Search results for "BAI"
showing 10 items of 716 documents
Injective spaces of real-valued functions with the baire property
1995
Generalizing the technique used by S.A. Argyros in [3], we give a lemma from which certain Banach spaces are shown to be non-injective. This is applied mainly to study the injectivity of spaces of real-valued Borel functions and functions with the Baire property on a topological space. The results obtained in this way do not follow from previous works about this matter.
A Note on Algebraic Sums of Subsets of the Real Line
2002
AbstractWe investigate the algebraic sums of sets for a large class of invari-ant ˙-ideals and ˙- elds of subsets of the real line. We give a simpleexample of two Borel subsets of the real line such that its algebraicsum is not a Borel set. Next we show a similar result to Proposition 2from A. Kharazishvili paper [4]. Our results are obtained for ideals withcoanalytical bases. 1 Introduction We shall work in ZFC set theory. By !we denote natural numbers. By 4wedenote the symmetric di erence of sets. The cardinality of a set Xwe denoteby jXj. By R we denote the real line and by Q we denote rational numbers. IfAand Bare subsets of R n and b2R , then A+B= fa+b: a2A^b2Bgand A+ b= A+ fbg. Simila…
Countable connected spaces and bunches of arcs in R3
2006
Abstract We investigate the images (also called quotients) of countable connected bunches of arcs in R 3 , obtained by shrinking the arcs to points (see Section 2 for definitions of new terms). First, we give an intrinsic description of such images among T 1 -spaces: they are precisely countable and weakly first countable spaces. Moreover, an image is first countable if and only if it can be represented as a quotient of another bunch with its projection hereditarily quotient (Theorem 2.7). Applying this result we see, for instance, that two classical countable connected T 2 -spaces—the Bing space [R.H. Bing, A connected countable Hausdorff space, Proc. Amer. Math. Soc. 4 (1953) 474], and th…
Crédit-bailleur. Rejet de la demande en restitution du crédit-bailleur dont le contrat n'a pas été publié correctement à la date du jugement d'ouvert…
2011
International audience; (Com. 11 mai 2010, n° 09-14.048, arrêt n° 524 F-P+B, Sté Credipar c/ K'Nevez et a., D. 2010. 1276, et les obs. ; Rev. sociétés 2010. 409, obs. P. Roussel Galle ; JCP 2010. 958, n° 12, obs. M. Cabrillac, et Act. 791, obs. J. Lasserre Capdeville)
Plantations installées par le preneur à bail : l'accession du bailleur en différé [Note sous : Cass. 3e civ., 23 nov. 2017, n° 16-16.815, FS-P+B+I, E…
2017
Sauf convention contraire, les plantations réalisées par le preneur lui appartiennent pendant la durée du bail en cours, l'accession du bailleur à leur propriété se produisant au jour du renouvellement du contrat.
La valorisation de l'exploitation agricole : totem et tabou
2017
International audience; Depuis la profondeur des âges et l’ordre éternel des champs, les sociétés agraires se sont toujours montrées réfractaires à la finance. Jusqu’au tournant du milieu XXème siècle, l’esprit paysan – baigné de catholicisme - cultivait même soigneusement sa différence en regard du monde marchand. Il n’est guère étonnant, dans ce contexte, que la valorisation des exploitations agricoles fasse figure de tabou. Mais au-delà des mentalités, c’est la politique juridique française qui a rendu la question impensable. A l’origine de la loi, il y a le souci impérieux d’éviter la spéculation foncière. La terre étant le substrat de la plupart des unités de production agricoles, le l…
Park Parking
2019
The book containing this project, presents the outcomes of the 1st International Workshop “Dubai Pop-Up: Architecture in a Transient City” organized in March 2017 at d3-Dubai Design District by Al Ghurair University in collaboration with other international academic partners. Local students of architecture worked together with students coming from an international background, in order to foster a shared design vision through a collective cultural growth and reciprocal awareness. The participants had the opportunity to visit both recent accomplished buildings and projects under construction, confronting themselves with the local context in a dynamic and stimulating environment. The workshop …
Dubai, da città in transizione a città resiliente?
2020
L'articolo presenta il lavoro, Dubai Pop-Up. Architecture in a transient city, esito di un un workshop internazionale di progettazione (coordinato da T. Aglieri Rinella e R. Garcia Rubio) che ha portato al centro la questione Dubai, riunendo un gran numero di docenti e studenti per ragionare sull’introduzione di nuovi modi di pensare la città. Grazie alle diversificate e talvolta sorprendenti ipotesi che i progetti elaborati suggeriscono, appare chiaro quanto possa essere ancora aperto il grado delle alternative a quel modello di sviluppo orientato solamente sulla “monocoltura del profitto” che sino adesso ha guidato le scelte urbane in questa città. The article presents the work "Dubai Pop…
Dubai: a city as a capriccio
2019
Dubai is a fascinating young city projected to the future. Its skyline offers nowadays a wide panorama of architectural works, from hi-scale landscape interventions to small size projects, designed by some of the most renowned world-famous architects. Those projects aim at a radical change of the urban landscape, attempting to reconnect a built environment today fragmented by the bursting expansion of recent times. The Essay talk about the proper perception of a peculiar “collage city” like Dubai, in an analogous but inverted manner in the rapport between reality and representation, generate an idea of city that puts the visitor in a condition of surreal estrangement, where any kind of juxt…
Revisiting Dubai's Business School Mania
2019
We continue the ongoing dialogue in AMLE on business school hubs and addresses from Rogmans (2019, this issue) by evaluating the applicability of Dunning’s OLI advantages—Ownership (O), Location (L), Internalization (I)—in explaining Dubai’s emergence as a global education hub. Because business schools typically possess few transferable Ownership-advantages, Dunning’s OLI advantages theory appears simplistic and decontextualized when applied to the global business school field. This commentary contributes to existing research on business school hubs by providing some guiding points for future discussions seeking to develop a better understanding of international branch campuses. peerReviewed