Presentations
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Study Plan by Wan Wen Published 18. March 2011
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Study Plan by Benjamin Kwofie Published 29. January 2011
Title: The Adoption, Diffusion, and Implementation of e-learning for Building the Capacity of Tertiary Institutions in Developing Countries
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Study Plan by Patrick Ohemeng Gyaase Published 29. January 2011
Title: Re-engineering Governance, E-Government Approach to Decentralisation in Ghana
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Study Plan by Joseph Kwame Adjei Published 29. January 2011
Title: A Case for Implementation of Citizen-centric National IDentity Management Systems
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Study Plan by Nana Kofi Annan Published 29. January 2011
Title: Composite M learning platform for ubiquitous education delivery
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Study Plan by Daniel Michael Okwabi Adjin Published 29. January 2011
Title: DEVELOPMENT OF A TECHNO-ECONOMIC MODEL OF INTELLIGENT TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM FOR DEPLOYMENT IN GHANA
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Study Plan by Ezer Osei Yeboah-Boateng Published 29. January 2011
Title: CYBER-SECURITY CHALLENGES With SMEs In DEVELOPING ECONOMIES: Issues on Confidentiality, Integrity & Availability (CIA).
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Study Plan by Solomon Bamfo Published 26. January 2011
Title: "Internet Access Provision as a Public Good and Growth in The Human Capital"
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Study Plan by Peter Tobbin Published 21. January 2011
Title: Diffusion, Adoption and Use of Mobile Data Services: A Consumer Behavior Analysis
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Study Plan by Anja Wejs Published 12. January 2011
Title: Integrating Climate Change in Strategic Environmental Assessments of Urban Plans
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A Method for Holistic Evaluation of Sustainable Buildings of the Future - By Gitte Gylling Hammershøj Olesen Published 22. November 2010
Through the last decades there has been a growing interest in quantitative assessment of building performance but now, contours of a more holistic approach to sustainable buildings emerges and the technological and practical development follow suit. The project approaches the question of a need for creating holistic evaluation of sustainable buildings based on a symbiosis between quantitative and qualitative methods for assessing sustainable buildings.
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Empowering by technology -mapping everyday geographies of the suburb - By Anne-Marie Sanvig Knudsen Published 22. November 2010
In recent years access to new mobile technologies has become more and more widespread. With the influx of smart phones which incorporate GPS technology, mapping human activities has become even more accessible. From an urban planning perspective new mobile communication technologies hold a somewhat unexplored potential of engaging citizens, communities and user-groups in planning processes and the co-production of cities and neighbourhoods.
