Search Results for: adam tas corridor – Page 2
event
...in Urban Renewal Projects such as the Adam Tas Corridor. The talk will argue that current discussions around the ethics, regulation and governance of AI must involve a plurality of...
post
...hopes to put some of these ideas into practice in his STIAS project which looks at the use of open data and generative AI in the urban renewal Adam Tas...
project
...Throughout the research fellowship the open data initiatives within the Western Cape, and urban renewal projects such as the Adam Tas Corridor will be some of use cases considered. ...
project
Different causes and expressions of xenophobia are analysed by comparing three countries: South Africa, Germany and Canada. On a spectrum of rejection of migrants, South Africa is situated at one...
project
The domestication of many animal species was a key element in the development of human societies. An early step presumably involved the acquisition of docility, a prerequisite for animal handling,...
project
Like all complex animals, humans have faces. Indeed, the human face is unconsciously used as the standard to which all other animal faces are compared, in terms of “oddness” or...
event
...through several countries on their journey to safety. This path – traversing countries and regions – is broadly referred to as a migration corridor. Migration corridors have not gotten adequate...
post
...Floristic Region, Succulent Karoo ecoregion and the Maputaland-Pondoland-Albany corridor,” he said. “The Cape Floristic Region is the smallest yet richest of the six plant kingdoms and the only one in...
post
...second-largest and largest deepwater port managing two million tons of cargo annually. It’s also the gateway to the Lobito Corridor – which offers access for European Union countries and the...
post
...a favourable position to survive the catastrophe. “We live in a world of animals and plants that predate us by hundreds of millions of years – we have a duty...
publication
Adam S. Wilkins, Richard W. Wrangham and W. Tecumseh Fitch. 2014. The “Domestication Syndrome” in Mammals: A Unified Explanation Based on Neural Crest Cell Behavior and Genetics. Genetics, 197 (3),...