KAPLAN 1983), die aber heute aufgrund von Sukzession (natürliche Entwicklung) verschwunden sind. Die direkte Umgebung der Harpener Teiche zeichnet sich außerdem durch verschiedene heimische und gebietsfremde Gehölzarten auf. Die Nähe zum Siedlungsbereich führt zum Auftreten einiger interessanter, nicht einheimischer Pflanzen, die durch den Menschen eingeführt bzw. abgelagert wurden (Adventivarten, Gartenmüll). Zu diesem engeren Untersuchungsgebiet (Gebiet 1), in dem auch die zentrale Anlaufstation bzw. der Infostand eingerichtet wurde, wurde außerdem aus Gründen der Strukturvielfalt die Industriebrache der ehmaligen Zeche Robert Müser (Gebiet 2) und der Bereich der Halde mit einem Teil des Geländes der ehemaligen Zeche Amalie (Gebiet 3) miteinbezogen.
Im Folgenden werden für den Bochum-Herner Raum bemerkenswerte Pflanzenfunde aus dem Jahr 2009 aufgeführt. Zur besseren Auswertung wurden hinter den Fundorten die MTB-Angaben
(Topographische Karte 1:25.000) angegeben und ggf. eine Bewertung des
floristischen Status sowie eine Bewertung des Fundes für den hiesigen Raum.
Gesucht: Der Ursprung des Lebens : Internationales Symposium zur Evolution von Transportproteinen
(2010)
Dinteria : Nr. 31, 2009/2010
(2010)
This work provides an overview of Nigerian Christianity. it covers issues such as Pentecostalism, Charismatism, gender dynamics, Muslim-Christian relations, and the arts and performance in Christian traditions as they are transforming contemporary Nigerian society. While focussing on contemporary Christianity, these essays also reflect on Nigeria's history and cultural traditions. Understanding and interpreting the events covered in the essays will enable us to envision the nation's future.
This volume presents comprehensive case studies on various topics in Religious Studies. It aims at bringing about the dynamics of change and innovations that characterise the study of religions in contemporary Nigerian society. The work focusses on Biblical Studies, Church History, Islamic Studies and African Traditional Religions.
The ongoing crisis in Zimbabwe has led to an unprecedented exodus of over a million desperate people from all strata of Zimbabwean society. The Zimbabwean diaspora is now truly global in extent. Yet rather than turning their backs on Zimbabwe, most maintain very close links with the country, returning often and remitting billions of dollars each year. Zimbabwe's Exodus. Crisis, Migration, Survival is written by leading migration scholars many from the Zimbabwean diaspora. The book explores the relationship between Zimbabwe's economic and political crisis and migration as a survival strategy. The book includes personal stories of ordinary Zimbabweans living and working in other countries, who describe the hotility and xenophobia they often experience.
The bed, dressed in hand sewn quilt or threadbare blanket, may in and of itself be memorable, but it is what happens in the bed - the sex and lovemaking, the dreams, the reading, the nightmares, the rest, giving birth and dying - which give 'bed' special meaning. Whether a bed is shared with a book, a child, a pet or a partner, whether lovers lie in ecstasy or indifference, whether 'bed' relates to intimacy or betrayal, it is memories and recollections of 'bed', in whatever form, which have triggered the writing of these thirty stories by women from southern Africa. Well known writers Joanne Fedler, Sarah Lotz, Arja Salafranca, Rosemund Handler and Liesl Jobson will delight, but you will discover here new writers from Botswana, Zimbabwe, Mozambique, Malawi, Namibia and Zambia, each with a unique voice as they cast light on the intimate lives of women living in this part of the world and the possibilities that are both available to and denied them. The BED BOOK of short stories - some quirky and tender, others traumatic or macabre - is the perfect companion to take to bed with you, to keep you reading long into the night.
The book interrogates the relationship between democracy and development and how underdevelopment prevents citizens from participating in democracy. Section One is a collection of experts' writing on key issues such as the single-party state; development policy; poverty, inequality and growth; the institutions of governance; the public service; and the role of civil society. Section Two, Idasa's Democracy Index 2010, releases Idasa's findings on Participation, Elections, Accountability, Political Freedom, Human Dignity and Democracy. The third in Idasa's Democracy Index series, this book argues that democracy needs economic development along with an embedded system of institutions, supported by active citizens and a vibrant political culture.
Since the collapse of apartheid, there have been major increases in migration flows within, to and from the Southern African region. Cross-border movements are at an all-time high across the region and internal migration is at record levels. The implications of greater mobility for areas of origin and destination have not been systematically explored. Migration is most often seen as a negative phenomenon, a result of increased poverty and the failure of development. More recently, the positive relationship between migration and development has been emphasised by agencies such as the Global Commission on International Migration, the Global Forum on Migration and Development, the United Nations Development Programme and the African Union. The chapters in this publication are all based on primary research and examine various facets of the relationship between migration, poverty and development, including issues that are often ignored in the migration-development debate like migration and food security and migration and vulnerability to HIV. The book argues that the development and poverty reduction potential of migration is being hindered by national policies that fail to recognise and build on the positive aspects and potential of migration. As a result, as these studies show, migrants are often pushed to the margins where they are forced to 'survive on the move'. Their treatment violates labour laws and basic human rights and compromises the potential of migration as a means to create sustainable livelihoods, reduce poverty and food insecurity, mitigate the brain drain and promote the productive use of remittances. This book shows that migrant lives and livelihoods should be at the centre of international and African debates about migration, poverty and development.
Social Accountability in Africa: Practitioners' Experiences and Lessons is a collection of case studies from Africa on social accountability. This collection attempts to build a consolidated body of knowledge on social accountability efforts across the continent. The case studies are diverse and present unique approaches to how social accountability strategies and interventions are implemented within different countries. The book is written by practitioners, for practitioners, providing first hand experience of designing and implementing social accountability initiatives and the challenges, methods and successes each one presents.
The relationship between migration, development and remittances in Lesotho has been exhaustively studied for the period up to 1990. This was an era when the vast majority of migrants from Lesotho were young men working on the South African gold mines and over 50 percent of households had a migrant mineworker. Since 1990, patterns of migration to South Africa have changed dramatically. The reconfiguration of migration between the two countries has had a marked impact on remittance flows to Lesotho. The central question addressed in this report is how the change in patterns of migration from and within Lesotho since 1990 has impacted on remittance flows and usage.
To many young people, the term sport has an exhilarating ring; to many older persons, it signifies recreation and leisure. From colonial times, it has been viewed as a means of social control. Increasingly, it is being touted by governments and donor agencies as a self-evident tool of Africa's development. How accurate are these individual, romantic and moral notions of sport? In this volume, eleven African scholars offer insightful analyses of the complex ideological and structural dimensions of modern sport as a cultural institution. Drawing on various theories and cross-cultural data, the contributors to this volume highlight the various ways in which sport norms, policies, practices and representations pervasively interface with gender and other socially constructed categories of difference. They argue that sport is not only a site of competition and physical recreation, but also a crossroad where features of modern society such as hegemony, identities, democracy, technology, development and master statuses intertwine and bifurcate. As they point out in many ways, sport production, reproduction, distribution and consumption are relational, spatial and contextual and, therefore, do not pay off for men, women and other social groups equally. The authors draw attention to the structure and scope of efforts needed to transform the exclusionary and gendered nature of sport processes to make them adequate to the task of engendering Africa's development. Gender, Sport and Development in Africa is an immensely important contribution to current debates on the broader impacts of sport on society. It is an essential reading for students, policy-makers and others interested in perspectives that interrogate the grand narratives of sport as a neutral instrument of development in African countries.
Strengthening popular participation in the African Union : a guide to AU structures and processes
(2010)
The African Union (AU) has committed to a vision of Africa that is 'integrated, prosperous and peaceful - driven by its own citizens, a dynamic force in the global arena' (Vision and Mission of the African Union, May 2004). This guide is an effort to take up the challenge of achieving this vision. It is a tool to assist activists to engage with AU policies and programmes. It describes the AU decision-making process and outlines the roles and responsibilities of the AU institutions. It also contains a sampling of the experiences of those non-governmental organisations (NGOs) that have interacted with the AU.
Reforming the Malawian Public Sector argues that the new public management model that Malawi, like most African countries, adopted under the influence of donor organisations has not led to the intended development. The book examines decentralisation, performance contracting, and public-private partnerships as key aspects of the reforms and comes to the conclusion that at best, it can be argued that the failures have been due to poor implementation and this could be attributed to the fact that the process was led by donors who lacked the necessary institutional infrastructure. The book uses the 2005/6 fertiliser subsidy programme, which the government embarked on despite donor resistance that it went against market models, but which turned out to be overwhelmingly successful to demonstrate the state's developmental ability and potential. This volume is essential reading for academics, students, and practitioners seeking a deeper understanding of public administration, management, policy, development and governance in Africa and the rest of the developing world. The book is dedicated to the memory Guy Mhone, a Malawian, who was among Africa's leading scholars in public administration and governance. His works focused mainly on public sector reforms and development.
This nine-country study of higher education financing in Africa includes three East African states (Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda), five countries in southern Africa (Botswana, Lesotho, Mozambique, Namibia and South Africa), and an Indian Ocean island state (Mauritius). Higher Education Financing in East and Southern Africa explores trends in financing policies, paying particular attention to the nature and extent of public sector funding of higher education, the growth of private financing (including both household financing and the growth of private higher education institutions) and the changing mix of financing instruments that these countries are developing in response to public sector financial constraints. This unique collection of African-country case studies draws attention to the remaining challenges around the financing of higher education in Africa, but also identifies good practices, lessons and common themes.
How else does the ramified phenomenon of greed (corruption, nepotism, extreme self-aggrandizement, megalomanic tendencies etc) become nefarious to both the physical and mental worlds of a people either individually or collectively? It brings about a retrogressing, catabatic state in their evolution in both regards, eating back into the socio-economic and political set up of a given society as well as unquestionably impairing the mindset of its people.
Anxiety in Mosaic
(2010)
Anxiety In Mosaic is a sum up of a man's fears and hopes into a volume of poetry; anxieties that span a cross section of the human phenomena of greed (in ramifications) and the resultant socio-political, economic and environmental consequences; the repercussions of worsted governance, feminist, ecological, emigrational and imperialist concerns, presented from the perspective of a philosophical questioning. The charm of these thoroughly vocal, finely-crafted poems not only lie in the quasi-compendious multiplicity of subject matter but also in their creative and innovative re-chartings.
The Bafaw Language (Bantu A10) is a product of the language research programme of the Department of Linguistics of the University of Buea. It is the first serious piece of work on this highly endangered language, and aims to account generally for the data of Bafaw. The work therefore lays the foundation for more advanced work in the future. It provides a description of: the phonology, i.e. the sound system; the morphology or lexis; and the syntax of the Bafaw language. The work goes far beyond to provide a sociolinguistic survey of the Bafaw language community, and offers a discussion of functional literacy in Bafaw, the development of an orthography and the thematic glossary of the language. The book provides a useful resource for the Bafaw language development and an inspiration for further research and scholarship.
Die Zeitschrift Pandaemonium Germanicum erscheint zweimal jährlich und versteht sich als Forum für die wissenschaftliche Diskussion in den verschiedenen Bereichen der internationalen Germanistik, nämlich der Literatur- und Übersetzungswissenschaft, Linguistik, DaF und Kulturstudien. Die Zeitschrift wird von der deutschen Abteilung der FFLCH-USP (Universität São Paulo) seit 1997 herausgegeben und will zur Verbreitung unveröffentlichter Forschungen von GermanistInnen aus Brasilien und anderen Ländern, sowie zur Förderung des Dialogs zwischen der Germanistik und anderen Wissensbereichen beitragen.
Die Zeitschrift Pandaemonium Germanicum erscheint zweimal jährlich und versteht sich als Forum für die wissenschaftliche Diskussion in den verschiedenen Bereichen der internationalen Germanistik, nämlich der Literatur- und Übersetzungswissenschaft, Linguistik, DaF und Kulturstudien. Die Zeitschrift wird von der deutschen Abteilung der FFLCH-USP (Universität São Paulo) seit 1997 herausgegeben und will zur Verbreitung unveröffentlichter Forschungen von GermanistInnen aus Brasilien und anderen Ländern, sowie zur Förderung des Dialogs zwischen der Germanistik und anderen Wissensbereichen beitragen.
Die Hessischen Schülerakademien unterscheiden sich von manchen anderen Akademien dadurch, dass sie zugleich als Schulpraktika für Lehramtsstudierende durchgeführt werden, ferner, weil von derselben Schule mehrere SchülerInnen teilnehmen dürfen und dies nicht nur jeweils einmal. Dies sichert inhaltliche und persönliche Kontinuität, obwohl wir darauf achten, dass hinreichend viele Neulinge eine Chance zur Teilnahme erhalten. Etwa die Hälfte der SchülerInnen möchte sich nach einer Akademie sofort für die nächste anmelden, und auch unter den Studierenden steigt der Anteil an "Wiederholern", die den Praktikumsschein schon erworben haben. Eine solche Begeisterung ist kein schlechtes Zeichen für eine universitäre Lehrveranstaltung.
kurz und kn@pp news : Nr. 20
(2010)
kurz und kn@pp news : Nr. 19
(2010)
kurz und kn@pp news : Nr. 18
(2010)
GOeTHEO : Ausgabe 3
(2010)
GOeTHEO : Ausgabe 2
(2010)
kurz und kn@pp news : Nr. 21
(2010)
* Das Schaafheimer Arzt- und Apothekenzentrum (SCHAAZ): erste Ergebnisse
* Erfahrungen mit praxisinternen Fehlerberichtssystemen gesucht
* MultiCare-Studie: Multimorbiditätsmuster in der Hausarztpraxis
* Gemeinsam für mehr Patientensicherheit in der Primärversorgung
* Prof. Gerlach neuer Präsident der DEGAM