Cardiologie : quoi de neuf depuis ces 10 dernières années?
Les journées Victor Segalen - Bordeaux
Formation Médicale Continue des Médecins Généralistes
>> Cardiologie : quoi de neuf ces 10 dernières années?
Pierre Dos Santos, Valves percutanées et rétrécissement aortique
Laurie Aimable, Education thérapeutique en réadaptation cardiaque
Frédéric Sacher, Techniques d’ablation en rythmologie
Jean-Benoît Thambo, Cardiologie int
Onco-gériatrie : une nouvelle spécialité?
Les journées Victor Segalen - Bordeaux
Formation Médicale Continue des Médecins Généralistes
>> Onco-gériatrie : une nouvelle spécialité?
Cécile Mertens, Fragilité et vulnérabilité des personnes âgées face au cancer
Muriel Rainfray, Evaluation de l’espérance de vie et comorbidités des sujets âgés
Pierre Soubeyran, Elaboration d’un
Graphing Linear Equations and Inequalities: Plotting Points in the Plane
This module contains the a graphing linear equations and inequalities from Elementary Algebra by Denny Burzynski and Wade Ellis, Jr.
Europe day ahead: Growth worries dampen sentiment
June 23 - Risk assets tumble on both sides of the Atlantic as global data continues to come in soft. Sentiment fails to lift even after the IEA decides to releases 60 million barrels of oil reserves.
The Green Movement and Nonviolent Struggle for Democratic Iran
Dr. Ardeshir Amirarjmand, Representative of Mousavi, leader of the Green Movement
Moderator: Dr. John Tirman, Executive Director of MIT's Center for International Studies
Special Guest: Dr. Farzin Vahdat, Founding member of Nonviolent Initiative for Democracy
Harris antelope ground squirrel from the Sonora desert
Many small mammals live in the desert and rely on cacti and their fruit for water and nutrients. Many small mammals hibernate in winter, but not the Harris antelope ground squirrel.
Grasshoppers, Ants and Locusts: the future of the world economy [Audio]
Speaker(s): Martin Wolf | The financial crisis was the product of an unstable interaction between ants (excess savers), grasshoppers (excess borrowers) and locusts (the financial sector that intermediated between the two). In view of this history, is the current recovery solidly built? Or do the weaknesses the crisis revealed remain pervasive? Martin Wolf is the associate editor and chief economics commentator at the Financial Times.
Learn with Pictures and Video S2 #25 - 5 More Must-Know Spanish Words 2
Learn Spanish with SpanishPod101.com! Now that you have lived in Spain for awhile, you want to travel out of the city and see things. You notice that the people that live even in the next city have different Spanish accents and words for things. You are glad that you know some Spanish words that make [...]
3.2 Case Study 1: Caswell's cockroaches The setting is a class of nine- and ten-year-olds in Toronto, Canada. The curriculum focus is biology. The classroom has been carefully organised to mirror the way in which a real adult scientific research community operates at the University of Toronto's zoological department, local to the school. Over a ten-week period, the young students are given the opportunity to become immersed in a culture of ‘scientific inquiry’ by their teacher, Beverley Caswell, who has chosen to make the
5 Child labour: a case study An interesting, controversial but important topic in the debate about corporate social responsibility and Global Corporate Citizenship is the issue of child labour. According to estimates released in April 2002 in
Every child counts: New global estimates on child labour
(Geneva, ILO), there were: some 352 million children (aged 5–17) engaged in some form of economic activity in the world in 2000, including 211 million in the a
Northern California True Color Time Lapse from SeaWiFS
Transitions between relatively cloud free true color scenes of Northern California from SeaWiFS
Stelios on Brands, Serial Entrepreneurship, the Environment and Giving Something Back! [Audio]
Speaker(s): Sir Stelios Haji-Ioannou | Stelios Haji-Ioannou, LSE alumnus, is founder of the easyGroup companies and has given £2 million to LSE for the Stelios Scholars programme.
Running Cities: London in contextd [Audio]
Speaker(s): Sir Simon Milton, Professor Ricky Burdett; Deyan Sudjic | What is the new administration's vision for London? Speakers discuss how to design and manage the powerhouses of the global economy, assessing London's development compared to the megacities of the world. Simon Milton was appointed deputy mayor for policy and planning after serving as chairman of London's Local Government Association. Ricky Burdett, chief adviser for the London 2012 Olympics, and Deyan Sudjic, director of the
Where Now For the United States After the Election? [Audio]
Speaker(s): Professor Michael Cox, Jessica Mathews; Bob Singh | The 2008 race for the White House has been the most exciting in recent American history. But will it make much difference to the United States and the rest of the world who wins: Obama or McCain? Michael Cox is a professor of international relations at LSE. Jessica Mathews is president of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Rob Singh is a fellow of the RSA and an associate fellow of the Institute for the Study of the Ame
World War Two: behind closed doors [Audio]
Speaker(s): Laurence Rees | Laurence Rees will be discussing his book and BBC series World War Two: behind closed doors. He will re-examine the key decisions made by Stalin, Churchill and Roosevelt during the war. Laurence Rees is an award-winning historian and documentary maker.
IHL and International Human Rights Law in Non-International Armed Conflicts [Audio]
Speaker(s): Professor Marco Sassòli | Professor Sassoli will explore the relationship between International Humanitarian and Human Rights Law during non-international armed conflict, by applying the lex specialis principle. Marco Sassrli is professor of international law at the University of Geneva and associate professor at the Universities of Quebec and Laval.
Democracy in America: Jefferson, Tocqueville, and Lincoln [Audio]
Speaker(s): Professor Peter Onuf | Professor Onuf explores the development of the elusive and controversial ideal of democracy from Thomas Jefferson's revolutionary writings to Abraham Lincoln's great effort to vindicate republican principles in the American Civil War. Peter Onuf is Thomas Jefferson Foundation Professor of History at the University of Virginia and Harmsworth Professor of American History at the University of Oxford.
LSE Literary Weekend - Ben Okri 'showcase' [Audio]
Speaker(s): Ben Okri | Poet in the City and LSE are honoured to be holding a special showcase event with the world famous poet and writer Ben Okri. Born in 1959 in Minna, northern Nigeria, he became world famous as a writer in 1991 when he won the Booker prize for his novel The Famished Road. Set in a Nigerian village, this was the first in a trilogy of successful novels about Azaro, a spirit child. In all he has published eight novels, and won countless awards and honours for his writing. His l
Bulls or Bears in the China Shop? Global Crises, Global Linkages and Asian Manufacturing [Audio]
Speaker(s): Professor Andrew Bernard | This annual Sir Patrick Gillam Lecture examines the impact of the global economic downturn on East Asia and the prospects for East Asian manufacturing in its aftermath. Andrew Bernard is Jack Byrne Professor of International Economics and director of the Center for International Business at the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth, USA.
Climate Change: Are We Heading for a New Cold War? [Audio]
Speaker(s): Professor Graciela Chichilnisky | There is an historic standoff between China and the US on the issue of global warming. Neither wants to limit emissions unless the other does so first. In Copenhagen December 2009 the nations of the world will decide whether to resolve the Global Warming problem extending Kyoto after 2012 - or to start a new Cold War of escalating emissions - the outcome of which may determine the fate of humankind. Professor Graciela Chichilnisky suggests two modest













