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<title>Geography - PhD Theses</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/10468/205</link>
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<dc:date>2013-05-02T22:17:08Z</dc:date>
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<item rdf:about="http://hdl.handle.net/10468/501">
<title>Monitoring the vegetation start of season (SOS) across the island of Ireland using the MERIS global vegetation index</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/10468/501</link>
<description>Monitoring the vegetation start of season (SOS) across the island of Ireland using the MERIS global vegetation index
O'Connor, Brian
The aim of this study was to develop a methodology, based on satellite remote sensing, to estimate the vegetation Start of Season (SOS) across the whole island of Ireland on an annual basis. This growing body of research is known as Land Surface Phenology (LSP) monitoring. The SOS was estimated for each year from a 7-year time series of 10-day composited, 1.2 km reduced resolution MERIS Global Vegetation Index (MGVI) data from 2003 to 2009, using the time series analysis software, TIMESAT. The selection of a 10-day composite period was guided by in-situ observations of leaf unfolding and cloud cover at representative point locations on the island. The MGVI time series was smoothed and the SOS metric extracted at a point corresponding to 20% of the seasonal MGVI amplitude. The SOS metric was extracted on a per pixel basis and gridded for national scale coverage. There were consistent spatial patterns in the SOS grids which were replicated on an annual basis and were qualitatively linked to variation in landcover. Analysis revealed that three statistically separable groups of CORINE Land Cover (CLC) classes could be derived from differences in the SOS, namely agricultural and forest land cover types, peat bogs, and natural and semi-natural vegetation types. These groups demonstrated that managed vegetation, e.g. pastures has a significantly earlier SOS than in unmanaged vegetation e.g. natural grasslands. There was also interannual spatio-temporal variability in the SOS. Such variability was highlighted in a series of anomaly grids showing variation from the 7-year mean SOS. An initial climate analysis indicated that an anomalously cold winter and spring in 2005/2006, linked to a negative North Atlantic Oscillation index value, delayed the 2006 SOS countrywide, while in other years the SOS anomalies showed more complex variation. A correlation study using air temperature as a climate variable revealed the spatial complexity of the air temperature-SOS relationship across the Republic of Ireland as the timing of maximum correlation varied from November to April depending on location. The SOS was found to occur earlier due to warmer winters in the Southeast while it was later with warmer winters in the Northwest. The inverse pattern emerged in the spatial patterns of the spring correlates. This contrasting pattern would appear to be linked to vegetation management as arable cropping is typically practiced in the southeast while there is mixed agriculture and mostly pastures to the west. Therefore, land use as well as air temperature appears to be an important determinant of national scale patterns in the SOS. The TIMESAT tool formed a crucial component of the estimation of SOS across the country in all seven years as it minimised the negative impact of noise and data dropouts in the MGVI time series by applying a smoothing algorithm. The extracted SOS metric was sensitive to temporal and spatial variation in land surface vegetation seasonality while the spatial patterns in the gridded SOS estimates aligned with those in landcover type. The methodology can be extended for a longer time series of FAPAR as MERIS will be replaced by the ESA Sentinel mission in 2013, while the availability of full resolution (300m) MERIS FAPAR and equivalent sensor products holds the possibility of monitoring finer scale seasonality variation. This study has shown the utility of the SOS metric as an indicator of spatiotemporal variability in vegetation phenology, as well as a correlate of other environmental variables such as air temperature. However, the satellite-based method is not seen as a replacement of ground-based observations, but rather as a complementary approach to studying vegetation phenology at the national scale. In future, the method can be extended to extract other metrics of the seasonal cycle in order to gain a more comprehensive view of seasonal vegetation development.
</description>
<dc:date>2011-08-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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<item rdf:about="http://hdl.handle.net/10468/203">
<title>Participation by place-based community organisations in local development: case studies from East Cork</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/10468/203</link>
<description>Participation by place-based community organisations in local development: case studies from East Cork
Ryan, Conor John
The past two decades have witnessed concerted efforts by theorists and policy-makers to place civil society at the centre of social, economic and environmental development processes.  To this end, policies grounded in a Third Way approach have sought to forge stronger linkages between the state and voluntary community-based organisations.  Concepts such as active citizenship, social capital, partnership and sustainability have underpinned this political philosophy, which reflects a movement in development theory and political science away from notions of state-led development and unfettered neo-liberalism. In the Irish context, a series of initiatives have given expression to this new policy agenda, the foremost amongst them the publication of a White Paper in 2000.  New local governance structures and development schemes have multiplied since the early 1990s, while the physical planning system has also been modified.  All this has taken place against the backdrop of unprecedented economic development and social change precipitated by the ‘Celtic Tiger’.This thesis examines the interaction between community organisations, state institutions and other actors in development processes in East Cork.  It focuses upon place-based community organisations, who seek to represent the interests of their particular localities.  A case study approach is employed to explore the realpolitik of local development and to gauge the extent to which grassroots community organisations wield influence in determining the development of their communities. The study concludes that the transfer of decision-making power to community organisations has been more illusory than real and that, in practical terms, such groups remain marginal in the circuits of power.  However, the situation of community organisations operating in different geographical locales cannot be reduced to an overarching theoretical logic.  The case studies show that the modus operandi of community groups varies considerably and can be influenced by specific local geographies, events and personalities.
</description>
<dc:date>2010-01-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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<item rdf:about="http://hdl.handle.net/10468/977">
<title>Towards a regional understanding of Irish traditional music</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/10468/977</link>
<description>Towards a regional understanding of Irish traditional music
Kearney, David
The geography of Irish traditional music is a complex, popular and largely&#13;
unexplored element of the narrative of the tradition. Geographical concepts such as the&#13;
region are recurrent in the discourse of Irish traditional music but regions and their&#13;
processes are, for the most part, blurred or misunderstood. This thesis explores the&#13;
geographical approach to the study of Irish traditional music focusing on the concept of&#13;
the region and, in particular, the role of memory in the construction and diffusion of&#13;
regional identities.&#13;
This is a tripartite study considering people, place and music. Each of these&#13;
elements impacts on our experience of the other. All societies have created music. Music&#13;
is often associated with or derived from places. Some places construct or reinforce their&#13;
identity through the music and musicians through which they are associated. The thesis&#13;
challenges conventional discourse on regional styles that construct an imagined pattern of&#13;
regions based on subtle musical differences that may, though are not always, shared by&#13;
people in that region and focuses on the social networks through which the music is&#13;
disseminated. The thesis also challenges the abandonment of regional styles and the&#13;
concept of regions in understanding the complex geographies of Irish traditional music&#13;
(Morton, 2001). It seeks to find a middle ground between discourse analysis, musical&#13;
analysis, the experience of music and place, and the representation of music and place.&#13;
The dissertation is divided into three parts. Part one considers the development of&#13;
music geography, noting and critiquing the abandonment of useful paradigms in both&#13;
geography and ethnomusicology in search of new ways of understanding. Of particular&#13;
interest is the concept of the region but it also considers the study of landscape and the&#13;
humanist approach in cultural geography. The second part focuses on the discourse and&#13;
study of regions in Irish traditional music and the various agents and processes that shape&#13;
the concept of the region in Irish traditional music. The final part presents a case study of&#13;
the Sliabh Luachra region combining and applying the various perspectives and&#13;
paradigms drawn from geographical, ethnomusicological and anthropological sources. It&#13;
attempts to generate an understanding of Sliabh Luachra as a region in the Irish traditional&#13;
music narrative that is based on a combination of musical, socio-cultural and&#13;
locational/environmental factors.
</description>
<dc:date>2009-09-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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