• 제목/요약/키워드: archipelagic studies

검색결과 4건 처리시간 0.019초

생태 군도도시 개발을 위한 계획기법·목적의 연관성 분석 (A correlation analysis of physical design method·purpose for eco-archipelagic city)

  • 한주형;장동민
    • 한국산학기술학회논문지
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    • 제14권10호
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    • pp.5251-5259
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    • 2013
  • 본 연구는 군도개발을 위한 물리적 계획기법의 개발현황을 파악하고 계획기법과 개발목적 간의 연관성 분석을 통해 지속가능한 생태 군도도시 개발전략을 구축하는데 목표를 둔다. 첫째, 국내 외 사례의 비교분석에서는 친환경적으로 개발된 유럽사례가 환경론적 측면에서 다양한 개발테마에 맞게 적용되고 과학도시, 관광도시, 상업도시, 생태도시로서의 아이덴티티를 갖고 개발되고 있음의 결과를 얻었다. 그러나 국내사례는 인간중심의 관광도시 개발에만 집중하는 단기적 개발기법 적용이 대부분이었으며, 섬 내에 살고 있는 거주민들의 개발 지식정보 습득과 이해가 미비하여 향후 지속가능한 개발에 장애가 될 수 있음을 파악하였다. 둘째, 보다 체계적인 물리적 계획기법의 적용방향을 제시하기 위해 심층 분석을 실시하였다. 연구방법은 사례분석을 통해 도출한 계획기법을 계획목적을 중심으로 연관성 분석 실시하여 각 사례별 적용여부 및 개발동향을 파악하였다. 그 결과, 개발목적에 따른 컨텐츠와 물리적 계획기법들이 다각적 측면에서 개발해야 하고 또한, 현지주민은 지속적인 정보지식 공유와 외부인과의 소통을 원활히 할 수 있는 서비스 컨텐츠, 관련 인프라 확충을 해야 할 것이다.

The Prison and the Sea

  • Mrazek, Jan
    • 수완나부미
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    • 제11권1호
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    • pp.7-40
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    • 2019
  • The essay reflects on the work of Adrian Lapian (1929-2011), an Indonesian scholar of archipelagic/maritime Southeast Asia and its "sea people-sea pirates-sea kings." The essay suggests that Lapian's writing mirrors navigation at sea, and the constant re-orientation and ever-changing, multiple points of view that are part of it. This is contrasted to Foucault's "panopticism" and academic desire for discipline. Taking cue from Lapian's writing and from the present author's experience of seafaring, the essay envisions Southeast Asian studies as a fluid, precarious, disorienting, even nauseating multiplicity of experiences, dialogues, and moving, unstable, and uncertain points of view; a style of learning that is less (neo)colonial, more humble, and closer to experiences in the region, than super-scholarship that imposes universalizing, panoptic standards, theories and methods (typically self-styled as "new") that reduce the particular into a specimen of the general, a cell in the Panopticon. The essay concludes with reflections on certain learning initiatives/traditions at the National University of Singapore, including seafaring voyages-experiences, encounters, and conversations that make students and scholars alike to move and see differently, to be touched, blown away, rocked, swayed, disoriented, swallowed, transformed, and feel anew their places, roots, bonds, distances, fears, blindness, powerlessness.

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Other faunas, coral rubbles, and soft coral covers are important predictors of coral reef fish diversity, abundance, and biomass

  • Imam Bachtiar;Tri Aryono Hadi;Karnan Karnan;Naila Taslimah Bachtiar
    • Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • 제26권4호
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    • pp.268-281
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    • 2023
  • Coral reef fisheries are prominent for the archipelagic countries' food sufficiency and security. Studies showed that fish abundance and biomass are affected by biophysical variables. The present study determines which biophysical variables are important predictors of fish diversity, abundance, and biomass. The study used available monitoring data from the Indonesian Research Center for Oceanography, the National Board for Research and Innovation. Data were collected from 245 transects in 19 locations distributed across the Indonesian Archipelago, including the eastern Indian Ocean, Sunda Shelf (Karimata Sea), Wallacea (Flores and Banda Seas), and the western Pacific Ocean. Principal component analysis and multiple regression model were administered to 13 biophysical metrics against 11 variables of coral reef fishes, i.e., diversity, abundance, and biomass of coral reef fishes at three trophic levels. The results showed for the first time that the covers of other fauna, coral rubbles, and soft corals were the three most important predictor variables for nearly all coral reef fish variables. Other fauna cover was the important predictor for all 11 coral reef fish variables. Coral rubble cover was the predictor for ten variables, but carnivore fish abundance. Soft coral cover was a good predictor for corallivore, carnivore, and targeted fishes. Despite important predictors for corallivore and carnivore fish variables, hard coral cover was not the critical predictor for herbivore fish variables. The other important predictor variables with a consistent pattern were dead coral covered with algae and rocks. Dead coral covered with algae was an important predictor for herbivore fishes, while the rock was good for only carnivore fishes.

Archipeligiality as a Southeast Asian Poetic in Cirilo F. Bautista's Sunlight on Broken Stones

  • Sanchez, Louie Jon A.
    • 수완나부미
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    • 제6권1호
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    • pp.193-221
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    • 2014
  • Archipeligiality, a concept continuously being developed by the scholar, is one that attempts to articulate the Filipino sense of place as discoursed in/through its literatures. As a country composed of 7,107 islands, the very fragmentation and division of the country, as well as its multiculturality and multilinguality, have become the very means by which Filipino writers have "imagined" so to speak-that is, also, constructed, into a singular, united frame-the "nation." This, the author supposes, is an important aspect to explore when it comes to discoursing the larger Southeast Asian imagination, or poetic, as similar situations (i.e. Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore), may soon compel for a comparative critico-literary perspective. This paper continues this exploratory "geoliterary" discourse by looking at a Filipino canonical work in English by Cirilo F. Bautista, the epic The Trilogy of Saint Lazarus, the title of which already signals a geographic allusion to the first map-name granted by the Spanish colonizer to the Philippines in the region, and consequently the first signification of the country's subjected existence in the colonial imagination. The work, published between 1970 and 1998, is composed of three parts: The Archipelago, Telex Moon, and Sunlight on Broken Stones, which won the 1998 Philippine Independence Centennial Literary Prize. In these epics, notions of Philippine history and situation were discoursed, and Filipino historical figures were engaged in dialogue by the poet/the poet's voice, with the end of locating the place [where history and time had brought it; or its direction or trajectory as a nation, being true to the Filipino maxim of ang di lumingon sa pinanggalingan, di makararating sa paroroonan (the one who does not look back to his origins would not reach his destination)]. of the Philippines not only in the national imagination, but in this paper, in the wider regional consciousness. The paper proposes that the archipelagic concept is an important and unique characteristic of the Southeast Asian situation, and thus, may be a means to explicate the clearly connected landscapes of the region's imagination through literature. This paper focuses on Sunlight on Broken Stones.

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