scholarly journals Do COVID19 infection rates change over time and space? Population density and socio-economic measures as regressors

Cities ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 103400
Author(s):  
Yuval Arbel ◽  
Chaim Fialkoff ◽  
Amichai Kerner ◽  
Miryam Kerner
Author(s):  
Derek Nurse

The focus of this chapter is on how languages move and change over time and space. The perceptions of historical linguists have been shaped by what they were observing. During the flowering of comparative linguistics, from the late 19th into the 20th century, the dominant view was that in earlier times when people moved, their languages moved with them, often over long distances, sometimes fast, and that language change was largely internal. That changed in the second half of the 20th century. We now recognize that in recent centuries and millennia, most movements of communities and individuals have been local and shorter. Constant contact between communities resulted in features flowing across language boundaries, especially in crowded and long-settled locations such as most of Central and West Africa. Although communities did mix and people did cross borders, it became clear that language and linguistic features could also move without communities moving.


2003 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 447-454
Author(s):  
Li Maihe ◽  
Norbert Kräuchi

Author(s):  
Christopher Rodgers

The governance of common land in England and Wales is shaped by a mixture of customary and legal norms that can shift and change. Notwithstanding the introduction of legislation for the registration of common land and common rights, custom retains an important role in the governance of common land. This chapter situates custom alongside the other normative rules used to structure the governance of common land. It considers reforms introduced by the Commons Act 2006, including provision for the formation of self-regulating commons councils. It concludes that a legal pluralist analysis that focuses on the functionality of differing customary and legal norms, but which is also sensitive to the sources from which rules derive normativity, is essential if we are to position custom in the hierarchy of norms relevant to the governance of common land, to understand their respective roles and how these can change over time and space, and to appraise their effectiveness.


2011 ◽  
Vol 46 (3) ◽  
pp. 591-609
Author(s):  
Roderick P. Hart ◽  
Elvin T. Lim

This article explores how contemporary historians can avail themselves of quantitative approaches to examine how elusive concepts like ‘time’ and ‘space’ have been used in the public domain. By making use of specifically designed programs, historians can use digital tools to harness an unprecedented mass of information. This is a particularly important methodological innovation at a time of rapidly expanding data: news, speeches, and commentary are available first electronically, and they are available on countless sites in an unprecedented array of formats. Mastering these sources digitally is not only imperative for the contemporary historian; it also provides essential source material for understanding how language and meanings change over time, between contexts, and across different media.


Author(s):  
Karen S. McNeal ◽  
Julie C. Libarkin ◽  
Tamara Shapiro Ledley ◽  
Katherine K. Ellins

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