landscape impacts
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Revista Prumo ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (9) ◽  
Author(s):  
Michel Zisman Zalis

Resumo Este trabalho investiga os impactos ambientais, sociais, urbanos e paisagísticos decorrentes da infraestrutura da internet, a partir do estudo de caso da grande ressonância arquitetônica desse sistema: o Data Center, um tipo de edifício em ampla multiplicação que evidencia a fisicalidade de um sistema que se apresenta como nebuloso, onipotente e ubíquo. A partir de exemplos elegidos, instiga-se a desenvolver análises dessas arquiteturas hipertecnológicas, discutindo seus aspectos formais e sócio-ambientais. A centralidade vital da infraestrutura da internet em uma sociedade cada vez mais conectada reverbera desafios existentes, mas cada vez mais complexos, como processos de urbanização, acesso desigual à comunicação e alto impacto ambiental, integrando o debate dos possíveis caminhos do campo da arquitetura nos desdobramentos da era digital. Palavras-chave: Data Center; Infraestrutura; Arquitetura da Internet; Fisicalidade da Internet. Abstract This work investigates the environmental, social, urban, and landscape impacts resulting from the internet infrastructure, focusing on the case study of the great architectural resonance of this system: The Data Center — a type of building in wide multiplication that highlights the physicality of a system that presents itself as cloudy, omnipotent, and ubiquitous. Based on selected examples, it analyzes these hyper-technological architectures, discussing their formal and socio-environmental aspects. The vital centrality of internet infrastructure in an increasingly connected society reverberates existing but increasingly complex challenges, such as urbanization processes, unequal access to communication, and high environmental impact, integrating the debate on possible paths in the field of architecture in the developments of the digital age. Keywords: Data Center; Infrastructure; Internet Architecture; Internet’s physicality.


2021 ◽  
Vol 109 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Kathleen Semple Delaney ◽  
Gary Busteed ◽  
Robert N. Fisher ◽  
Seth P. D. Riley

2020 ◽  
Vol 66 (3) ◽  
pp. 348-363
Author(s):  
Jon Paul Pierre ◽  
John R. Andrews ◽  
Michael H. Young ◽  
Alexander Y. Sun ◽  
Brad D. Wolaver

2020 ◽  
Vol 30 (7) ◽  
Author(s):  
Martha K. Raynolds ◽  
Janet C. Jorgenson ◽  
M. Torre Jorgenson ◽  
Mikhail Kanevskiy ◽  
Anna K. Liljedahl ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 68 (4) ◽  
pp. 317-339 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marina Frolova ◽  
Csaba Centeri ◽  
Karl Benediktsson ◽  
Marcel Hunziker ◽  
Robert Kabai ◽  
...  

Landscape quality has become a fundamental issue in the development of renewable energy (henceforth abbreviated RE) projects. Rapid technological advances in RE production and distribution, coupled with changing policy frameworks, bring specific challenges during planning in order to avoid degradation of landscape quality. The current work provides a comprehensive review on RE landscapes and the impacts of RE systems on landscape for most European countries. It is based on a review by an interdisciplinary international team of experts of empirical research findings on landscape impacts of RE from thirty-seven countries that have participated in the COST Action TU1401 Renewable Energy and Landscape Quality (RELY).


Author(s):  
Verónica Ruiz Abou-Nigm

Private international law embraces legal diversity and pluralism. Different legal traditions continue to meet, interact and integrate in different forms of integration, at the national, regional and international levels. Different systems of substantive law couple with divergent systems of private international law (designed to accommodate the former in cross-border situations). This complex legal landscape impacts individuals and families in cross-border scenarios and international commerce broadly conceived. Private international law methodologies and techniques offer means for the coordination of this constellation of legal orders and value systems in cross-border situations. This is essential in integration processes as it is for furthering ‘global’ interconnectivity....


2019 ◽  
pp. 1242-1263
Author(s):  
Richard R. Shaker ◽  
Timothy J. Ehlinger

Recent studies have implied the importance of incorporating configuration metrics into landscape-aquatic ecological integrity research; however few have addressed the needs of spatial data while exploring non-linear relationships. This study investigates spatial dependence of a measure of aquatic ecological condition at two basin scales, and the spatial and non-linear role of landscape in explaining that measure across 92 watersheds in Southern Wisconsin. It hypothesizes that: (1) indicators of ecological condition have different spatial needs at subwatershed and watershed scales; (2) land cover composition, urban configuration, and landscape diversity can explain aquatic ecological integrity differently; and (3) global non-linear analysis improve local spatial statistical techniques for explaining and interpreting landscape impacts on aquatic ecological integrity. Results revealed spatial autocorrelation in the measure of aquatic ecological condition at the HUC-12 subwatershed scale, and artificial neural networks (ANN) were an improvement over geographically weighted regression (GWR) for deciphering complex landscape-aquatic condition relationships.


2019 ◽  
pp. 184-192
Author(s):  
Bartosz Jawecki ◽  
Marek W. Lorenc ◽  
Katarzyna Tokarczyk-Dorociak ◽  
Xiangdong Wei
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