Student is removed from their current residence hall or apartment and moved to another residence hall or apartment If student is relocated he or she is usually banned from the current hall or apartment
Temporary or permanent removal of a population or community in response to an emergency or disaster A protective action in which persons are asked to vacate a contaminated area to avoid chronic exposure from deposited contamination Relocation is distinguished from evacuation in that during an emergency, the potential for a release exists; in contrast, during the relocation phase, there is no passing plume
Besides the earlier "evacuation" in 1942, this term also includes the forced removal and movement of Japanese Canadians at the end of the war with Japan in 1945 As documented in a Department of Labour order Japanese who were loyal to Canada were expected to prove their loyalty by moving "East of the Rocky Mountains" This order was given in concert with an offer of repatriation to Japan in 1945-46 In practical terms Japanese were pressured to leave BC
The process of moving species from an area destined for destruction and/or development It often has negative effects both on relocated and resident species, causing increased stress, the spread of disease, overpopulation, and increased competition for resources
The process of revising code and data addresses in relocatable object code This occurs when the linker must combine object files to create an executable program It also occurs when the dynamic loader loads a shared library into a process's address space