Keith Lilley Queen`s University, Belfast Processes of urban - Support Technique
Is there an information guide for staff on the Belfast campus?
Information for staff and students on the Belfast campus. This simple guide will help you make the best use of the design features, services and systems of the new facilities as well as providing you with useful contacts, maps and transport information.
What is the Belfast Interface Project?
In spring of 2011 Belfast Interface Project commissioned a piece of research carried out by the Institute for Conflict Research to identify and classify the known security barriers and associated forms of defensive architecture in residential areas of Belfast.
What is the Belfast study?
The Belfast Study was a community study carried out in Belfast in 1975 by two researchers, James and Lesley Milroy. The study was carried out in order to study local practices in interpreting socio-linguistic patterns, by gaining access to everyday speech. 1. BACKGROUND
How do I make a decision about Belfast?
Visiting the city and the University not only gives you a taste of the University but what the travel to Belfast is like. Meeting other prospective students, lecturers and getting a flavour for University life is the best thing to do when trying to make your decision. What do you like about living in Belfast?
Discovery
An invention can be any new and useful process, machine, method, software, treatment, device or other article, or any unique composition of a number of known articles. Sometimes the very idea itself will be unique. Often it is the way you deliver the idea that is novel. There may also be more than one inventor, particularly in research teams where
Invention Disclosure
After informal discussions, the submission of an Invention Disclosure Form (IDF) starts the formal commercialisation process. An IDF is a confidential document and the information within it will be protected by the team. The IDF should fully articulate your invention and describe clearly the novel technical aspects. It should also clearly illustrat
Assessment
During the IP assessment phase, support and input from the inventor is essential to help drive the project forward. At the discovery stage you will have discussed a brief overview of your invention, and your CDM will have given you some initial guidance. However, now that the formal IDF has been submitted, a more detailed assessment of the inventio
Protection
There are various types of IPR that enable us to protect your invention.Patenting is the most usual form used in the University, but it is not the only form of IPR. A patent is essentially a legal quasi-monopoly that the State grants in return for disclosure of a new discovery. It is also an asset because patent protection typically lasts for 20 ye
Market Validation
With your involvement, we will endeavour to find the problem/solution fit for the invention. This means promoting your invention, under confidentiality agreements, to commercial partners, entrepreneurs and industry experts in the specific field. During this stage we will try to validate the commercial potential of the invention and any assumptions
Existing Business Or spin-out?
Making the decision to either pursue the creation of a new spin-out company or a straight licence deal is a critical point in the commercialisation process. The licence route can often deliver successful outcomes much earlier and with much less effort - but is still not easy. A spin-out will take a great amount of effort and time, particularly if t
Licensing
A licence is an agreement between Queen's and a company to which Queen’s IP rights to a technology are granted in return for financial and other benefits. A licence agreement does not affect ownership of the IP. It instead grants access to the IP under certain conditions. The licence agreement is an essential part of the commercialisation process.
Market Launch
Most university inventions are very early-stage and require significant further research and development before they will be adopted in the market place. Typically, the licensee or spin-out company continues the advancement of the technology and makes other business investments to develop the product or service, but we may still need to develop tec
Revenue Distribution & Reinvestment
Revenues received by Queen's from licensees are distributed according to the University IPR Policy. These specify that income is distributed: 1. 50% to inventors; 2. 25% to the inventors’ faculty; and 3. 25% to the University. Queen's has one of the most favourable revenue distribution formulae amongst major UK universities. Itmaintains a standard
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Keith Lilley Chris Lloyd |
Exhibiting the city: planning ideas and public involvement in wartime
Keith D. Lilley is Reader in Historical Geography at the School of Geography Archaeology and Palaeoecology |
Urban planning after the Black Death: townscape transformation in
4 sept. 2014 KEITH D. LILLEY. *. School of Geography Archaeology and Palaeoecology |
G:UM 14(2)Viewpoints.wpd
Ivor Samuels Urban Morphology Research Group |
Mapping the Realm: A New Look at the Gough Map of Britain (c. 1360)
Dr Keith D. Lilley is Senior Lecturer in Human Geography at Queen's University Belfast. Medieval Economic History Queen's University Belfast. |
Urban planning and the design of towns in the Middle Ages: the
KEITH D. LILLEY. School of Geography The Queen's University of Belfast |
Bishnupriya Basak Designation: Associate Professor Place of
Keith Lilley of. Queens University Belfast. She currently has a project on 'Tracking ancient migration routes and cultural connections in Northeastern |
The Sound-Considered City: A Guide for Decision-Makers
Link to publication record in Queen's University Belfast Research Portal support creating urban spaces in which sound is considered an essential part of. |
Historical Uses of GIS
digital urban landscapes to study cities' changing morphology over time. Keith Lilley leads a group of researchers at Queen's University Belfast who are ... |
Mapping the medieval city: plan analysis and urban history
KEITH D. LILLE Y*. School of Geography Queen's University of Belfast |