Tri :
Date
Editeur
Auteur
Titre
|
|
Détermination de centres d'inertie
/ Université Lille-I, Unisciel
/ 10-06-2009
/ Unisciel
Toubin Céline
Voir le résumé
Voir le résumé
Détermination de centres d’inertie Mot(s) clés libre(s) : centres de masse, centre d’inertie, solide
|
Accéder à la ressource
|
|
Démarche Qualité du Centre de Résonance Magnétique des Systèmes Biologiques
/ DCAM - Département Conception et Assistance Multimédia - Université Bordeaux Segalen, Université Bordeaux Segalen - DCAM
/ 01-12-2009
/ Canal-u.fr
VALEINS Henri, FRANCONI Jean-Michel
Voir le résumé
Voir le résumé
Réunis dans le cadre de la rencontre organisée par l’Université de Bordeaux sur la thématique « Les enjeux de la démarche qualité en recherche », différents responsables qualités reviennent sur les procédures de mise en place d’outils qualité au sein de leurs structures de recherche. Abordée sous un angle différent selon que ces unités sont dédiées aux sciences humaines et sociales ou aux sciences et technologies, l’implantation d’une démarche qualité requiert un travail préalable de sensibilisation auprès des personnels, un esprit collaboratif et un fort engagement de la direction. Les outils qualité sont avant tout au service de la recherche et du pilotage de projet, ils sont donc les garants d’un meilleur fonctionnement des structures de recherche mais aussi d’une plus grande attractivité vis à vis des étudiants, des collaborateurs et des entreprises.
Ce programme est le troisième volet d’une série de 4 interventions dédiées aux « Enjeux de la démarche qualité en recherche » :
- La qualité en sciences souples. Expérience de PACTE
- Rhodia R&D : management de la qualité
- Comment définir les indicateurs de performance en recherche ? Mot(s) clés libre(s) : RMN, biologie (recherche), base documentaire, travail collaboratif, recherche et démarche qualité, recherche (travail de groupe), recherche (gestion), qualité (gestion), pilotage de projets, PDCA plan do check act, harmonisation des pratiques, espaces collaboratifs de travail, description des processus, démarche qualité (outils), médecine (recherche), centre de résonance magnétique des systèmes biologiques (bordeaux)
|
Accéder à la ressource
|
|
Démarche Qualité du Centre de Résonance Magnétique des Systèmes Biologiques
/ DCAM - Département Conception et Assistance Multimédia - Université Bordeaux Segalen, Université Bordeaux Segalen - DCAM
/ 01-12-2009
/ Canal-U - OAI Archive
VALEINS Henri, FRANCONI Jean-Michel
Voir le résumé
Voir le résumé
Réunis dans le cadre de la rencontre organisée par l’Université de Bordeaux sur la thématique « Les enjeux de la démarche qualité en recherche », différents responsables qualités reviennent sur les procédures de mise en place d’outils qualité au sein de leurs structures de recherche. Abordée sous un angle différent selon que ces unités sont dédiées aux sciences humaines et sociales ou aux sciences et technologies, l’implantation d’une démarche qualité requiert un travail préalable de sensibilisation auprès des personnels, un esprit collaboratif et un fort engagement de la direction. Les outils qualité sont avant tout au service de la recherche et du pilotage de projet, ils sont donc les garants d’un meilleur fonctionnement des structures de recherche mais aussi d’une plus grande attractivité vis à vis des étudiants, des collaborateurs et des entreprises.Ce programme est le troisième volet d’une série de 4 interventions dédiées aux « Enjeux de la démarche qualité en recherche » : - La qualité en sciences souples. Expérience de PACTE - Rhodia R&D : management de la qualité - Comment définir les indicateurs de performance en recherche ? Mot(s) clés libre(s) : base documentaire, biologie (recherche), centre de résonance magnétique des systèmes biologiques (bordeaux), démarche qualité (outils), description des processus, espaces collaboratifs de travail, harmonisation des pratiques, médecine (recherche), PDCA pl
|
Accéder à la ressource
|
|
CAV 2010 - Réparation de l'ADN et radiosensibilité : radiocurabilité et tumeurs humaines
/ Canal-U/Sciences de la Santé et du Sport
/ 22-01-2010
/ Canal-U - OAI Archive
VOGIN Guillaume
Voir le résumé
Voir le résumé
La présentation de Guillaume VOGIN, lors de la semaine de radiothérapie qui s'est tenue au Centre Alexis Vautrin (CAV) à Vandoeuvre-lès-Nancy, le 22 janvier 2010.Le thème: réparation de l'ADN et radiosensibilité - modèles, implications dans la radiocurabilité des tumeurs humaines. Mot(s) clés libre(s) : Acide désoxyribonucléique, CAV, centre Alexis Vautrin, désoxyribonucléique, DNA, radiocurabilité des tumeurs humaines, radiosensiblité, réparation de l'ADN, Semaine de la radiothérapie, Vandoeuvres les Nancy
|
Accéder à la ressource
|
|
Semaine de la recherche thérapeutique - Faïez ZANNAD
/ Canal-U/Sciences de la Santé et du Sport
/ 23-03-2009
/ Canal-U - OAI Archive
ZANNAD Faiez
Voir le résumé
Voir le résumé
Conférence de Faïez ZANNAD pour le Débat Décideur Mot(s) clés libre(s) : CEnGEPS, Centre d'Investigation Clinique, CHU, conférence, Débat scientifique et politique, Faïez ZANNAD, Insuffisance cardiaque
|
Accéder à la ressource
|
|
/ Canal-U/Sciences de la Santé et du Sport
/ 01-05-2007
/ Canal-U - OAI Archive
ZILLIOX Rémy, GIRBON Jean-Pierre
Voir le résumé
Voir le résumé
Mot(s) clés libre(s) : Training mission in burns centre in Haiti
|
Accéder à la ressource
|
|
C. Pat Giersch (Wellesley College), "Patterns of Inclusion and Exclusion Along Twentieth-Century China’s Southwestern and Tibetan Borderlands"
/ Franck Guillemain
/ Canal-u.fr
Voir le résumé
Voir le résumé
In recent years, increasingly sophisticated work has traced the remarkable changes in early twentieth-century state-building along China's southwestern and Tibetan borderlands. During this same period, however, the tentacles of global commerce were reaching into these regions, too, but we do not yet fully understanding the links between state and commerce, on one hand, and the long-term trajectories of change that left many borderlands communities with less and less control over their own political and economic futures. Rather than conceiving of these regions as autonomous until after 1945, as James Scott would have it, this paper argues that significant changes were already underway by the early twentieth century. These changes included the organization of trade, as new types of shareholder firms as well as state-owned companies emerged; control over resources and profits, as outside traders and officials gained access to land, mineral rights, commodities, and trade routes. To chart these changes, the paper focuses on two regions--southern Yunnan and western Sichuan's Tibetan (Kham) areas--and the commodities that they produced, including rubber, pack animals, medicinal materials for Chinese Traditional Medicine, and gold dust. While these areas had been involved in trading these commodities for, in some cases, centuries before the twentieth century, the paper explores how the unique combination of modern commerce and state-building began to transform these regions.
International conference “Territories, Communities, and Exchanges in the
Sino-Tibetan Kham Borderlands,” Februray 18-20, 2016. This conference is
an outcome of a collaborative ERC-funded research project (Starting
grant no. 283870).
For more information, please visit the project's
Website: http://kham.cnrs.fr Mot(s) clés libre(s) : UPS2259, CEH, Centre d'Etudes Himalayennes, C. Pat Giersch, Patterns of Inclusion and Exclusion Along Twentieth-Century China’s Southwestern and Tibetan Borderlands, Territories, Communities, and Exchanges in the Kham Sino-Tibetan Borderlands, ERC (European Research Council)
|
Accéder à la ressource
|
|
Chen Bo (Sichuan University), “House Society” Revisited "
/ Franck Guillemain
/ Canal-u.fr
Voir le résumé
Voir le résumé
In this paper, I will begin by considering the concept of “house society” and its applicability to Southwest China. I ask the question of why no scholar, Levi-Strauss included since he originally framed this concept, has successfully used this concept to go beyond the traditional framework of descent and alliance. After making a thorough survey of the history of European views on Tibetan kinship, I argue that the dominance of Ladakh metonymy was responsible for the failure to reconsider both this area and the concept. Based on this dual consideration, I further scrutinize Levi-Strauss’s concept of “house society” in light of the case of Dra-pa Tibetans, who are regarded as the link between two large areas: societies on the Tibetan plateau characterized and demarcated by two kinship-marriage models, and the Ye (house) societies that include ethnic groups such as the Yi, Dra-pa, Na and Naxi. For several reasons, I argue that the house society model was not a social institution that emerged later but that it was one of the earliest. Though the earliest records we obtained were about one thousand and five hundred years ago, it might possibly date back to earlier time. While the mode of sexual relations among Dra-pa is being transformed towards marriage, the matrilineal/local-based visit by males still dominates. I further argue that associating women with the house plays a crucial role in the emergence of this institution. This binding relationship between women (men included) and the house is a form of house fetishism and has contributed to social phenomena we are witnessing today in Dra-pa, as well as other areas westward, such as local competition over building the best house.
International conference “Territories, Communities, and Exchanges in the
Sino-Tibetan Kham Borderlands,” Februray 18-20, 2016. This conference is
an outcome of a collaborative ERC-funded research project (Starting
grant no. 283870).
For more information, please visit the project's
Website: http://kham.cnrs.fr
Mot(s) clés libre(s) : UPS2259, CEH, Centre d'Etudes Himalayennes, “House Society” Revisited, Chen Bo, Territories, Communities, and Exchanges in the Kham Sino-Tibetan Borderlands, ERC (European Research Council), Sichuan University
|
Accéder à la ressource
|
|
Dáša Mortensen (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), " Wangchuk Tempa and the Control of Gyalthang in the Early-Twentieth Century "
/ Franck Guillemain
/ Canal-u.fr
Voir le résumé
Voir le résumé
This paper examines the fascinating life of Wangchuk Tempa 汪学鼎 (1886-1961), the de facto early-twentieth-century political and military leader of Gyalthang (rGyal Thang) in southern Kham, in order to illustrate the complex power dynamics at play in this frontier region. Wangchuk Tempa received monastic training at Ganden Sumtsenling Monastery in Gyalthang and at Sera Monastery in Lhasa, before leaving the monastic life in 1916. By the late 1920s he had recruited a well-armed militia to protect Gyalthang from roaming bandits and Chinese military incursions, and his militia fought against the Red Army when it came through Gyalthang in May, 1936. While many young Gyalthangpa were inspired by the Communist activists they met in Lijiang, Kunming, and Bathang in the late 1940s, and some ultimately joined the underground Communist Party, Wangchuk Tempa remained wary of the Communists’ intentions in Gyalthang. Even after the People’s Liberation Army officially “liberated” Gyalthang on May 10, 1950, Wangchuk Tempa continued to fight against the PLA and resist Communist rule in the area until 1952. A fierce defender of local autonomy, Wangchuk Tempa engaged in lengthy negotiations with Communist Party officials while traveling around China on political tours, before he eventually agreed to serve as Vice Governor of the newly established Diqing Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture in 1957. Chinese Communist Party accounts (wenshi ziliao) of the 1980s demonize Wangchuk Tempa as a “bandit leader” and “anti-revolutionary rebel,” while Gyalthangpa today often refer to his legendary exploits in laudatory and mythic terms. Wangchuk Tempa’s leadership in Gyalthang highlights the complex relationship between local, regional, and national politics. It also demonstrates the limited authority exercised by the government of the Dalai Lama, the Qing court, the Nationalist government, and the early Chinese Communist government in Gyalthang in the early- to mid-twentieth century.
International conference “Territories, Communities, and Exchanges in the
Sino-Tibetan Kham Borderlands,” Februray 18-20, 2016. This conference is
an outcome of a collaborative ERC-funded research project (Starting
grant no. 283870).
For more information, please visit the project's
Website: http://kham.cnrs.fr
Mot(s) clés libre(s) : UPS2259, CEH, Centre d'Etudes Himalayennes, Wangchuk Tempa and the Control of Gyalthang in the Early-Twentieth Century, Dáša Mortensen, Territories, Communities, and Exchanges in the Kham Sino-Tibetan Borderlands, ERC (European Research Council), University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
|
Accéder à la ressource
|
|
Dawa Drolma (Bay Path University), " The Renaissance of Traditional Dzongsar Craft-making in the Meshö Valley: An Insider’s Perspective on New Economic Processes and Identity Transformations in Sino-Tibetan Borderlands "
/ Franck Guillemain
/ Canal-u.fr
Voir le résumé
Voir le résumé
As a member of a deeply-rooted traditional craft-making family in the Meshö (Sman Shod) Valley of Kham region, I will present the results of my ongoing fieldwork and academic study on the renaissance of Buddhist craft-making that is beginning to flourish in the Sino-Tibetan borderlands. Meshö is a remote valley in Dergé County (Kandze Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture), Sichuan Province, where the majority of its 5,343 residents are agro-pastoralists. The area is famous for the monastery of Dzongsar, one of the largest monastic universities in Kham during the first half of the twentieth century. In the 1980s, when the renovation of the monastery was permitted, the lack of specialists in traditional handicrafts pushed the monastic authorities to establish workshops headed by the few remaining elderly craftsmen who retained traditional craft-making knowledge and skills. In the early twenty-first century, these workshops have become real schools of traditional crafts through local and foreign funding, and are now managed by a local NGO: Yuthok Yondengonpo Medical Association (YYMA). There are now more than 27 workshops, in which 13 different traditional crafts (lost-wax-casting, pottery, thangka painting, wood carving, etc.) are taught to around 450 apprentices. My paper will focus upon how new trade opportunities are transforming economic, familial, and community networks that surround these craft workshops. I will particularly deal with the demographic profile of teachers and apprentices, the challenges faced by local crafts workshops regarding modernization, and the raise of art and crafts entrepreneurs in Kham. I will also consider the reaction of local authorities to the rapid growth of the crafts industry.
International conference “Territories, Communities, and Exchanges in the
Sino-Tibetan Kham Borderlands,” Februray 18-20, 2016. This conference is
an outcome of a collaborative ERC-funded research project (Starting
grant no. 283870).
For more information, please visit the project's
Website: http://kham.cnrs.fr
Mot(s) clés libre(s) : UPS2259, CEH, Centre d'Etudes Himalayennes, The Renaissance of Traditional Dzongsar Craft-making in the Meshö Valley: An Insider’s Perspective on New Economic Processes and Identity Transformations in Sino-Tibetan Borderlands, Dawa Drolma, Territories, Communities, and Exchanges in the Kham Sino-Tibetan Borderlands, ERC (European Research Council), Bay Path University
|
Accéder à la ressource
|
|