Supplementary Ways for Improving International Stability (SWIIS '95)


Book Description

Paperback. These proceedings contain the papers presented at the IFAC Conference on Supplementary Ways for Improving International Stability (SWIIS '95) held in Vienna, Austria, 29 September - 1 October 1995.International stability refers to conditions in which nations interact with one another in ways permitting gradual change within a mutually-acceptable scale and direction. The conference followed the tradition set by the previous four SWIIS meetings and considered the beneficial application of systems engineering methods to these conditions with respect to all national and international, regional and global, political and ecological aspects. Scientists from fields such as political science, economics, social science and international studies were, therefore, also present to discuss their ideas and help to meet this objective.The following areas of international stability were covered: methodological analysis, investigation of development, mode




Technology and International Stability (SWIIS 2003)


Book Description

A proceedings in the volume from the IFAC workshop Waterford, Republic of Ireland, 3-5 July 2003




Conflict Management and Resolution in Regions of Long Confronted Nations


Book Description

This Proceedings contains the papers presented at the 7th IFAC Workshop on Supplementary Ways for Improving International Stability held in Ohrid, Republic of Macedonia on 22-24 May 2000. There are twenty papers which discuss a wide and diverse selection of issues such as peace, conflict, ethics, tourism, social systems and international law in relation to regions of long-confronted nations. Paper 1 is an invited plenary lecture which is dedicated to the study of mutual relationship and relevance of systems theory and human science. Paper 2 is the keynote lecture dedicated to the study of the concept of active peace. Paper 3 is the SWIIS 2000 survey paper dedicated to surveying the development of the application of systems engineering methods to international conflict resolution. Session one looked at behaviour indicated with slogans and proverbs and general security modelling in society systems via a view stability as ever evolving property and a need for safety and stability. Session two discusses power distribution, processes of coalition formation and conditions for multipolar stability. Structural analysis and modelling of complex hierarchical systems is also addressed here. The third session looks at how fuzzy information is dealt with in human organisation systems and the theory of using fuzzy systems for analysing society systems in transitional crisis and reformulation of national goals. The fourth session is dedicated to non-technical problems in crisis or similar situations in society systems represented by issues of ethics, fairness and justice. In session five the authors presented the modelling and management results of their ownmulti-national co-operation following their goals and purposes. It also explores a new methodological approach to international cross-boundary co-operation in regions of long confronted nations which is enhanced by common ecological concerns and tendencies to save the living environment for future generations. The impact of NATO action on supplemental ways intended to improve international stability, with a primary focus on the 1999 Kosovo crisis is discussed in session six. Session seven looked at methods which can be used in order to empower individuals, teams, and even larger social groups to become more competent in coping with changes. The impact of developing tourism and tourist industries on cross-border international co-operation in regions of long confronted nations is also discussed here.




Contributions of Technology to International Conflict Resolution


Book Description

This book investigates technology's potential for stimulating and strengthening approaches that can lead to the peaceful solution of international conflicts. It discusses the causes of war; the political and social implications of neighbourhood and international involvement, and evaluates various aid programmes. Models are applied to methods of mediation and simulating power distribution and decision making to show how modern technology can be used to promote resolution in the event of conflict.




Large Scale Systems: Theory and Applications 1998


Book Description

As the 21st century nears, there is a need to seriously reconsider many aspects of modeling and controlling large, complex, man-made systems. Integration of technologies and functions requires deep interdisciplinary expertise and technical breadth for successful implementation. Large scale systems theory can play a central role in this effort and it is a strongly held belief that this approach will continue to be of major importance in the future.













Micromechanics of Fracture in Generalized Spaces


Book Description

By the detailed analysis of the modern development of the mechanics of deformable media can be found the deep internal contradiction. From the one hand it is declared that the deformation and fracture are the hierarchical processes which are linked and unite several structural and scale levels. From the other hand the sequential investigation of the hierarchy of the deformation and destruction is not carried out. The book's aim is filling this mentioned gap and investigates the hot topic of the fracture of non-ideal media. From the microscopic point of view in the book we study the hierarchy of the processes in fractured solid in the whole diapason of practically used scales. According the multilevel hierarchical system ideology under "microscopic we understand taking into account the processes on the level lower than relative present strata. From hierarchical point of view the conception of "microscopic fracture can be soundly applied to the traditionally macroscopic area, namely geomechanics or main crack propagation. At the same time microscopic fracture of the nanomaterials can be well-grounded too. This ground demands the investigation on the level of inter-atomic interaction and quantum mechanical description. The important feature of the book is the application of fibred manifolds and non-Euclidean spaces to the description of the processes of deformation and fracture in inhomogeneous and defected continua. The non-Euclidean spaces for the dislocations' description were introduced by J.F. Nye, B.A. Bilby, E. Kröner, K. Kondo in fiftieth. In last decades this necessity was shown in geomechanics and theory of seismic signal propagation. The applications of non-Euclidean spaces to the plasticity allow us to construct the mathematically satisfying description of the processes. Taking into account this space expansion the media with microstructure are understood as Finsler space media. The bundle space technique is used for the description of the influence of microstructure on the continuum metrics. The crack propagation is studied as a process of movement in Finsler space. Reduction of the general description to the variational principle in engineering case is investigated and a new result for the crack trajectory in inhomogeneous media is obtained. Stability and stochastization of crack trajectory in layered composites is investigated. The gauge field is introduced on the basis of the structure representation of Lie group generated by defects without any additional assumption. Effective elastic and non-elastic media for nanomaterials and their geometrical description are discussed. The monograph provides the basis for more detailed and exact description of real processes in the material. The monograph will be interesting for the researchers in the field of fracture mechanics, solid state physics and geomechanics. It can be used as well by the last year students wishing to become more familiar with some modern approaches to the physics of fracture and continual theory of dislocations. In Supplement, written by V.V.Barkaline, quantum mechanical concept of physical body wholeness according to H. Primas is discussed with relation to fracture. Role of electronic subsystem in fracture dynamics in adiabatic and non-adiabatic approximations is clarified. Potential energy surface of ion subsystem accounting electron contribution is interpreted as master parameter of fracture dynamics. Its features and relation to non-euclidean metrics of defected solid body is discussed. Quantum mechanical criteria of fracture arising are proposed.