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8361
PREFACE
Published 2022-06-01“…This study has been completed by photogrammetrists, architects, and restorers. The issue of the journal ends with an article devoted to the analyzing the prerequisites and conditions for the foundation of an aircraft engine enterprise in Ukraine. …”
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8362
The Crimea and Rum in the 13th–14th centuries: The Anatolian Diaspora and Urban Culture of Solkhat »
Published 2016-01-01“…Two more names worth mentioning here: those of the builders (architects) belonging to different generations of one and the same (?) …”
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8363
Measuring Intensity – Describing and Analysing the “Urban Buzz”
Published 2019-12-01“…And a culture among architects and urban planners of designing for intense human interactions? …”
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8364
Seditious Spaces
Published 2018-10-01“…The disconnect between the ideology of the regime and the kind of space it produces indicates a potential for architects and urban planners to be subversive by designing public space to be more democratic, regardless of a regime’s ideology. …”
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8365
A Critique of Principlism
Published 2023-02-01“…During the Nuremberg Trials of 1946-47, a cohort of French, American, British, and Soviet judges forced the Nazi doctors and architects of the Holocaust to stand trial for their egregious actions and feel the firm hand of justice. …”
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8366
Towards achieving interorganisational collaboration between health-care providers: a realist evidence synthesis
Published 2023-06-01“…We conducted a realist evaluation to further test our refined programme theory by exploring the experiences of a range of stakeholders, comprising the leaders or architects of IOCs, regulators, policy-makers, professional bodies, front-line staff and patient representatives. …”
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8367
Public space and the contemporary city. A narrative of places, time, relationships
Published 2020-05-01“…This semantic versatility is confirmed by Italo Calvino (1972) when he states that «[…] every time you enter the square, you find yourself in the middle of a dialogue», a social and cultural dialogue that springs from the possibility represented by the public place to host the unfolding of social life, evoking the collective identity of a community. For a century, architects, urban planners and historians have complained about the «death of the square», an end characterised by the difficulty of comparison between the reasons of social modernisation and the historical form of the square and of experiencing it. …”
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