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Die Extraktion relevanter Abflussbildungsprozesse und deren adäquate Abbildung in Modellen gewinnt im Rahmen eines integrierten Managements ganzer Einzugsgebiete immer mehr an Wert, weil die Hochwasserentstehung und die Dynamik der mit dem Wasser transportierten Schadstoffe entscheidend von der Abflussbildung gesteuert werden. Ziel eines Flussgebietsmanagements ist die Verbesserung der Funktionsfähigkeit eines Einzugsgebiets. Das Bereitstellen verlässlicher Entscheidungsgrundlagen für die praktische Umsetzung einzugsgebietsbezogener Maßnahmen erfordert die Einbindung der komplexen, interagierenden Prozesse. Modelle können bei der Analyse und integrierenden Betrachtung der in der Regel nichtlinearen und rückgekoppelten Prozesse einen besonderen Stellenwert einnehmen. So können sie zu Prognosen der Auswirkungen geplanter Maßnahmen und der Veränderungen von natürlichen Randbedingungen herangezogen werden. Die erforderliche Genauigkeit der Prozessabbildung und welche Art von Modellen genutzt wird ist dabei abhängig von der jeweiligen Fragestellung und der untersuchten Skala. Insgesamt ist es erforderlich, den Unsicherheiten der Modellergebnisse einen angemessenen Stellenwert im Hinblick auf ein langzeitliches, optimales Management einzuräumen. Hierzu zählen auch Fragen der Verfügbarkeit, Zuverlässigkeit und Repräsentativität von Daten auf Einzugsgebietsebene. Eine enge Kopplung der Prozessforschung und der Auswertung mittels hydrologischer Modellierung ist in diesem Kontext für eine Beurteilung von Richtlinien und Maßnahmenvorschlägen im Flussgebietsmanagement notwendig.
In past years, desertification and land degradation have been acknowledged as a major threat to human welfare world-wide, and their environmental and societal implications have sparked the formulation of the UN Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD). Any measure taken against desertification, or the design of dedicated early warning systems, must take into account both the spatial and temporal dimensions of process driving factors. Equally important, past and present reactions of ecosystems to physical and socio-economical disturbances or management interventions need to be understood. In this context, remote sensing and geoinformation processing support the required assessment, monitoring and modelling approaches, and hence provide an essential contribution to the scientific component of the struggle against desertification. Supported by DG Research of the European Commission, the Remote Sensing Department of the University of Trier convened RGLDD to promote scientific exchange between specialists working on the interface of remote sensing, geoinformation processing, desertification/land degradation research and its socio-economic implications. Although targeted at the scientific community, contributions with application perspectives were of crucial importance and both an overview of the current state of the art as well as operational opportunities were presented. Hosted at the Robert-Schuman Haus in Trier, the conference gained widespread attention and attracted an international audience from all parts of the world, which underlines the global dimension of land degradation and desertification processes. Based on a rigorous review of submitted abstracts, more than 100 contributions were accepted for oral and poster presentation, which are found in these proceedings edition in full paper form. Please note: This document is optimised for screen resolution, to receive a high-resolution version please contact the editors.
Globalization and Divergence: Dynamics of Dissensus in Non-Dominant Cinema Cultures of South India
(2002)
Based on her field studies between 1999 and 2003 in the South Indian State Kerala, the author critically reflects about Habermas's concept of the (bourgeois) public sphere, and also about later critiques of Habermas (eg. Eley). Schulze adds the new dimensions of human emotionality and humane ethics to the discussion of today's public (spheres) and civil societies which are part of globalising modernisations. It is poor and marginalized women's strongly felt compassion and love practised in their daily lives, which Schulze focusses on: these Marginalized ethics of the 'Good life' do sharply contrast the dominant societies' value systems; these latters consequently don't provide to the Marginaliezed a 'model'. However, Kerala, which is widely refered to as a development model - particularly with respect to the situation/ education of its women - is thus analysed by the author as a historically and culturally specific kind of 'modernity', which follows are rather violent and aggressive path of development in consonance with the general ruling anti-human/ nature philosophy of 'globalization'. Schulze's tool in her field work is 'participatory action research' and also her 'empathic camera' (camcoder). She mixed with local women who had organized themselves in women's groups with the urge to truly represent themSelves and their own ethics and goals in life - without the usual intervention of men/ of nationalist politics ruling Kerala's public sphere(s). In the course of Schulze and the local women groups becoming acquainted with each other, the scholar and the Marginalized felt the desire to support each other in their respective struggles for empowerment and for being respected as a human being. The author finally understood the fallacy and cynicism which lies in applying as a scholar the term 'women in Kerala' as if there wasn't the day to day particular violence which women of dalit ('untouchable'), or of adivasi (indigenous) background experience. Women's lives are moulded by networks of violence which are inherent to Kerala's castes, classes, and ethnicities, parallel to the basic oppression which women face because they are women. A group of dalit women in Kerala became particularly close companions in Schulze's quest for unravelling seemingly contradictory facts: Kerala's official claim to provide to women and other persons who were generally discriminated against in the larger Indian context, a supportive social and educational environment, on the one hand, and on the other hand the comparatively high number of suicides among Keralite women (and men), and the absence of women in what appears as Kerala's public sphere and 'civil society'. In several analytical steps which always centre around the experiences and feelings of the many poor and marginalized women, their life-worlds, their daily life philosophies, their views, voices, their ethics, dreams, Schulze unfolds these Marginalized visions, and tries to interpret them on their own terms. In this manner not only the mainstream society's propaganda about the 'Kerala development model' is demystified, but also to the reader insights become possible into a totally different set of ethics held by these women. They transgress notions of competition, of the 'necessary' monetarisation of all spheres of human life and of nature, of caste, religious, or gender conflicts. By means of 13 small video films the women together with Schulze showed and reflected upon their philosophy of an empowered 'Good life'.
Abstracts book of oral presentations and poster contributions for the mid-term conference of the Interreg IVB NWE project ForeStClim. The international conference took place in Nancy (France) from 20. to 22. September 2010. The topics of the conference sessions were as follows:rnSession 1: Projecting forest sites and stand shiftsrnSession 2: Climate change and water: modelling across spatial and temporal scalesrnSession 3: Addressing climate change in practical silvicultural decision support
Detaillierte Beschreibung und Bewertung der im Trierer Stadtarchiv nahezu vollständig für den Zeitraum 1798 bis 1814 aufbewahrten Passregister des Saardepartements.
Überblicksdarstellung zu deutschen Reiseberichten aus der Provence aus der ersten Hälfte des 19. jahrhunderts (mit Bibliographie)