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A man is travelling to Africa from Europe. And yet it is also about waiting waiting for Africa. Volker, a German, leaves his home in Frankfurt for Windhoek. He leaves a lover, he is leaving for a long time, and he does not have a return ticket. He does not know anything about Africa, to him it is one country, not a continent, neither does he really know where he is going to; he just knows that he wants to leave Europe. Lufthansa, the airline that carries him stops at Charles de Gaulle airport and here he waits and waits and waits. And in the airport he observes and describes and thinks. The text is a stream of consciousness, Volkers thoughts. Interspersed with this are stories of people he encounters in the airport; a murderer, a terrorist, a person with dwarfism, a trans woman, a porn star, a terrorist, a child trafficker, a paedophile. All are connected, with each other, with Volker and with us, the readers. Adairs novel is innovative in form, self-conscious and self-critical; it challenges conventional Western assumptions that all good novels have a clear story line, a good plot and fully rounded characters.
A man is travelling to Africa from Europe. And yet it is also about waiting - waiting for Africa. Volker, a German, leaves his home in Frankfurt for Windhoek. He leaves a lover, he is leaving for a long time, and he does not have a return ticket. He does not know anything about Africa, to him it is one country, not a continent, neither does he really know where he is going to; he just knows that he wants to leave Europe. Lufthansa, the airline that carries him stops at Charles de Gaulle airport and here he waits and waits and waits. And in the airport he observes and describes and thinks. The text is a stream of consciousness, Volker's thoughts. Interspersed with this are stories of people he encounters in the airport; a murderer, a terrorist, a person with dwarfism, a trans woman, a porn star, a terrorist, a child trafficker, a paedophile. All are connected, with each other, with Volker and with us, the readers. Adair's novel is innovative in form, self-conscious and self-critical; it challenges conventional Western assumptions that all good novels have a clear story line, a good plot and fully rounded characters.
A Vietnamese Refugee, a Viral Video, and the United Airlines Scandal That Started It All “His refusal to give up his seat on a United Airlines flight, and the ensuing assault he suffered, is emblematic of how far we, the people, still have to travel to create a world with liberty and justice for all.” —Marlena Fiol, PhD, globally recognized scholar and speaker and author of Nothing Bad Between Us Dr. David Dao was dragged off United Express Flight 3411 on April 9, 2017 after refusing to give up his seat. In the tradition of contemporary immigrant stories comes a personal narrative of the many small but significant acts of racial discrimination faced on the way to the American Dream. The unseen effects of discrimination. The United Airlines scandal of 2017 garnered over a million views on YouTube. A result of an overbooking overlook, security officials forcibly removed Dr. Dao after refusing to give up his seat. He awoke in the hospital to a concussion, a broken nose, several broken teeth, and worldwide attention. Things aren’t always fair for an immigrant, but according to Dr. Dao, you can prevail if you firmly advocate for yourself. A response to a lifetime of oppressive acts. Why was Dr. Dao so adamant on his right to a seat? His entire life had led to that moment. A Vietnamese refugee, he fled his home country during the fall of Saigon. He was stranded in the Indian Ocean, immigrated to the United States, enrolled in medical school for a second time, built a practice, and started a family-all the while battling the effects of discrimination and what he had to embrace as a result. This is his story. If you are moved by immigrant stories, or books like America for Americans, Minor Feelings, How to Be an Antiracist, or The Making of Asian America, then you’ll want to read Dr. David Dao's story, Dragged Off.
"TRB's Airport Cooperative Research Program (ACRP) Report 104: Defining and Measuring Aircraft Delay and Airport Capacity Thresholds offers guidance to help airports understand, select, calculate, and report measures of delay and capacity. The report describes common metrics, identifies data sources, recommends metrics based on an airport's needs, and suggests ways to potentially improve metrics."--Publisher's description.
Demand for air travel has increased over the years and so have airport delays and congestion. Delays have a huge impact on airline costs and influence the satisfaction of passengers, thus becoming an important topic of research in the field of air transportation. In recent literature, a Passenger Delay Calculator (PDC) was proposed to estimate passenger delays. The PDC computes passenger delays for a specified day based on actual flight schedules, fight cancellation information, and ticket booking information. However, since actual fight schedules are a necessary input, the PDC cannot be applied directly to hypothetical scenarios, in which different cancellation strategies are implemented and their impact on passenger delays are evaluated. A different model. Airport Network Delays (AND), has also been developed recently. The AND model estimates fight delays and relies on an input in which demand consists of the national planned fight schedule for any given day. In this thesis, we have attempted to incorporate these two models, the AND and the PDC, within a single framework, so that the resulting new integrated model can compute passenger delays without requiring an actual flight-schedule input. The integrated model would certainly increase the usefulness and applicability of the PDC since it could be used with hypothetical scenarios, different flight cancellation strategies, etc. We first describe the framework of the integrated model for studying flight delays and passenger delays at a daily scale. The integrated model includes four components: a Tail Recovery Model, Flight Cancellation Algorithms, a Refined Airport Network Delay (RAND) model, and the PDC. The Tail Recovery Model recovers missing tail numbers for many flights recorded in the Aviation System Performance Metrics (ASPM) database. The Flight Cancellation Algorithms implement alternative strategies for flight cancellations in the presence of large delays, such as cancelling flights with long flight delays or flights with a large ratio of flight delay divided by the seating capacity of the aircraft. The RAND model is an extension of the AND, in which two implicit assumptions of the AND model have been modified. The RAND model produces better estimates of flight delays in the sense of replicating actual flight delays obtained from the ASPM database. The overall integrated model is able to compute passenger delays and relies only on planned flight schedules rather than actual flight schedules. Moreover, the integrated model facilitates the study of factors that influence flight delays, such as weather conditions and demand fluctuations, and evaluates the impact of different cancellation strategies on passenger delays. Using actual data from different days, we conclude that passenger delays can be reduced on the busiest traffic days through improved flight cancellation strategies. In the second part of the thesis, we extend the RAND model to compute flight delays on a monthly scale using different capacity profiles as input. These capacity profiles can be directly obtained from Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) reports or constructed by using classical machine learning algorithms on airport-level data. We validate our estimation of flight delays by using data of January, 2008, showing that both the capacity profiles and the RAND perform well in terms of replicating the actual monthly flight delays. These results imply that an effort can be made to develop an integrated model incorporating the RAND, the PDC etc. at a monthly scale or even at any generic time scale.
Regulation 261/2004 on Air Passengers' Rights has been amongst the most high-profile pieces of EU secondary legislation of the past years, generating controversial judgments of the Court of Justice, from C-344/04 ex parte IATA to C-402/07 Sturgeon. The Regulation has led to equally challenging decisions across the Member States, ranging from judicial enthusiasm for passenger rights to domestic courts holding that a Regulation could not be relied upon by an individual claimant or even threatening outright to refuse to apply its provisions. The economic stakes are significant for passengers and airlines alike, and despite the European Commission's recent publication of reform proposals, controversies appear far from settled. At the same time the Regulation should, according to the Treaty, have uniform, direct and general application in all the Member States of the Union. How, then, can this diversity be explained? What implications do the diverging national interpretations have for the EU's regulatory strategy at large? This book brings together leading experts in the field to present a series of case studies from 15 different Member States as well as the extra-territorial application of Regulation 261, combined with high-level analysis from the perspectives of Aviation law and EU law.