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Zoekresultaten

Producten 12

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Lives of data

Lives of Data maps the historical and emergent dynamics of big data, computing, and society in India. Data infrastructures are now more global than ever before. In much of the world, new sociotechnical possibilities of big data and artificial intelligence are unfolding under the long shadows cast by infra/structural inequalities, colonialism, modernization, and national sovereignty. This book offers critical vantage points for looking at big data and its shadows, as they play out in uneven encounters of machinic and cultural relationalities of data in India’s socio-politically disparate and diverse contexts.Lives of Data emerged from research projects and workshops at the Sarai programme, Centre for the Study of Developing Societies. It brings together fifteen interdisciplinary scholars and practitioners to set up a collaborative research agenda on computational cultures. The essays offer wide-ranging analyses of media and techno-scientific trajectories of data analytics, disruptive formations of digital economy, and the grounded practices of data-driven governance in India. Encompassing history, anthropology, science and technology studies (STS), media studies, civic technology, data science, digital humanities, and journalism, the essays open up possibilities for a truly situated global and sociotechnically specific understanding of the many lives of data.

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Trends and developments in the renewable energy sector in Ukraine

The government of Ukraine has adopted the Renewable Energy Directive (RED) with clear goals and a roadmap to facilitate its energy transition towards renewable sources. This is done because of both climate concerns as well as reasons related to Ukraine’s foreign policy which led the government to decide that Ukraine should work more on its own energy independence. Currently the percentage of renewable energy sources in Ukraine is among the lowest of the entire Europe and there is only slow development in terms of the growth of the sector, even though there is a lot of available biomass, given the large and flat surface of the country with a well-developed agricultural sector. As in most countries in the world, there is a quite intensive and well-developed debate in Ukraine about the energy sector, energy usage and the necessary transition towards more renewable types of energy. One of the consequences of it is that Ukraine is one of the partner countries in the Paris agreement and committed itself to reducing the amount of greenhouse gas emissions in the future. That means that a transformation towards renewable energy is needed, even though currently in Ukraine only a low percentage of energy is generated by sustainable sources. The general picture is that in Ukraine the development of the renewable energy sector is going not as fast as could have been. In other words, there are several barriers present that hinder the energy transition. One of the issues behind such a barrier may be a limited access to technology, or problems with legislation or other issues which may be unknown so far, but certainly relevant for foreign investors. The Ukrainian government adopted the so-called Renewable Energy Directive (RED), set goals for the energy transition and support the transition itself. In some areas progress was made, for example in the growing number of biomass fired boilers, but still Ukraine remains one of the European countries with the lowest percentage of renewable energy production. Therefore, in order to identify currently existing barriers and help to find possible applications of new technologies in Ukraine, the Dutch Enterprise Agency (Rijksdienst voor Ondernemerschap) commissioned this study. It was done within the framework of the Partners in Business on Bioenergy program. The focus of this study is on analysing the renewable energy sector, with special attention for biomass, in the form of biomass-based heating and biomass for biofuels. Of course, other parts of the renewable energy sector such as solar and wind energy are also taken into consideration. The second part consists of a case study to determine the business case for direct processing of sugar beets with Betaprocess as a possible application of biomass to biofuel production in Ukraine. The third study is aiming at determining the amount of biomass that can safely be taken from the fields, without negatively affecting the fertility of the soil. These sub-studies mentioned in the previous paragraph offer a better understanding of the renewable energy market in general and biomass/biofuel applications in particular. This study sheds light on several important questions that entrepreneurs and/or other foreign investors may have about investing in Ukraine. Even though it is well-known that doing business in Ukraine is challenging, it is also very important to have a clear picture of the opportunities that this country offers, within the limits that nature sets, in order to avoid negative consequences like soil degradation. The objective of this report is to find out about which opportunities and barriers exist in the Ukrainian transition towards renewable energy generation, to calculate the profitability of new biomass-processing technologies as well as finding out limitations of biomass usage.

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12 Ideas to Tackle the Shortage of Software Professionals in Europe

"The booklet presents curated real-world good practice examples that help translate our strategy into concrete actions, and in turn, into the design of education and training programmes that will contribute to skill, upskill, or reskill individuals into high demand professional software roles."

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Projecten 4

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COPE: Communicatie Optimalisatie door Participatie Ervaringen

Kinderen en jongeren met een communicatieve problemen kunnen belemmeringen ervaren in dagelijkse situaties die om communicatie vragen. Dit noemen we communicatieve participatie. Het is van meerwaarde om communicatieve participatie makkelijk en betrouwbaar te meten. Hierdoor kan de logopedist samen met de cliënt relevante behandeldoelen stellen en deze evalueren.

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COPE: Communicatie Optimalisatie door Participatie Ervaringen
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COPE: Communicatie Optimalisatie door Participatie Ervaringen

Kinderen en jongeren met een communicatieve problemen kunnen belemmeringen ervaren in dagelijkse situaties die om communicatie vragen. Dit noemen we communicatieve participatie. Het is van meerwaarde om communicatieve participatie makkelijk en betrouwbaar te meten. Hierdoor kan de logopedist samen met de cliënt relevante behandeldoelen stellen en deze evalueren.Doel Het doel van het project is om een communicatieve participatie item bank (CPIB) voor kinderen en adolescenten te ontwikkelen, waarmee communicatieve participatie gemeten wordt. Daarnaast wordt een methode gaan ontwikkeld waarmee relevante participatiegerichte behandeldoelen kunnen worden opgesteld aan de hand van de CPIB. Meer informatie over het project is te vinden op www.nvlf.nl/kennis/over-cope. Resultaten De producten zullen bijdragen aan persoonsgerichte logopedie. Door op participatieniveau te meten en aan de hand van de uitkomst samen doelen op te stellen, sluit de zorg nog beter aan bij de wensen van de cliënt. Looptijd 01 oktober 2021 - 01 oktober 2025 Aanpak Het project maakt gebruik van een mixed-methods design. Door middel van kwalitatief onderzoek en co-creatie zullen de communicatieve participatie item bank en doelstellingsmethodiek ontwikkeld worden. Door middel van kwantitatief onderzoek zal de CPIB gevalideerd worden.

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K2K Consortium development zero-emissions tourism mobility

Client: Netherlands Enterprise Agency (RVO.nl) / Partners for International Business (PIB)The Knowledge-To-Knowledge (K2K) project “Consortium development zero-emission tourism mobility" is part of the private-public Partners for International Business (PIB) programme ‘Erfolgsformeln Verbinden: Nachhaltige Mobilität und Energie in Österreich und in den Niederlanden’. The K2K project was executed by the Centre for Sustainability, Tourism and Transport (CSTT), the research institute of the Academy for Tourism of Breda University of Applied Sciences. Partners in this project were Camptoo, NKC, emodz, and TUI Netherlands. The goal of the K2K project was to develop a joint research and policy agenda for stimulating zero-emissions tourism mobility under Dutch-Austrian cooperation. The results, derived by an extensive literature study and a number of interviews and meetings with both tourism and transport experts, and tourism (business) professionals, are found in this report.

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