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Showing result 1 - 5 of 892 swedish dissertations matching the above criteria.
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1. Balance and circulation : aspects of tradition and change among the Mejprat of Irian Barat
Abstract : .... READ MORE
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2. Atmospheric and oceanic circulation from a thermodynamic perspective
Abstract : The climate system is continuously transporting and exchanging heat, freshwater, carbon and other tracers in different spatio-temporal scales. Therefore, analysing the system from a thermodynamic or biogeochemical framework is highly convenient. READ MORE
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3. Making Metal Making : Circulation and Workshop Practices in the Swedish Metal Trades, 1730–1775
Abstract : This dissertation is concerned with the making of metal making. It explores how skills, knowledge, and artefacts were circulated and grounded within the Swedish metal trades during the period ca. 1730 to 1775. It also analyses how these processes were related to different ways of organising practices of work. READ MORE
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4. Securing the working democracy : Inventive arrangements to guarantee circulation and the emergence of democracy policy
Abstract : In the 1990s, Swedish democracy's ability to remain strong and renew itself became increasingly questioned in government commission reports and social-scientific writings. The perceptions of the financial crisis in 1992–1994, new identities, immigration and changes in participation in civic associations and organizations were listed as challenges to democracy. READ MORE
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5. The thermohaline circulation during the Last Glacial Maximum and in the Present-Day climate
Abstract : The thermohaline circulation (THC) corresponds to the large time- and spatial-scales ocean circulation associated with the transport of heat and salt, and is known to be an important factor controlling the climate variability. The large scales involved in the THC make it difficult to observe, and therefore the synergy of numerical models and climate proxy reconstructions is particularly relevant to study the characteristics of this circulation in the present and past climates. READ MORE