Uc Berkeley Graduate Division

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  uc berkeley graduate division: Inside Graduate Admissions Julie R. Posselt, 2016-01-11 Advanced degrees are necessary for careers that once required only a college education. Yet little has been written about who gets into grad school and why. Julie Posselt pulls back the curtain on this secret process, revealing how faculty evaluate applicants in top-ranked doctoral programs in the humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences.
  uc berkeley graduate division: Fluid Borders Lisa García Bedolla, 2005-10-07 Annotation This project examines the political dynamics of Latino immigrants in California.
  uc berkeley graduate division: Getting Mentored in Graduate School W. Brad Johnson, Jennifer M. Huwe, 2003 Getting Mentored in Graduate School is the first guide to mentoring relationships written exclusively for graduate students. Research has shown that students who are mentored enjoy many benefits, including better training, greater career success, and a stronger professional identity. Authors Johnson and Huwe draw directly from their own experiences as mentor and protege to advise students on finding a mentor and maintaining the mentor relationship throughout graduate school. Conversational, accessible, and informative, this book offers practical strategies that can be employed not only by students pursuing mentorships but also by professors seeking to improve their mentoring skills. Johnson and Huwe arm readers with the tools they need to anticipate and prevent common pitfalls and to resolve problems that may arise in mentoring relationships. This book is essential reading for students who want to learn and master the unwritten rules that lead to finding a mentor and getting more from graduate school and your career.
  uc berkeley graduate division: University of California, Berkeley. Office of the Graduate Division Records University of California, Berkeley. Office of the Graduate Division, 1940
  uc berkeley graduate division: Law and Policy for the Quantum Age Chris Jay Hoofnagle, Simson L. Garfinkel, 2022-01-06 It is often said that quantum technologies are poised to change the world as we know it, but cutting through the hype, what will quantum technologies actually mean for countries and their citizens? In Law and Policy for the Quantum Age, Chris Jay Hoofnagle and Simson L. Garfinkel explain the genesis of quantum information science (QIS) and the resulting quantum technologies that are most exciting: quantum sensing, computing, and communication. This groundbreaking, timely text explains how quantum technologies work, how countries will likely employ QIS for future national defense and what the legal landscapes will be for these nations, and how companies might (or might not) profit from the technology. Hoofnagle and Garfinkel argue that the consequences of QIS are so profound that we must begin planning for them today. This title is available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.
  uc berkeley graduate division: Announcement of the Graduate Division, Northern Section University of California, Berkeley. Graduate Division. Northern Section, 1915
  uc berkeley graduate division: The Grants Register , 2004 Postgraduate awards in the English speaking world.
  uc berkeley graduate division: Open Sources Chris DiBona, Sam Ockman, 1999-01-03 Freely available source code, with contributions from thousands of programmers around the world: this is the spirit of the software revolution known as Open Source. Open Source has grabbed the computer industry's attention. Netscape has opened the source code to Mozilla; IBM supports Apache; major database vendors haved ported their products to Linux. As enterprises realize the power of the open-source development model, Open Source is becoming a viable mainstream alternative to commercial software.Now in Open Sources, leaders of Open Source come together for the first time to discuss the new vision of the software industry they have created. The essays in this volume offer insight into how the Open Source movement works, why it succeeds, and where it is going.For programmers who have labored on open-source projects, Open Sources is the new gospel: a powerful vision from the movement's spiritual leaders. For businesses integrating open-source software into their enterprise, Open Sources reveals the mysteries of how open development builds better software, and how businesses can leverage freely available software for a competitive business advantage.The contributors here have been the leaders in the open-source arena: Brian Behlendorf (Apache) Kirk McKusick (Berkeley Unix) Tim O'Reilly (Publisher, O'Reilly & Associates) Bruce Perens (Debian Project, Open Source Initiative) Tom Paquin and Jim Hamerly (mozilla.org, Netscape) Eric Raymond (Open Source Initiative) Richard Stallman (GNU, Free Software Foundation, Emacs) Michael Tiemann (Cygnus Solutions) Linus Torvalds (Linux) Paul Vixie (Bind) Larry Wall (Perl) This book explains why the majority of the Internet's servers use open- source technologies for everything from the operating system to Web serving and email. Key technology products developed with open-source software have overtaken and surpassed the commercial efforts of billion dollar companies like Microsoft and IBM to dominate software markets. Learn the inside story of what led Netscape to decide to release its source code using the open-source mode. Learn how Cygnus Solutions builds the world's best compilers by sharing the source code. Learn why venture capitalists are eagerly watching Red Hat Software, a company that gives its key product -- Linux -- away.For the first time in print, this book presents the story of the open- source phenomenon told by the people who created this movement.Open Sources will bring you into the world of free software and show you the revolution.
  uc berkeley graduate division: The Limits of the Legal Complex Malcolm Feeley, Malcolm M. Feeley, Malcolm Langford, 2021 Spanning two centuries and five Nordic countries, this book questions the view that political lawyers are required for the development of a liberal political regime. It combines cross-disciplinary theory and careful empirical case studies by country experts whose regional insights are brought to bear on wider global contexts. The theory of the legal complex posits that lawyers will not simply mobilize collectively for material self-interest; instead they will organize and struggle for the limited goal of political liberalism. Constituted by a moderate state, core civil rights, and civil society freedoms, political liberalism is presented as a discrete but professionally valued good to which all lawyers can lend their support. Leading scholars claim that when one finds struggles against political repression, politics of the Legal Complex are frequently part of that struggle. One glaring omission in this research program is the Nordic region. This insightful volume provides a comprehensive account of the history and politics of lawyers of the last 200 years in the Nordic countries: Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Finland, and Iceland. Topping most global indexes of core civil rights, these states have been found to contain few to no visible legal complexes. Where previous studies have characterized lawyers as stewards and guardians of the law that seek to preserve its semi-autonomous nature, these legal complexes have emerged in a manner that challenges the standard narrative. This book offers rational choice and structuralist explanations for why and when lawyers mobilise collectively for political liberalism. In each country analysis, authors place lawyers in nineteenth century state transformation and emerging constitutionalism, followed by expanding democracy and the welfare state, the challenge of fascism and world war, the tensions of the Cold War, and the latter-day rights revolutions. These analyses are complemented by a comprehensive comparative introduction, and a concluding reflection on how the theory of the legal complex might be recast, making The Limits of the Legal Complex an invaluable resource for scholars and practitioners alike.
  uc berkeley graduate division: Normativity Judith Jarvis Thomson, 2015-12-20 Judith Jarvis Thomson's Normativity is a study of normative thought. She brings out that normative thought is not restricted to moral thought. Normative judgments divide into two sub-kinds, the evaluative and the directive; but the sub-kinds are larger than is commonly appreciated. Evaluative judgments include the judgments that such and such is a good umbrella, that Alfred is a witty comedian, and that Bert answered Carol's question correctly, as well as the judgment that David is a good human being. Directive judgments include the judgment that a toaster should toast evenly, that Edward ought to get a haircut, and that Frances must move her rook, as well as the judgment that George ought to be kind to his little brother. Thomson describes how judgments of these two sub-kinds interconnect and what makes them true when they are true. Given the extensiveness of the two sub-kinds of normative judgment, our everyday thinking is rich in normativity, and moreover, there is no gap between normative and factual thought. The widespread suspicion of the normative is therefore in large measure due to nothing deeper than an excessively narrow conception of what counts as a normative judgment.
  uc berkeley graduate division: School Choice and Diversity Janelle T. Scott, 2005-08-20 This collection of essays will help readers to disentangle the complex relationship between school choice and student diversity in the post-Brown era. Presenting the views of the most prominent researchers of school choice reforms in the U.S., this book argues that the contexts under which school choice plans are adopted are actually responsible for shaping student diversity within schools. Using sociological, economic, and political analysis, the authors present studies of controlled and voluntary choice plans, charter schools, private school selection, and their interaction with race, social class, gender, and student disability.
  uc berkeley graduate division: The Problem of the Color[blind] Brandi Wilkins Catanese, 2011-06-07 Catanese's beautifully written and cogently argued book addresses one of the most persistent sociopolitical questions in contemporary culture. She suggests that it is performance and the difference it makes that complicates the terms by which we can even understand 'multicultural' and 'colorblind' concepts. A tremendously illuminating study that promises to break new ground in the fields of theatre and performance studies, African American studies, feminist theory, cultural studies, and film and television studies. ---Daphne Brooks, Princeton University Adds immeasurably to the ways in which we can understand the contradictory aspects of racial discourse and performance as they have emerged during the last two decades. An ambitious, smart, and fascinating book. ---Jennifer DeVere Brody, Duke University Are we a multicultural nation, or a colorblind one? The Problem of the Color[blind] examines this vexed question in American culture by focusing on black performance in theater, film, and television. The practice of colorblind casting---choosing actors without regard to race---assumes a performing body that is somehow race neutral. But where, exactly, is race neutrality located---in the eyes of the spectator, in the body of the performer, in the medium of the performance? In analyzing and theorizing such questions, Brandi Wilkins Catanese explores a range of engaging and provocative subjects, including the infamous debate between playwright August Wilson and drama critic Robert Brustein, the film career of Denzel Washington, Suzan-Lori Parks's play Venus, the phenomenon of postblackness (as represented in the Studio Museum in Harlem's Freestyle exhibition), the performer Ice Cube's transformation from icon of gangsta rap to family movie star, and the controversial reality television series Black. White. Concluding that ideologies of transcendence are ahistorical and therefore unenforceable, Catanese advances the concept of racial transgression---a process of acknowledging rather than ignoring the racialized histories of performance---as her chapters move between readings of dramatic texts, films, popular culture, and debates in critical race theory and the culture wars.
  uc berkeley graduate division: Quitting Certainties Michael G. Titelbaum, 2013 This book presents a new Bayesian framework for modeling rational degrees of belief, called the Certainty-Loss Framework.
  uc berkeley graduate division: Philosophy the Day After Tomorrow Stanley Cavell, 2005 Seeking for philosophy the same spirit and assurance conveyed by artists like Fred Astaire, Cavell presents essays exploring the meaning of grace and gesture in film and on stage, in language and in life. Critical to the renaissance in American thought Cavell hopes to provoke is the recognition of the centrality of the “ordinary” to American life.
  uc berkeley graduate division: The Time Has Come Michael Kaufman, 2019-01-15 In the vein of Tim Wise’s White Like Me and Sheryl Sandberg’s Lean In, The Time Has Come —by co-founder of the White Ribbon campaign Michael Kaufman — offers a plain-spoken and forthright look at why and how men must actively fight for gender equality. From founding the White Ribbon Campaign, the world’s largest organized effort of men working to end violence against women, in the early 1990s, to his appointment as the only male member of the G7 Gender Equality Advisory Council, Michael Kaufman has been a major figure in promoting social justice and women’s rights for decades. Now, in The Time Has Come, he issues a stirring call for men to mobilize in the movement for gender equality. Weaving together sociological data, personal experiences, and insights gleaned from decades of work with governments and NGOs around the globe, Kaufman explores topics ranging from domestic violence to parental leave, grappling with the ways in which a culture of toxic masculinity hurts women and men (and their children). Informative and provocative, The Time Has Come demonstrates how real gender equality creates advancements in both the workplace and the global economy, and urges men to become dedicated allies in dismantling the patriarchy.
  uc berkeley graduate division: Fundamentals of Transportation and Traffic Operations Carlos Daganzo, 1997
  uc berkeley graduate division: Spirit of the New England Tribes William S. Simmons, 2018-03-06 Spanning three centuries, this collection traces the historical evolution of legends, folktales, and traditions of four major native American groups from their earliest encounters with European settlers to the present. The book is based on some 240 folklore texts gathered from early colonial writings, newspapers, magazines, diaries, local histories, anthropology and folklore publications, a variety of unpublished manuscript sources, and field research with living Indians.
  uc berkeley graduate division: Domestic Subjects Beth H. Piatote, 2013-01-29 Amid the decline of U.S. military campaigns against Native Americans in the late nineteenth century, assimilation policy arose as the new front in the Indian Wars, with its weapons the deployment of culture and law, and its locus the American Indian home and family. In this groundbreaking interdisciplinary work, Piatote tracks the double movement of literature and law in the contest over the aims of settler-national domestication and the defense of tribal-national culture, political rights, and territory.
  uc berkeley graduate division: Playing the Race Card Linda Williams, 2002-09-23 Williams, the author of Hard Core, explores how these images took root, beginning with melodramatic theater, where suffering characters acquire virtue through victimization.--BOOK JACKET.
  uc berkeley graduate division: Juridical Humanity Samera Esmeir, 2012-06-20 In colonial Egypt, the state introduced legal reforms that claimed to liberate Egyptians from the inhumanity of pre-colonial rule and elevate them to the status of human beings. These legal reforms intersected with a new historical consciousness that distinguished freedom from force and the human from the pre-human, endowing modern law with the power to accomplish but never truly secure this transition. Samera Esmeir offers a historical and theoretical account of the colonizing operations of modern law in Egypt. Investigating the law, both on the books and in practice, she underscores the centrality of the human to Egyptian legal and colonial history and argues that the production of juridical humanity was a constitutive force of colonial rule and subjugation. This original contribution queries long-held assumptions about the entanglement of law, humanity, violence, and nature, and thereby develops a new reading of the history of colonialism.
  uc berkeley graduate division: Achieving College Dreams Rhona S. Weinstein, Frank C. Worrell, 2016-03-17 Achieving College Dreams: How a University-Charter District Partnership Created an Early College High School tells the story of a remarkable 10-year collaboration between the University of California, Berkeley and Aspire Public Schools to develop and nurture the California College Preparatory Academy. Bridging the two cultures--artfully described as Pac-Man (the charter district) meets chess (the university)--the school serves as an exemplar in providing low-income and first-generation college youth with an excellent and equitable education. Framed by a longitudinal lens, findings from community-engaged scholarship, and a diversity of voices from students to superintendents, this book charts the journey from the initial decision to open a school to the high school graduation of its first two classes. The book captures struggle, improvement, and success as it takes readers inside the workings of the partnership, the development of the school, and the spillover of effects across district and university. Confronting the challenge of interweaving rigor and support, its authors explore such critical ingredients as teacher-student advisories; school transition; the home-school divide; building a supportive college-preparatory culture; teaching with depth, relational power, and equity; the forging of an academic identity; and scaling up. At a time of sharply unequal schools, glaring disparities in college readiness, and heightened expectations, Achieving College Dreams uniquely extends the knowledge base about how to better prepare underserved students for college eligibility and success. The book also calls for universities to step up to the plate as partners with districts to ensure both excellence and equity in secondary education for all children.
  uc berkeley graduate division: Information, Accountability, and Cumulative Learning Thad Dunning, Guy Grossman, Macartan Humphreys, Susan D. Hyde, Craig McIntosh, Gareth Nellis, 2019-07-11 Throughout the world, voters lack access to information about politicians, government performance, and public services. Efforts to remedy these informational deficits are numerous. Yet do informational campaigns influence voter behavior and increase democratic accountability? Through the first project of the Metaketa Initiative, sponsored by the Evidence in Governance and Politics (EGAP) research network, this book aims to address this substantive question and at the same time introduce a new model for cumulative learning that increases coordination among otherwise independent researcher teams. It presents the overall results (using meta-analysis) from six independently conducted but coordinated field experimental studies, the results from each individual study, and the findings from a related evaluation of whether practitioners utilize this information as expected. It also discusses lessons learned from EGAP's efforts to coordinate field experiments, increase replication of theoretically important studies across contexts, and increase the external validity of field experimental research.
  uc berkeley graduate division: "I'm Just a Comic Book Boy" Christopher B. Field, Keegan Lannon, Michael David MacBride, 2019-03-06 Comics and the punk movement are inextricably linked--each has a foundational do-it-yourself ethos and a nonconformist spirit defiant of authority. This collection of new essays provides for the first time a thorough analysis of the intersections between comics and punk. The contributors expand the discussion beyond the familiar U.S. and UK scenes to include the influence punk has had on comics produced in other countries, such as Spain and Turkey.
  uc berkeley graduate division: States of Dependency Karen M. Tani, 2016-04-04 Who bears responsibility for the poor, and who may exercise the power that comes with that responsibility? Amid the Great Depression, American reformers answered this question in new ways, with profound effects on long-standing practices of governance and entrenched understandings of citizenship. States of Dependency traces New Deal welfare programs over the span of four decades, asking what happened as money, expertise and ideas travelled from a federal administrative epicenter in Washington, DC, through state and local bureaucracies, and into diverse and divided communities. Drawing on a wealth of previously un-mined legal and archival sources, Karen Tani reveals how reformers attempted to build a more bureaucratic, centralized and uniform public welfare system; how traditions of localism, federalism and hostility toward the 'undeserving poor' affected their efforts; and how, along the way, more and more Americans came to speak of public income support in the powerful but limiting language of law and rights. The resulting account moves beyond attacking or defending Americans' reliance on the welfare state to explore the complex network of dependencies undergirding modern American governance.
  uc berkeley graduate division: The Centennial Record of the University of California Verne A. Stadtman, 1967
  uc berkeley graduate division: Mechanical Engineering , 1987
  uc berkeley graduate division: Where Sight Meets Sound Emily Zazulia, 2021 Late-medieval composers delighted in complicating the relationship between their music's written and sung forms, often tasking singers with reading their music in unusual ways-from slowing down a melodic line, to turning it backwards or upside down, even omitting certain notes or rests. These manipulations increasingly yielded music that was aurally all but unrecognizable as a derivative of the notated original. This book uses these unorthodox applications of notation to understand how late-medieval composers thought about the tool of musical notation. It argues that these compositions foregro.
  uc berkeley graduate division: Hemispheric American Studies Caroline Field Levander, Robert Steven Levine, 2008 Annotation The book seeks to excavate the complex cultural history of texts and discourses across the ever-changing and stratified geopolitical and cultural fields that collectively comprise the American hemisphere.
  uc berkeley graduate division: Graduate Programs in the Humanities, Arts & Social Sciences 2014 (Grad 2) Peterson's, 2013-11-22 Peterson's Graduate Programs in the Humanities, Arts & Social Sciences 2014 contains comprehensive profiles of more than 11,000 graduate programs in disciplines such as, applied arts & design, area & cultural studies, art & art history, conflict resolution & mediation/peace studies, criminology & forensics, language & literature, psychology & counseling, religious studies, sociology, anthropology, archaeology and more. Up-to-date data, collected through Peterson's Annual Survey of Graduate and Professional Institutions, provides valuable information on degree offerings, professional accreditation, jointly offered degrees, part-time and evening/weekend programs, postbaccalaureate distance degrees, faculty, students, requirements, expenses, financial support, faculty research, and unit head and application contact information. There are helpful links to in-depth descriptions about a specific graduate program or department, faculty members and their research, and more. There are also valuable articles on financial assistance, the graduate admissions process, advice for international and minority students, and facts about accreditation, with a current list of accrediting agencies.
  uc berkeley graduate division: Graduate Programs in the Humanities, Arts & Social Sciences 2015 (Grad 2) Peterson's, 2014-11-25 Peterson's Graduate Programs in the Humanities, Arts & Social Sciences 2015 contains details on more than 11,000 graduate programs of study across all relevant disciplines-including the arts and architecture, communications and media, psychology and counseling, political science and international affairs, economics, and sociology, anthropology, archaeology, and more. Informative data profiles include facts and figures on accreditation, degree requirements, application deadlines and contact information, financial support, faculty, and student body profiles. Two-page in-depth descriptions, written by featured institutions, offer complete details on specific graduate programs, schools, or departments as well as information on faculty research. Comprehensive directories list programs in this volume, as well as others in the graduate series.
  uc berkeley graduate division: Pieces of the Personality Puzzle David Charles Funder, Daniel J. Ozer, 2007 The Fourth Edition of Pieces of the Personality Puzzle features insightful readings in personality psychology from a wide range of voices, with nearly a third of the readings new to this edition.
  uc berkeley graduate division: Meaning of Folklore Alan Dundes, 2007-10-31 The essays of Alan Dundes virtually created the meaning of folklore as an American academic discipline. Yet many of them went quickly out of print after their initial publication in far-flung journals. Brought together for the first time in this volume compiled and edited by Simon Bronner, the selection surveys Dundes's major ideas and emphases, and is introduced by Bronner with a thorough analysis of Dundes's long career, his interpretations, and his inestimable contribution to folklore studies. Runner-up, the Wayland Hand Award for Folklore and History, 2009
  uc berkeley graduate division: Sacred Gifts, Profane Pleasures Marcy Norton, 2010-01 Traces European encounters and use of tobacco and cacao and its eventual commodification into a major business from the earliest period through the seventeenth century.
  uc berkeley graduate division: UCSF Graduate Division Bulletin University of California, San Francisco. Graduate Division, 2001
  uc berkeley graduate division: Assessing the Future Landscape of Scholarly Communication Diane Harley, 2010 Results of research conducted between 2007 and 2010. In the interest of developing a deeper understanding of how and why scholars do what they do to advance their academic fields, as well as their careers, our approach focused on fine grained analyses of faculty values and behaviors throughout the scholarly communication lifecycle, including career advancement, sharing, collaborating, informal and formal publishing, resource generation, and engaging with the public. The report is based on the responses of 160 interviewees across 45, mostly elite, research institutions in seven selected academic fields: archaeology, astrophysics, biology, economics, history, music, and political science. We concentrated on assessing scholars' attitudes and needs as both producers and users of research results.
  uc berkeley graduate division: UCSF News University of California, San Francisco, 1974
  uc berkeley graduate division: Disparate Regimes Brendan A. Shanahan, 2025 Historians have well described how US immigration policy increasingly fell under the purview of federal law and national politics in the mid-to-late nineteenth century. It is far less understood that the rights of noncitizen immigrants in the country remained primarily contested in the realms of state politics and law until the mid-to-late twentieth century. Such state-level political debates often centered on whether noncitizen immigrants should vote, count as part of the polity for the purposes of state legislative representation, work in public and publicly funded employment, or obtain professional licensure. Enacted state alienage laws were rarely self-executing, and immigrants and their allies regularly challenged nativist restrictions in court, on the job, by appealing to lawmakers and the public, and even via diplomacy. Battles over the passage, implementation, and constitutionality of such policies at times aligned with and sometimes clashed against contemporaneous efforts to expand rights to marginalized Americans, particularly US-born women. Often considered separately or treated as topics of marginal importance, Disparate Regimes underscores the centrality of nativist state politics and alienage policies to the history of American immigration and citizenship from the late nineteenth to the mid-twentieth centuries. It argues that the proliferation of these debates and laws produced veritable disparate regimes of citizenship rights in the American political economy on a state-by-state basis. It further illustrates how nativist state politics and alienage policies helped to invent and concretize the idea that citizenship rights meant citizen-only rights in law, practice, and popular perception in the United States.
  uc berkeley graduate division: Immigrant California David Scott FitzGerald, John D. Skrentny, 2021-01-26 If California were its own country, it would have the world's fifth largest immigrant population. The way these newcomers are integrated into the state will shape California's schools, workforce, businesses, public health, politics, and culture. In Immigrant California, leading experts in U.S. migration provide cutting-edge research on the incorporation of immigrants and their descendants in this bellwether state. California, unique for its diverse population, powerful economy, and progressive politics, provides important lessons for what to expect as demographic change comes to most states across the country. Contributors to this volume cover topics ranging from education systems to healthcare initiatives and unravel the sometimes-contradictory details of California's immigration history. By examining the past and present of immigration policy in California, the volume shows how a state that was once the national leader in anti-immigrant policies quickly became a standard-bearer of greater accommodation. California's successes, and its failures, provide an essential road map for the future prosperity of immigrants and natives alike.
  uc berkeley graduate division: LBL Research Review , 1990
  uc berkeley graduate division: Military Politics and Democracy in the Andes Maiah Jaskoski, 2013-08-15 Interviews with active-duty and retired military officers in Ecuador and Peru shed light on the evolution of Andean civil-military relations, with implications for democratization. Military Politics and Democracy in the Andes challenges conventional theories regarding military behavior in post-transition democracies. Through a deeply researched comparative analysis of the Ecuadorian and Peruvian armies, Maiah Jaskoski argues that militaries are concerned more with the predictability of their missions than with sovereignty objectives set by democratically elected leaders. Jaskoski gathers data from interviews with public officials, private sector representatives, journalists, and more than 160 Peruvian and Ecuadorian officers from all branches of the military. The results are surprising. Ecuador’s army, for example, fearing the uncertainty of border defense against insurgent encroachment in the north, neglected this duty, thereby sacrificing the state’s security goals, acting against government orders, and challenging democratic consolidation. Instead of defending the border, the army has opted to carry out policing functions within Ecuador, such as combating the drug trade. Additionally, by ignoring its duty to defend sovereignty, the army is available to contract out its policing services to paying, private companies that, relative to the public, benefit disproportionately from army security. Jaskoski also looks briefly at this theory's implications for military responsiveness to government orders in democratic Bolivia, Colombia, and Venezuela, and in newly formed democracies more broadly.
为什么UC网盘突然对普通用户限速了? - 知乎
Feb 20, 2025 · 为什么UC网盘突然对普通用户限速了? 虽然UC只给普通用户10G容量,但之前下载速度几乎接近设备理论速度上限,而现在直接限速了。

加州大学(UC)十所分校到底有什么区别? - 知乎
加州大学(UC)十所分校到底有什么区别? 明年留学美国,加州首选,但是除了文理学院以外,UC 系列有那么多分校,除去排名的高低,这几所学校到底有什么区别呢?

UC纪元最后的结局是什么样? - 知乎
关于UC历史的后续(后UC纪元): 0153年的赞斯卡尔战争结束后,UC系列高达的官方正作便结束了,但仍有一些或被打入黑历史或不可考据的漫画,小说等内容描述了后UC纪元的事情。

在加州大学伯克利分校 (UC Berkeley) 就读是怎样一番体验? - 知乎
如果愿意的话,UC Villiage还可以分给住户一片田地,可以种一些蔬菜水果。 UC Village分给我的田地 娱乐方面,附近风景其实挺多的,开车10分钟就能到水边,半小时就能到旧金山,1小时 …

知乎 - 有问题,就会有答案
加利福尼亚大学戴维斯分校(University of California- Davis),1905年创立,是一所地处美国加州首府萨…

如何高效地补完《高达》UC系列作品? - 知乎
永久更新,欢迎收藏。 2024.12.7已更新《机动战士高达:GQuuuuuuX》 我觉得看高达所谓的高效补完,应该囊括以下三点: 一.高效补完重要的作品 二.高效补完每部作品里的名场景、名战 …

c盘突然大了几十g,roaming这个文件夹怎么这么大? - 知乎
C:\Users\Administrator\AppData\Roaming\Apple Computer\MobileSync\Backup这个文件夹去看看,你可能是备份了你的iPhone,然后就突然大了。

如何把uc缓存的视频移出来? - 知乎
更新:最新版uc浏览器现已支持整部视频软件内转码,即缓存好的视频无需利用第三方软件分段逐个转码改格式,一键转换成mp4(如图3),实为uc爱好者的福音。

想入坑高达动画,看剧顺序怎么看? - 知乎
如果看完了UC三部曲,想试试其他的高达系列,笔者推荐W,W可以说是许多7080后的入坑高达作品,后半段剧情会略显沉闷,但是初期也创造了女主角大喊“快来杀我”的经典台词。

阿里巴巴旗下有哪些子公司? - 知乎
阿里巴巴旗下有哪些子公司? 为了更方便的梳理庞大的阿里系,因此把它们按阿里巴巴自有(包括全资收购的)、阿里巴巴投资控股来分成两类。 一.阿里巴巴自有 电商:天猫商城、淘宝、一 …

为什么UC网盘突然对普通用户限速了? - 知乎
Feb 20, 2025 · 为什么UC网盘突然对普通用户限速了? 虽然UC只给普通用户10G容量,但之前下载速度几乎接近设备理论速度上限,而现在直接限速了。

加州大学(UC)十所分校到底有什么区别? - 知乎
加州大学(UC)十所分校到底有什么区别? 明年留学美国,加州首选,但是除了文理学院以外,UC 系列有那么多分校,除去排名的高低,这几所学校到底有什么区别呢?

UC纪元最后的结局是什么样? - 知乎
关于UC历史的后续(后UC纪元): 0153年的赞斯卡尔战争结束后,UC系列高达的官方正作便结束了,但仍有一些或被打入黑历史或不可考据的漫画,小说等内容描述了后UC纪元的事情。

在加州大学伯克利分校 (UC Berkeley) 就读是怎样一番体验? - 知乎
如果愿意的话,UC Villiage还可以分给住户一片田地,可以种一些蔬菜水果。 UC Village分给我的田地 娱乐方面,附近风景其实挺多的,开车10分钟就能到水边,半小时就能到旧金山,1小时 …

知乎 - 有问题,就会有答案
加利福尼亚大学戴维斯分校(University of California- Davis),1905年创立,是一所地处美国加州首府萨…

如何高效地补完《高达》UC系列作品? - 知乎
永久更新,欢迎收藏。 2024.12.7已更新《机动战士高达:GQuuuuuuX》 我觉得看高达所谓的高效补完,应该囊括以下三点: 一.高效补完重要的作品 二.高效补完每部作品里的名场景、名战 …

c盘突然大了几十g,roaming这个文件夹怎么这么大? - 知乎
C:\Users\Administrator\AppData\Roaming\Apple Computer\MobileSync\Backup这个文件夹去看看,你可能是备份了你的iPhone,然后就突然大了。

如何把uc缓存的视频移出来? - 知乎
更新:最新版uc浏览器现已支持整部视频软件内转码,即缓存好的视频无需利用第三方软件分段逐个转码改格式,一键转换成mp4(如图3),实为uc爱好者的福音。

想入坑高达动画,看剧顺序怎么看? - 知乎
如果看完了UC三部曲,想试试其他的高达系列,笔者推荐W,W可以说是许多7080后的入坑高达作品,后半段剧情会略显沉闷,但是初期也创造了女主角大喊“快来杀我”的经典台词。

阿里巴巴旗下有哪些子公司? - 知乎
阿里巴巴旗下有哪些子公司? 为了更方便的梳理庞大的阿里系,因此把它们按阿里巴巴自有(包括全资收购的)、阿里巴巴投资控股来分成两类。 一.阿里巴巴自有 电商:天猫商城、淘宝、一 …