About: Graffiti is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 1875 publications have been published within this topic receiving 17519 citations. The topic is also known as: calliglyph & calligraffito.
TL;DR: CNCL deletes those conjectures of the second and third type in which one of the invariants on the left is always smaller than an invariant on the right that may undoubtedly remove a number of interesting conjectures.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the problem of public space in Australia and the role of protest in the regulation of protest at Parliament House, Canberra, and make a claim on Parliament House.
Abstract: List of Illustrations. Acknowledgements. 1 The Problem with Public Space. 2 Publics and the City. 3 Making a Claim: The Regulation of Protest at Parliament House, Canberra. 4 Cruising: Governing Beat Sex in Melbourne. 5 Making a Name: Writing Graffiti in Sydney. 6 "No Fun. No Hope. Don't Belong." : Re-making "Public Space" in Neo-liberal Perth. 7 Justifying Exclusion: Keeping Men out of the Ladies' Baths, Sydney. 8 Imagining the Public City: Concluding Reflections. Bibliography. Index
TL;DR: The authors analyzed the graffiti in inner city "graffiti kings" in Philadelphia in terms of their style, motivation, and preferred setting, and found that graffiti written by teenage gangs delineate their turf or area of control; their content may indicate contested space and gang violence.
Abstract: Wall graffiti can be indicators of attitudes, behavioral dispositions, and social processes in settings where direct measurement is difficult. The autographed inscriptions of inner city “graffiti kings”in Philadelphia are analyzed in terms of their style, motivation, and preferred setting. Graffiti written by teenage gangs delineate their turf or area of control; their content may indicate contested space and gang violence. Graffiti in an ethnic neighborhood identify tension zones related to social change.
TL;DR: Flame Wars, in comp-slang, are vitriolic on-line exchanges as mentioned in this paper, often conducted publicly, in discussion groups clustered under thematic headings on electronic bulletin boards.
Abstract: From the Publisher:
Flame Wars, in comp-slang, are vitriolic on-line exchanges. Often they are conducted publicly, in discussion groups clustered under thematic headings on electronic bulletin boards. Like public bathroom graffiti, their authors are sometimes anonymous, often pseudonymous, and almost always strangers.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors defined "stalking" as repeated and persistent unwanted communications and/or approaches that produce fear in the victim, such as telephone calls, letters, e-mail, graffiti and placing notices in the media.
Abstract: "Stalking" is defined as repeated and persistent unwanted communications and/or approaches that produce fear in the victim. The stalker may use such means as telephone calls, letters, e-mail, graffiti and placing notices in the media. A stalker may approach or follow the victim, or keep their residence under surveillance.