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This course provides an overview of traditional energy sources, electrical energy generation, transmission, distribution and utilization systems. It introduces the concepts of renewable energy sources, distributed renewable energy generation and smart-grid structure. The key issues of energy requirement in portable electronic computing system and wireless energy transfer are covered. The course requires students to take prerequisites.
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This course presents special advanced studies in selected areas of Gender and Queer Theory. It aims to strengthen students' knowledge of Gender and Sexuality Studies from the philosophical and aesthetical points of view, as well as their knowledge of Gender and Queer Studies from a historical and a thematic perspective (with a special interest in the French Theory).
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This course introduces the fundamental principles of economics and business administration. The course explores two main themes: academic research in college and corporate business. Through a dynamic combination of lectures, group presentations, and discussions, students acquire both theoretical knowledge and practical skills crucial for their academic and professional endeavors.
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COURSE DETAIL
This course examines the nature, formation, and classification of soils, their physical, chemical, mineralogical, and biological properties, and issues of soil quality, land degradation and sustainable management. It also encompasses the properties, genesis, and distribution of the soils of New Zealand and their use.
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Although Australia is one of Japan's most important partners in the current international arena, the real picture of Australian society remains unfamiliar to Japanese people. After fighting each other in WWII, Australia and Japan have built a firm relationship through human exchange and trade. In recent years, they are strengthening their ties in the field of security, resulting in a “special strategic partnership.” This course is expected to deepen one's knowledge about Australia - Japan's Asia Pacific neighbor.
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This course covers methodologies of empirical regional/development economics, such as:
(1) How to conduct field surveys;
(2) How to use RCTs and micro-econometric methods, and
(3) How to read journal articles and how to prepare referee reports.
Course Prerequisites: Intermediate/advanced microeconomics and econometrics.
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This course focuses on the substantive role that China plays in the Global South where its preponderance of material power and putative developing country status confers upon it a dominant position in bilateral and regional political economies. China's economic position, coupled to an astute use of finances flowing from its mercantilist policies, has enabled it to become the leading trading partner and a significant investor in the developing world. Moreover, the Global South is increasingly figuring in Beijing's expanding security interests and soft power provisions. Interpretations embedded in prevailing academic discourses like socialisation, threat and peaceful rise take on new meaning when studied through the lens of ties with developing countries. Understanding how dynamics in this relationship are impacting upon a host of global and contemporary issues (BRICs, multilateralism, peacekeeping, the environment) is crucial to the shape of the 21st century.
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This course provides the conceptual inventory and practical tool kits that enable students to achieve circularity across organizational spaces. By integrating ethnographic methods with key concepts from entrepreneurship, the class equips students with the theoretical and practical knowledge needed to make transitions to sustainability. The course is intensive and follows a problem-based learning approach, where students develop solutions to a real-world circular challenge presented by a case company. The class requires active participation from students, with classroom activities and discussions as well as working in project teams inside and outside the classroom. It facilitates learning by participating, learning by observing, and learning by in-class presentations and critical reflections. Students are supported in their learning process with mentoring and coaching in collaboration with the Copenhagen School of Entrepreneurship.
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Classical music is the only art form that goes directly to the human spirit, states Pierre Bourdieu. More than any other genre, classical music has been stated to divide society by race and class. Orchestras base their business model typically on a visions of a white middle-class (and middle-age) audiences.. At the same time, even modern pop musical forms often presume but rarely do cross racial lines. Why is that so and where does the racial divide in music stem from? This course examines the interplay of music and race in North American history. We will examine different genres of music across time and space with a particular eye on agency and target audience, sound and word. We will look at mostly classical musicians of the African-American diaspora and North America, including their their experiences, their art and politics, and their receptions. Through an interdisciplinary approach using history, critical race theory, and cultural sociology, we will discuss and define racism, bias, inequality, and scripts of exclusion and inclusion in both pop and classical music. Moreover, we will examine to what extent and how shared empathy through sound may have the potential to influence, perhaps even change racial conscience, decreasing discrimination and exclusion in and outside stages ranging from street gigs to the concert hall. The seminar seeks to fulfill two objectives: first, we will spend a significant amount of time considering some of the most recent literature dedicated to the history and present experience of music and race. Both historians and musicologists have identified peculiar factors informing the interplay of music and politics. These include specific music genres, minstrelsy, jazz clubs, the music industry, and the interplay of music and civil rights. What cocktail, we’ll ask eventually, does it take to activate music as an instrument of both power and suppression and how do race and music interplay? Second, we will try to understand the mechanism of sound in the name of identity, discrimination, political action and discuss whether there are particular lessons for the impending future.
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