2,031 results
Search Results
202. Rethinking youth policy model in Europe and its constituents: civic learning and civic engagement.
- Author
-
Li, Xuan
- Subjects
- *
LEARNING , *CRITICAL analysis - Abstract
Drawing on the European framework for youth policy, the paper initially explores an idealized model of what governments at their best can do regarding youth policy in Europe, including its objective, core, and means. A critical analysis of the European framework yields a new dimension – internal/external Political Efficacy – which plays a pivotal role as a connector between the core and the means of youth policy. The model of youth policy proposed here is fundamentally underpinned by two means: Civic Learning and Civic Engagement. Lastly, the paper proposes the model of managing a holistic feature of the youth policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
203. The impact of populism on party organization? A study of four Southern European 'populist' parties.
- Author
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Vittori, Davide
- Subjects
- *
POPULISM , *POPULIST parties (Politics) , *COLD War, 1945-1991 , *POLITICAL parties - Abstract
The electoral growth of several 'anti-political establishment parties' in Europe since the end of the Cold War, was accompanied by the growth of the use of the catch-all category of populism to describe them. Despite the countless analyses related to populism, less attention – with some relevant exceptions – has been given to the impact of populism on party organizations. Still, populist parties do organize. While it is common to compare the organization of political parties belonging to the same party family, the attention on the impact of populism in shaping parties with different ideological backgrounds is scarce. This paper focuses on this literature gap, analyzing four parties, which the literature labels as 'populist'. The conclusion reached in this paper is that populism can be an ideological feature incorporated by different parties; however, its impact on the organization differs substantially from one party to another. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
204. How does professional football status challenge African players' behaviour?
- Author
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Acheampong, Ernest Yeboah
- Subjects
- *
OCCUPATIONAL prestige , *BEHAVIOR , *SOCIAL mobility , *RACISM in sports , *ATTITUDE change (Psychology) - Abstract
Football has become a lucrative business with its global viewership attracting many African players to move to leagues abroad. This paper explores the sociological approaches of Weber and Granovetter to understand the behaviour change in attitudes of African players after achieving professional football status abroad. It does so by analysing 'before and after' migration to Europe which is often ascribed to professional players' social upward mobility. The paper employs a qualitative approach with structured interviews and autobiographies of some players. The literature draws from social behaviour change and football migration and mobility concepts. Findings indicate that football has a way of changing African players' behaviour and makes others become a 'different human being'. However, their behaviours should rather translate into doing good things for society than assuming noxious stimuli. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
205. Household Management Systems and Women's Decision Making Within the Family in Europe.
- Author
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Mazzotta, Fernanda, Papaccio, Anna, and Parisi, Lavinia
- Subjects
- *
HOME economics , *DECISION making , *CREDIT , *FAMILIES - Abstract
This paper analyzes household management systems and their effect on intrahousehold gender differences in decision making in thirty European countries. The study considers five domains that reflect two types of decisions – time-consuming and frequent decisions like everyday shopping versus infrequent but important decisions like borrowing money or purchasing consumer durables. In time-consuming activities, the gender gap favors women in each system; for infrequent decisions, the gender gap is dependent on the way money is managed and the biggest gap is found in systems where resources are not pooled. This paper also investigates the role of distribution factors in shaping decision-making behavior. For time-consuming decisions, the higher the income (and education) of the woman compared to the man, the less likely she is to make the decisions. For infrequent activities, the higher the income of the woman compared to the man, the more likely she is to make the decisions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
206. Understanding low dose radiation exposure effects: MELODI's views on developing international cooperation.
- Author
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Repussard, Jacques
- Subjects
- *
RADIATION exposure , *EXPOSURE dose , *INTERNATIONAL cooperation , *RADIATION doses , *IONIZING radiation - Abstract
The paper presents, from a European point of view, the combined scientific and sociological rationale for further development of research into the biological effects and risks related to population exposures to low dose/low dose rate ionizing radiation. It further explains how this rationale led to the constitution, at European level, of the MELODI Association, to foster innovative and multidisciplinary research programs dedicated to this objective, and driven by a consensus-based Strategic Research Agenda (SRA). Finally, the paper suggests that this evolution towards a more integrated and multi-disciplinary approach to research in the field of low dose/dose rate radiation exposure effects and related risks could lead to new research opportunities also at an international level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
207. Co-designing for common values: creating hybrid spaces to nurture autonomous cooperation.
- Author
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Bassetti, Chiara, Sciannamblo, Mariacristina, Lyle, Peter, Teli, Maurizio, De Paoli, Stefano, and De Angeli, Antonella
- Subjects
- *
PARTICIPATORY design , *SOCIAL services , *COOPERATION , *SOCIAL values , *GEOMETRIC shapes , *COMMON good - Abstract
The paper concerns the development of digitally-mediated technologies that value social cooperation as a common good rather than as a source of revenue and accumulation. The paper discusses the activities that shaped a European participatory design project which aims to develop a digital space that promotes and facilitates the 'Commonfare', a complementary approach to social welfare. The paper provides and discusses concrete examples of design artifacts to address a key question about the role of co- and participatory design in developing hybrid spaces that nurture sharing and autonomous cooperation: how can co-design practices promote alternatives to the commodification of digitally-mediated cooperation? The paper argues for a need to focus on relational, social, political and ethical values, and highlights the potential power of co- and participatory design processes to achieve this. In summary, the paper proposes that only by re-asserting the centrality of shared values and capacities, rather than individual needs or problems, co-design can reposition itself thereby encouraging autonomous cooperation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
208. The narratives behind the EU's external perceptions: how civil society and elites in Ukraine, Israel and Palestine "learn" EU norms.
- Author
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Sabatovych, Iana, Heinrichs, Pauline, Hobova, Yevheniia, and Velivchenko, Viktor
- Subjects
- *
CIVIL society , *NATIONAL security , *INTERNATIONAL relations , *ELITE (Social sciences) ,FOREIGN relations of the European Union ,UKRAINIAN foreign relations, 1991- - Abstract
The EU's normative promotion is a keystone in the arch of its Foreign and Security Policy, reflected in establishing a "ring of friends" in its neighbourhood. However, the EU's normative impact in these countries is often hindered by domestic constraints. Conversely, deeper socialisation through persuasion and "learning" may advance towards the promotion of EU norms better. By tracing the "learning" component of the EU's external perceptions in its Eastern (Ukraine) and Southern (Israel and Palestine) neighbourhoods, this paper elaborates upon the receptiveness of EU norms. Considering the specific attention that the ENP draws towards the support of civil society, this paper focuses on "learning" narratives of EU norms among civil society elites in Ukraine, Israel and Palestine as the key targets of EU assistance – with a particular focus on various conceptualisations of learning in the learning process. Notwithstanding perceptions of the EU as a normative power, we find that the learning processes remain too complex to be captured within a single theoretical framework. Whereas communicative rationality implies learning about each other's identities through rational arguing, our analysis demonstrates that identity performance is one of the most emotive and crucial factors in perceptions of learning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
209. Law and biomedicine and the making of 'genuine' traditional medicines in global health.
- Author
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Cloatre, Emilie
- Subjects
- *
TRADITIONAL medicine , *HERBAL medicine , *INTELLECT , *HEALTH policy , *MEDICINAL plants , *PUBLIC health , *WORLD health , *GOVERNMENT regulation , *MEDICAL laws - Abstract
This paper explores the joint roles of law and biomedicine in constituting the boundary between legitimate and illegitimate (and genuine and 'pseudo') traditional healing. It argues that, as law and biomedicine have grown to share common understandings of the nature of knowledge, they have come to act as converging colonizing forces that displace and alter 'other' forms of knowing and ordering. Even as regulatory systems set out to recognize some forms of traditional medicine, they continue to operate on assumptions that disqualify knowledge, products, and actors, that do not resemble their biomedical counterparts. This leaves traditional healing systems potentially having to either operate outside the law or adapt to it by transforming themselves, potentially beyond the point of recognition, to fit better into the systems provided by law and biomedicine. The paper explores the series of dilemma this creates for those seeking to 'regulate better' traditional medicine. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
210. I'm neither racist nor xenophobic, but: dissecting European attitudes towards a ban on Muslims' immigration.
- Author
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Marfouk, Abdeslam
- Subjects
- *
PUBLIC opinion , *SOCIAL attitudes , *ISLAMOPHOBIA , *MUSLIMS , *RACISM , *GOVERNMENT policy ,EUROPEAN emigration & immigration - Abstract
During his presidential campaign, the new elected President of U.S., Donald Trump, called for a complete ban on Muslims from entering the United States. Although numerous European observers have been shocked by this proposal, using the most recent European Social Survey immigration module, this paper found that a sizeable proportion of Europeans support a similar ban in their own countries, e.g. Czech Republic (54 per cent), Hungary (51 per cent), Estonia (42 per cent), Poland (33 per cent), and Portugal (33 per cent). The paper also provides evidence that racism and immigration phobia play a key role in shaping Europeans' support of a ban on Muslims' immigration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
211. Racialized politics of garbage: waste management in urban Roma settlements in Eastern Europe.
- Author
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Dunajeva, Jekatyerina and Kostka, Joanna
- Subjects
- *
RACIALIZATION , *WASTE management , *ROMANIES , *RACISM - Abstract
Disproportionate exposure to adverse environmental conditions is part of the complex cycle of dispossession and racial discrimination faced by marginalized minorities in Europe—primarily the Roma. The concept of environmental justice or the analysis of environmental risk along racial dimensions are largely absent from policy debates. This is a critical omission considering that the consolidation of neoliberal governance powerfully recomposes access to public services and individualizes collective responsibilities for a safe environment. Driven by competitive logic, neoliberalism champions the zero-sum game where losers are either abandoned or punished by the governing apparatus. This article argues that neoliberal governance, underpinned by moral appeals and racist imaginaries, legitimizes repression of marginalized groups such as the Roma. The primary purpose of this paper is to fill a theoretical and conceptual gap in the literature linking environmental issues to racism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
212. The (stereo)typical student: how European higher education students feel they are viewed by relevant others.
- Author
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Jayadeva, Sazana, Brooks, Rachel, and Abrahams, Jessie
- Subjects
- *
HIGHER education , *STUDENTS , *STEREOTYPES , *SCHOLARLY method - Abstract
There is a growing body of scholarship on how students see themselves, and also on how they are conceptualised by other social actors. However, what has been less explored is how students believe they are seen by others, and how this impacts them. Drawing on focus groups with students across Europe – and particularly plasticine models students made to depict how they felt they were seen by relevant others – this paper will illustrate how the four most common ways in which students felt they were constructed were as hedonistic and lazy; useless and a burden; clever, hardworking, and successful; and a resource to be exploited. It will argue that such stereotypes had significant material impact on students' lives and how they experienced being a student. Finally, it will analyse how specific national contexts accounted for a range of variations in how students articulated these constructions. Supplemental data for this article is available online at https://doi.org/10.1080/01425692.2021.2007358. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
213. Tackling undeclared work in the European Union: beyond the rational economic actor approach.
- Author
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Horodnic, Ioana Alexandra and Williams, Colin C.
- Subjects
- *
INTERNATIONAL sanctions , *GOVERNMENT policy , *LOGISTIC regression analysis - Abstract
To tackle the undeclared economy, an emergent literature has called for the dominant "rational economic actor" approach, which increases the sanctions and risk of detection, to be replaced and/or complemented by a "social actor" approach that fosters citizens' commitment to compliance. Reporting two waves of the Eurobarometer survey conducted in 2007 and 2013 across Europe, fixed-effects logistic regression analysis reveals that although both approaches reduce participation in undeclared work, the strength of the impact of deterrents on the likelihood of participation in undeclared work has weakened between 2007 and 2013, but has strengthened for vertical and horizontal trust. The paper concludes by discussing the policy implications of these findings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
214. Water justice and Europe's Right2Water movement.
- Author
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van den Berge, Jerry, Vos, Jeroen, and Boelens, Rutgerd
- Subjects
- *
COVID-19 pandemic , *WATER rights , *SOCIAL movements - Abstract
In 2013 the European Citizens' Initiative (ECI) 'Right2Water' collected 1.9 million signatures across Europe against water privatization. It became the first ever successful ECI and has built a Europe-wide movement. Right2Water sought for Europe's legal enforcement of the Human Right to Water and Sanitation (HRWS) as a strategic political tool to challenge European Union market policies. The paper examines the ECI from a social movement perspective. Although the European Commission subscribed that 'water is a public good, not a commodity', its implementation is subject to continuing politics and socio-political struggle, with growing urgency in times of the Covid-19 pandemic crisis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
215. Derailment study of railway cargo vehicles using a response surface methodology.
- Author
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Pagaimo, J., Magalhães, H., Costa, J. N., and Ambrósio, J.
- Subjects
- *
RESPONSE surfaces (Statistics) , *RAILROAD trains , *RAILROAD accidents , *TIME perspective , *BOGIES (Vehicles) - Abstract
Railway bogies of the Y25 family are the most common type of freight bogies used in Europe. However, this family of bogies presents poor curving performance and a derailment history. Although numerical simulations are a powerful tool to study railway dynamics, derailment scenarios involve complex operational and vehicle conditions that increase the multivariate aspect of the problem. Thus, simulating all possible scenario variants is unfeasible from the computational perspective due to time and computational constraints. This paper proposes an approach based on a Response Surface Methodology to study the combined influence of uncertain parameters on the derailment potential of a railway vehicle. The potential of this approach is demonstrated using a real derailment as a case study. A set of scenarios is identified using a Design of Experiments approach, and is simulated on a commercial software. The response functions of the quantities used to assess derailment are generated, and the conditions that maximise the derailment potential are identified. The results reveal a combination of asymmetric loading, excessive speed, and Lenoir link failure may cause extreme wheel unloading in the study developed. This work reveals the advantages of a Response Surface Methodology to identify the conditions that maximise the derailment potential. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
216. Effect of the Importance Factor on the Seismic Performance of Health Facilities in Medium Seismicity Regions.
- Author
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Pérez Jiménez, Francisco Javier and Morillas, Leandro
- Subjects
- *
HEALTH facilities , *REINFORCED concrete buildings , *AUTHENTIC assessment , *STRUCTURAL frames , *BUILDING repair - Abstract
This paper addresses the effect of the importance factor on seismic performance by comparing four prototype health facilities located in a medium seismicity region in Europe. The buildings have Reinforced Concrete (RC) frame structures designed with importance factors 1.0, 1.2, 1.4, and 1.5. Performance assessment is based on the FEMA P-58-1 methodology. This study comprises nonlinear time history analyses of the building structure, the identification of structural and nonstructural performance groups, the probabilistic expression of structural response, and the quantification of damage and repair costs by means of fragility relations. The evaluation of the prototype buildings is the basis to discuss the impact of the importance factor on the performance under occasional and rare ground motions. This works reveals that seismic performance of the analyzed prototypes is not appropriate in terms of damage, loss of functionality and repair costs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
217. How microbreweries flooded Europe: mapping a new phenomenon in the beer industry.
- Author
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Materna, Kryštof, Bernhäuserová, Veronika, Hasman, Jiří, and Hána, David
- Subjects
- *
BEER industry , *MICROBREWERIES , *BREWERIES , *STATISTICS , *BEER - Abstract
Europe has experienced a major boom of new breweries over the last thirty years, with thousands of new breweries being set up, even in regions where brewing has no history. So far, however, this microbrewing wave has not been systematically mapped. This paper presents a unique database of European breweries from 1990–2020. Using a series of maps and statistical analyses, it shows how breweries have gradually spread across Europe. Initially, microbreweries were being established in countries that are in a declining stage of the beer life-cycle from industrial breweries. After 2005 (and particularly in the 2010s), breweries reached other regions through neighbouring and hierarchical spatial diffusion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
218. Dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic in Europe: five lessons from the European Society for Traumatic Stress Studies.
- Author
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Javakhishvili, Jana D., Arnberg, Filip, Greenberg, Neil, Kazlauskas, Evaldas, Lotzin, Annett, and Xavier, Miguel
- Subjects
- *
COVID-19 pandemic , *MENTAL illness , *COVID-19 , *MENTAL health policy , *MENTAL health , *EUROPEAN communities - Abstract
The paper provides insights into the mental health consequences of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic from the Central, Eastern, Nordic, Southern, and Western subregions of Europe, represented by five member countries of the European Society for Traumatic Stress Studies (ESTSS). On the basis of the existing national research and experiences in these countries, we propose five lessons learned. (1) There is no evidence of a mental health pandemic so far in the countries in focus. No increase in severe mental disorders but some increase in the symptoms of common mental health disorders are observable. More high-quality longitudinal studies are needed to understand the mental health burden of the pandemic. (2) The pandemic affects countries (including the mental health situation) differently, depending on the level of the exposure, management policies, pre-pandemic structural characteristics, and healthcare resources. (3) The pandemic affects people differently: the exposure severity to pandemic-related stressors differs between individuals, as well as individual resources to cope with these stressors. There are winners and losers as well as identifiable at-risk groups that need particular attention. (4) Besides the negative consequences, the pandemic has had a positive impact. The rapidly applied innovations within the system of healthcare responses provide a window of opportunity for positive changes in mental healthcare policies, strategies, and practices. The increased focus on mental health during the pandemic may contribute to the prioritization of mental health issues at policy-making and organizational levels and may reduce stigma. (5) A stress- and trauma-informed response to COVID-19 is required. The European community of psychotraumatologists under the leadership of ESTSS plays an important role in promoting stress- and trauma-informed healthcare and policies of pandemic management. Based on the lessons learned, we propose a stepped-care public mental health model for the prevention of adverse mental health outcomes during pandemics. Population mental health is affected differently in the COVID-19 pandemic: there are winners and losers, as well as identifiable at-risk groups that need particular attention. A stress- and trauma-informed public mental health stepped-care model can address pandemic-related mental health burden in a systematic way. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
219. Visual (de)humanization: construction of Otherness in newspaper photographs of the refugee crisis.
- Author
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Martikainen, Jari and Sakki, Inari
- Subjects
- *
DEHUMANIZATION , *OTHER (Philosophy) , *EUROPEAN Migrant Crisis, 2015-2016 , *PHOTOGRAPHS in newspapers , *REFUGEES , *INTERGROUP relations - Abstract
This study examines how Otherness is constructed visually in newspaper photographs of the refugee crisis. This visual rhetoric analysis examines the form, content, and function of images and explores the rhetorical strategies deployed in visualizations of the refugee crisis in a mainstream Finnish national newspaper from 2015 to 2016. The data consisted of 1,473 images. The study identified six rhetorical strategies used for dehumanizing refugees: massifying, separating, passivating, demonizing, individualizing, and recontextualizing the Other. The rhetorical strategies in turn constructed four discourses related to refugees, namely those of threat and victimhood aimed at dehumanizing as well as personhood and distance aimed at humanizing the Other. The paper contributes to the current knowledge on dehumanization and humanization of refugees in public discourse by unpacking the subtle visual mechanisms through which these processes occur. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
220. Theory and explanation in demography: The case of low fertility in Europe.
- Author
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Graham, Elspeth
- Subjects
- *
FERTILITY , *DEMOGRAPHY , *ENGAGEMENT (Philosophy) , *EXPLANATION - Abstract
In the 50th anniversary edition of Population Studies, John Hobcraft commented that demographers spend too little time trying to explain the phenomena they measure and describe. A quarter of a century on, this paper looks at the state of theory and explanation in contemporary demography. I ask how demographers have approached the task of explanation since Hobcraft's comment, grounding the discussion in the mainstream literature on low fertility in Europe. Using selected examples, I critically review macro- and micro-level approaches to explanation, highlighting some of the philosophical problems that each encounters. I argue that different conceptions of what demography is, and the explanatory language fertility researchers use, lead to differences in explanatory strategies that are rarely explicitly recognized. I also consider how critical theories challenge demographers to think in new ways. Despite the increasing attention paid to theory and explanation, I conclude that more engagement with the philosophy of social sciences is needed before fertility researchers can legitimately claim their studies do as much to explain and understand as to quantify and describe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
221. Shifting articulations of space and security: boundary work in European space policy making.
- Author
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Klimburg-Witjes, Nina
- Subjects
- *
EUROPEAN integration , *OUTER space - Abstract
European space policy is currently at a watershed. In 2021, there will be two institutions responsible for European space activities: The EU Space Agency (EU SPA) and the civilian European Space Agency (ESA) founded in 1975. This article investigates how new objectives and governance scheme(s) of European space activities reflect the increasing securitisation of space in Europe. Linking work in critical security studies to the concept of boundary work from science and technology studies (STS) I outline three phases of boundary work – expansion, expulsion and protection of autonomy – that all show how the dividing lines between peaceful and militarised space activities have become increasingly blurred. The conclusion argues that we currently witness a shift in the visions of European integration in space, with ESA remaining outside the EU framework and open to non-EU members while the EU SPA is accessible to EU members only and explicitly dedicated to the use of space for security. As the strategic potential of outer space is likely to grow, the paper offers a critical empirical investigation of the ongoing transformation in European space policy that has significant consequences for how we envision a "united Europe in space". [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
222. Defense Burden and the Effect of Others: From Neighbors to Allies.
- Author
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Xiaoxin, Yang and Bo, Chen
- Subjects
- *
PROBLEM solving , *ARMS transfers , *MILITARY budgets , *PANEL analysis , *SET theory , *BULLYING - Abstract
This paper presents new evidence on the effects of neighbors and allies on defense burdens using a spatial econometrics model with panel data on 36 countries in Europe collected over 19 years. Apart from the conventional spatial matrices of geographical neighbors, we develop special political vicinity matrices based on arms transfers, which reveal political closeness among countries, and solve the problems associated with endogenous weight matrices by using a QMLE approach. The regression results demonstrate that the defense burden is positively and spatially correlated among geographical neighbors. The use of political vicinity matrices reveals a negative effect of allied relations on defense burdens, which supports the free-riding theory in alliances for setting a defense budget. With composite matrices, the intimidation effect induced by geographical approaches is dominated by the free-riding actions of allies, and the effect becomes more pronounced over time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
223. How weather experiences strengthen climate opinions in Europe.
- Author
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Damsbo-Svendsen, Søren
- Subjects
- *
WEATHER , *STANDARD deviations , *IDEOLOGY , *CLIMATE change skepticism , *CLIMATE change , *POLITICAL doctrines , *EXPERIMENTAL design - Abstract
Previous research has shown that we believe more in the reality of climate change when we experience warmer-than-usual temperatures. This reflects a psychological process in which easily accessible information from personal weather experiences is used as a heuristic to form climate opinions. This paper replicates and extends upon a research design and results of Egan and Mullin to provide the first systematic European study of the Local Warming Effect. Based on data from 12 European countries, the analysis shows that when objective temperatures increase by two standard deviations (5 °C) relative to normal temperatures, climate opinions are strengthened by around 0.5–1.0 percentage points – comparable to the effect of a full step to the left on a 0–10 political ideology scale. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
224. Evaluating the Planimetric Accuracy of a Historical Map (Europe and the Mediterranean Sea by Piri Reis): A New Method and Cartographic Analysis.
- Author
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Narin, Omer Gokberk and Gullu, Mevlut
- Subjects
- *
HISTORICAL maps , *MAGNETIC declination , *AFFINE transformations , *ARTIFICIAL neural networks - Abstract
Historical maps are popular reference tools for historical, archaeological and temporal analysis, and there has recently been an increase in their use. However, for various reasons, the planimetric accuracy of maps produced before the nineteenth century is usually considered to be lower than today. In this paper, a new method for assessing maps is proposed, using a series of processes, such as radial-based function artificial neural network, magnetic declination, and also MapAnalyst software. The map used in the current study (of Europe and the Mediterranean Sea) is a small-scale map; therefore, control points were produced by taking reference from large-scale maps drawn by the same cartographer, Piri Reis (c.1465–1553). While developing this method, affine transformation (six parameters) was compared in terms of planimetric accuracy. The results indicate that Piri Reis's Mediterranean map offers us unique information in many areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
225. Insects as past and future food in entomophobic Europe.
- Author
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Svanberg, Ingvar and Berggren, Åsa
- Subjects
- *
INSECT food , *INSECTS , *EDIBLE insects , *HABIT , *FOOD habits , *TELEVISION cooking programs - Abstract
Insects as food show a large variation in traditional use over the world. This high variation between countries in combination with current ideas of insects as part of a solution to feed a growing global population raises interesting questions. The aim of this paper is to investigate what has been perceived as food historically and how this changes over time with focus on insects. Insects and their products have been used for food and medicine within and outside Europe for as long as we have records. They have not been a staple food but a rare addition to the diet. The frequency of use in Europe, even in times of food crisis, points to reluctance towards this food source. Based on behavioral history and perception of insects as food we suggest the terms entomophobic (insect despising) and entomophilic (insect loving) to describe the eating behavior of societies. If societies are to change their food consumption patterns, new food habits and traditions needs to be created. Altering a predominantly entomophobic society to an entomophilic, changes are needed to take place and many are linked to consumption tradition. Change is likely; history teaches us that aversion to ingredients is possible to overcome. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
226. Theory and explanation in demography: The case of low fertility in Europe.
- Author
-
Graham, Elspeth
- Subjects
- *
FERTILITY , *DEMOGRAPHY , *ENGAGEMENT (Philosophy) , *EXPLANATION - Abstract
In the 50th anniversary edition of Population Studies, John Hobcraft commented that demographers spend too little time trying to explain the phenomena they measure and describe. A quarter of a century on, this paper looks at the state of theory and explanation in contemporary demography. I ask how demographers have approached the task of explanation since Hobcraft's comment, grounding the discussion in the mainstream literature on low fertility in Europe. Using selected examples, I critically review macro- and micro-level approaches to explanation, highlighting some of the philosophical problems that each encounters. I argue that different conceptions of what demography is, and the explanatory language fertility researchers use, lead to differences in explanatory strategies that are rarely explicitly recognized. I also consider how critical theories challenge demographers to think in new ways. Despite the increasing attention paid to theory and explanation, I conclude that more engagement with the philosophy of social sciences is needed before fertility researchers can legitimately claim their studies do as much to explain and understand as to quantify and describe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
227. Real-time GNSS precise point positioning using improved robust adaptive Kalman filter.
- Author
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Elmezayen, Abdelsatar and El-Rabbany, Ahmed
- Subjects
- *
KALMAN filtering , *ADAPTIVE filters , *MEASUREMENT errors , *OUTLIER detection , *DYNAMIC models , *GLOBAL Positioning System - Abstract
Multi-constellation GNSS precise point positioning (PPP) typically uses the extended Kalman filter (EKF) for kinematic applications. Unfortunately, the obtained positioning accuracy in this approach is prone to errors caused by measurement outliers and the system's dynamic model. An adaptive robust Kalman filter (RKF) was recently developed to mitigate these errors. However, RKF uses empirical values as detection thresholds for the outliers, which requires the measurements to be from the same constellation and of equal precision to obtain an optimal PPP solution. The classification robust adaptive Kalman filter (CAKF) has subsequently been developed to deal with measurements of different precisions, namely pseudorange and carrier-phase measurements. This paper proposes a real-time GPS/Galileo PPP system, which employs a modified version of CAKF called the Improved Robust adaptive Kalman Filter (IRKF). The positioning performance of GPS/Galileo PPP through the IRKF is initially verified in comparison with those obtained through the EKF, RKF, and CAKF using the Centre for Orbit Determination in Europe (CODE) final orbit and clock products in both of static and kinematic modes. The real-time GPS/Galileo PPP solution through the IRKF is then assessed in comparison with its near-real-time counterpart. The results indicate that when the IRKF approach is utilised, the positioning accuracy is significantly improved and the convergence behaviour is enhanced compared with results from EKF, conventional RKF, and CAKF. In the real-time mode, centimeter-level horizontal positioning accuracy is achieved under an open sky environment, while decimeter-level horizontal positioning accuracy is achieved under a challenging environment. On the other hand, decimeter-level accuracy is achieved for the vertical positioning component under all environmental scenarios. Moreover, the positioning accuracy of the real-time solution is comparable to the near-real-time counterpart. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
228. Subtle images of antigypsyism: An analysis of the visual perception of “Roma”.
- Author
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End, Markus
- Subjects
- *
VISUAL perception , *RACISM , *ROMANIES , *PHOTOGRAPHY competitions , *HISTORY , *SOCIAL history ,SOCIAL conditions in Germany - Abstract
This paper analyses the powerful stereotypical media discourse that shapes and reproduces a certain racialised and prejudiced perception of people identified as “Roma” in Germany. Using a close analysis of a single picture – appearing as harmless at first glance – and through the reconstruction of its various interpretational contexts and semantics the paper identifies mechanisms used in stereotypical media coverage of “Roma”. This qualitative analysis draws on media analysis of antigypsyism as well as on research of photographic construction of the “gypsy” in order to analyse the contemporary visual regime of “Roma” in Germany. As it portrays “the Roma” as a fundamentally different and socially deviant group, this visual stereotyping is shown to be an integral element of the persistent antigypsyist ideology, deeply embedded in German society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
229. Call for Papers: European Peripheries.
- Subjects
- *
EUROPEANS - Abstract
A call for papers on the concept of European periphery is presented.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
230. Dreaming homogenous – power switches of history in public discourse in Hungary.
- Author
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Dessewffy, Tibor and Nagy, Zsófia
- Subjects
- *
REFUGEES , *COLLECTIVE memory , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *NATIONALISM ,EUROPEAN politics & government, 1989- - Abstract
The waves of migration that hit Europe during 2015 are often labelled as the 'refugee crisis', however the term 'crisis' is doubly understood as that of refugees and that of European politics. Taking the latter view, the present article claims that if one wants to understand the differences between national responses, the concept of social memory is an analytically useful one. We take the case of the Hungarian response to the crisis and explain how the concept of the migrant has been a floating signifier in Hungarian discourse. This is not due to lack of actual migratory movements but because of mnemonic processes typical of Eastern Europe. In the second part of the paper we explain how the floating signifier of the migrant has been manipulated by the Hungarian government and especially Prime Minister Viktor Orbán. We argue that this was made possible by three features: the autocratic transformation of the structure of the public sphere; Orbán's ability to switch history on/off as he pleases; and four deeply rooted historical repertoires. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
231. Hate Knows No Boundaries: Online Hate in Six Nations.
- Author
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Reichelmann, Ashley, Hawdon, James, Costello, Matt, Ryan, John, Blaya, Catherine, Llorent, Vicente, Oksanen, Atte, Räsänen, Pekka, and Zych, Izabela
- Subjects
- *
HATE crimes , *HATE speech , *CROSS-cultural differences , *COUNTRIES , *INTERNET surveys - Abstract
This paper examines cross-national commonalities and differences in online hate speech content, exposure, and emotional reaction. Using online surveys from 18 to 25-year-old respondents in six countries, we find a majority of respondents were exposed to online hate in the preceding 3 months. Commonalities across countries are the platform where the respondents were exposed and how they arrived at such content. Unique national cultures of hate speech also exist, including the common targets and respondents' emotional reactions. A majority of respondents report feeling angry, sad, or ashamed, but most worrisome may be the substantial numbers who report feelings of hatred or pride after seeing online hate. Given the potential for repeated exposure and the recent increase in hate crimes in the US. and Europe, this finding should serve as a reminder of the dangers of online hate and its potential link to offline violence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
232. Glowing cities and the future of manufacturing in the US and Europe: How digitalization will impact metropolitan areas depending on sectoral dominances and regional skill distribution: How digitalization will impact metropolitan areas depending on sectoral dominances and regional skill distribution
- Author
-
Hilpert, Yasmin M.
- Subjects
- *
DIGITAL technology , *METROPOLITAN areas , *INDUSTRY 4.0 , *AUTOMATION , *SOCIAL dominance , *MIDDLE class , *UNEMPLOYMENT statistics - Abstract
Since digitalization and Industry 4.0 have been recognized as a key issue for future economic development, prosperity and wealth distribution, several studies have emerged on the potential threats of new technology on workforce development. The consensus is that jobs may fall away, while some new jobs will be created, with a different skills profile and a new set of qualifications that are required. This paper examines the effects of three main indicators: the impact of skills, industrial sector dominance and product complexity on workforce reduction. Based on metropolitan data from the US (Census) and Europe (Eurostat), the author develops a metropolitan typology based on industrial sectors in each metro and analyses the systematic relationship between regional variations of automation, local skills and economic sector variations, finding that automation exposure in Europe is significantly lower than in the US and that medium-skilled manufacturing jobs in the US are increasingly threatened and low-skill service jobs remain relatively safe from automation – leading to a decreasing middle class. This also shows how metropolitan areas are at risk of developing polarized effects: some facing economic upturn and continuous prosperity, and a majority of others either stagnant or with extreme downturn and high unemployment rates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
233. Enfranchising immigrants and/or emigrants? Attitudes towards voting rights expansion among sedentary nationals in Europe.
- Author
-
Michel, Elie and Blatter, Joachim
- Subjects
- *
IMMIGRANTS , *EUROPEAN Union citizenship , *SUFFRAGE , *WOMEN immigrants , *GOVERNMENT policy ,EUROPEAN emigration & immigration - Abstract
Normative debates and comparative studies on voting rights regulations are lively. However, little is known on what citizens think of enfranchising migrants. This paper starts to fill this gap. We conducted an original survey in 26 European countries (n = 16,555). In most countries, an (often narrow) majority of sedentary nationals supports enfranchising emigrants. In all countries, no majority favours the enfranchisement of immigrants, although falling short of a majority in several cases. Being a woman, a bi-national citizen, but also younger, and leaning to the political left is associated with higher support for enfranchising immigrants. However, no individual-level characteristics, apart from age, is associated with the support for enfranchising emigrants. An exclusive national identity is associated not only with lower support for enfranchising immigrants but for emigrants, as well. Furthermore, larger relative sizes of immigrant population fuel support for enfranchisement of this group – up to a certain level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
234. Urban transportation sustainability assessments: a systematic review of literature.
- Author
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Karjalainen, Linda E. and Juhola, Sirkku
- Subjects
- *
URBAN transportation , *SUSTAINABILITY , *TRANSPORTATION planning , *SEARCH engines , *URBAN planning - Abstract
The volume of urban transportation sustainability assessments in academic literature has steadily increased over the last two decades. This paper targets these studies through the first systematic literature review to construct a synthesised and critical overview of how urban transportation sustainability is in fact assessed. The sample consists of 99 peer-reviewed articles retrieved via three scientific search engines. The results reveal a Europe-centric and single-case focus, a strong interest to introduce new indicator systems with limited references to previous work, and a lack of qualitative approaches and stakeholder diversity regarding the assessment methods. Nearly 2400 indicators are identified in the articles with significant variation in their use. Furthermore, the comprehensive accounting for sustainability is often overlooked, and the inconclusive assessment results are often noted by the authors of the sample articles themselves. Our findings signal that the research field is highly fragmented and to some extent fails to accumulate knowledge generated by past studies and to comprehensively operationalise the concept of sustainability. The identified shortcomings of the assessments and their implications for transportation policy-making and planning are highlighted, and based on our results recommendations to develop more reliable, comparable, and inclusive sustainability assessments for the urban transportation sector are made. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
235. Fatal and life-threatening ADRs associated with paliperidone palmitate: an observational study in the French pharmacovigilance database.
- Author
-
Boels, D., Mahé, J., Olry, A., Citterio-Quentin, A., Moragny, J., and Jolliet, P.
- Subjects
- *
SUDDEN death , *DRUG side effects , *INTRAMUSCULAR injections , *CARDIAC arrest , *SCIENTIFIC observation , *PEOPLE with schizophrenia - Abstract
Paliperidone palmitate (PP), a long‐acting intramuscular formulation of paliperidone, has been marketed in Europe within the last 10 years and provides an important treatment option for patients with schizophrenia. Our aim was to describe PP-related adverse drug reactions (ADRs) leading to death or life-threatening events, specifying their main clinical and pharmacological characteristics. This observational study was a retrospective review of PP-related ADRs in the French pharmacovigilance database between January 1, 2013, and December 31, 2019. Out of 473 PP-related ADRs, we identified 13 deaths and 14 life-threatening events. ADRs were primarily cardiorespiratory (n = 17; 63%). Other symptoms observed were mainly metabolic (n = 4), digestive (n = 4), and neurological (n = 4). Cardiorespiratory symptoms were generally observed within first 6 months after initiation of treatment (11 out of 17 cases), unlike metabolic disorders (all 4 cases 12–21 months after initiation). Cardiac arrests and sudden unexpected deaths occurred 10–14 days after the last PP once-monthly injection (23 cases) or 11–24 days after the last PP three-monthly injection (remaining 4 cases). No PP blood concentration assays were performed for these patients. In this study, PP-related ADRs leading to death or life-threatening events mainly presented with cardiorespiratory symptoms and tended to occur in the first 6 months after the initiation of treatment and within postadministration periods aligned with peak plasma PP concentrations. The hypothesis of supratherapeutic drug concentrations following intramuscular PP injection must be raised. PP-related ADRs leading to death or life-threatening events mainly presented with cardiorespiratory symptoms. Cardiac arrests and sudden unexpected deaths following initiation of PP treatment could be due to supratherapeutic drug concentrations. This study highlights the need to monitor blood concentrations of PP. Adverse reactions to paliperidone palmitate can lead to death or life-threatening events. It is hypothesized that cardiac arrests and sudden unexpected deaths following initiation of paliperidone palmitate treatment could be due to supratherapeutic drug concentrations. This paper proposes the need to monitor blood concentrations of paliperidone palmitate in future studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
236. Vernacular languages in the long ninth century: towards a connected history.
- Author
-
Gautier, Alban
- Subjects
- *
NATIVE language , *GERMANIC languages , *ROMANCE languages - Abstract
Before the late eighth century, with a few exceptions (epigraphy, the languages of the Caucasus and the North-Western Isles), little had been written in Europe in languages other than Latin, Greek and Hebrew. The long ninth century saw this monopoly of the 'three sacred languages' shaken and challenged: several vernacular languages (Celtic, Germanic and Slavonic, but also, if to a lesser extent, Romance) appeared in writing for the first time and others developed in significant ways. This paper, introducing this special issue on Vernacular Languages in the Long Ninth Century, starts with an assessment of the linguistic situation of Europe before the changes began; it goes on with a summary of the main developments known to have taken place in the long ninth century; it then addresses their possible connections and observable entanglements and identifies the conditions that allowed the emergence and the sustained flourishing of written vernaculars. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
237. Trust in Educational Settings: Insights and Emerging Research Questions.
- Author
-
Bormann, Inka, Niedlich, Sebastian, and Würbel, Iris
- Subjects
- *
TRUST , *EDUCATION - Abstract
The theoretical and empirical foundations of research on trust in education are still weak. To contribute to a better understanding of the role of trust in educational systems, this final article of the special issue "Trust in educational settings. European perspectives" highlights the findings from the contributions in this special issue and links them to insights and concepts from interdisciplinary trust research. Furthermore, it identifies and discusses seven avenues for future research on trust in educational settings. Thus, this paper and the special issue as a whole aim to highlight relevant avenues for future research, thereby strengthening research on trust in education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
238. The prudent entrepreneurs: women and public sector innovation.
- Author
-
Lapuente, Victor and Suzuki, Kohei
- Subjects
- *
BUSINESSWOMEN , *PUBLIC sector , *WOMEN'S attitudes , *GENDER stereotypes , *GENDER , *MULTILEVEL models , *CREATIVE ability - Abstract
Despite the large literature on gender differences in politics, there have been relatively few empirical studies testing the effects of gender in public administration. This paper examines how male and female public managers show attitudinal differences toward innovation in the public sector. We hypothesize that male and female managers differ in three aspects. Firstly, female managers are more result-oriented than rule-following, and more oriented toward societal interests. Secondly, female public managers are more open to new ideas and creativity, and more willing to challenge the status quo. Yet, thirdly, female leaders are less eager to take risks when would-be innovations may put their organizations in peril. Thus, we argue that female managers are more prudent and entrepreneurial than their male counterparts. We test these hypotheses using a data set of 5,909 senior public managers from 20 European countries. The results of multilevel model analysis find statistically significant gender differences in attitudes toward innovation. Despite the small size of gender impacts, our findings challenge prevailing stereotypes on women's entrepreneurial attitudes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
239. Pattern-based identification and mapping of landscape types using multi-thematic data.
- Author
-
Nowosad, Jakub and Stepinski, Tomasz F.
- Subjects
- *
LANDSCAPE assessment , *LAND cover , *NATURAL landscaping , *LANDSCAPES , *LAND resource , *CONCEPT mapping - Abstract
Categorical maps of landscape types (LTs) are useful abstractions that simplify spatial and thematic complexity of natural landscapes, thus facilitating land resources management. A local landscape arises from a fusion of patterns of natural themes (such as land cover, landforms, etc.), which makes an unsupervised identification and mapping of LTs difficult. This paper introduces the integrated co-occurrence matrix (INCOMA) – a signature for numerical representation of multi-thematic categorical patterns. INCOMA enables an unsupervised identification and mapping of LTs. The region is tessellated into a large number of local landscapes – patterns of themes over small square-shaped neighborhoods. With local landscapes represented by INCOMA signatures and with dissimilarities between local landscapes calculated using the Jensen-Shannon Divergence ( J S D), LTs can be identified and mapped using standard clustering or segmentation techniques. Resultant LTs are typically heterogeneous with respect to categories of contributing themes reflecting the human perception of a landscape. LTs calculated by INCOMA are more faithful abstractions of actual landscapes than LTs obtained by the current method of choice – the map overlay. The concept of INCOMA is described, and its application is demonstrated by an unsupervised mapping of LT zones in Europe based on combined patterns of land cover and landforms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
240. Islam and space in Europe: the politics of race, time, and secularism.
- Author
-
Müller, Tobias, Taleb, Adela, and Moses, C. J. J.
- Subjects
- *
ISLAM , *SECULARISM , *PUBLIC spaces - Abstract
This introduction to the Special Issue "Rethinking Islam and Space in Europe" advocates for an analytical turn in the study of Islam in Europe by using space as a central conceptual lens. While spatial approaches are gaining traction in the study of religion, migration, ethnicity, and race, we argue that the critical potential of spatial approaches remains largely unexplored. This paper offers a threefold contribution. First, we show how combining spatial perspectives with local histories contributes to de-exceptionalising the contemporary study of Islam in urban contexts. Second, by "localising secularism" we can uncover concrete formations of exclusion and erasure, while also providing a more refined picture of the ways in which the agency of Muslims is negotiated. Third, we demonstrate how scrutinizing the nexus of time, race and Europe reveals colonial pasts and continuities that are disrupted and transformed by the movement of bodies through public spaces. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
241. Myxomycete-Coleoptera associations in the Polish Carpathians.
- Author
-
Chachuła, Piotr, Melke, Andrzej, Ruta, Rafał, and Szołtys, Henryk
- Subjects
- *
MYXOMYCETES , *NATIONAL parks & reserves , *BEETLES , *SPECIES - Abstract
Few papers have been published on the interactions between slime moulds and beetles in Europe. The available knowledge was usually acquired incidentally to mycological studies and concerns common and easily identifiable slime moulds. The beetles in those studies were frequently identified to genus only, and sometimes only selected families were studied. In 2018–2019, a comprehensive survey of Myxomycete-Coleoptera associations was carried out in the Pieniny National Park (Carpathians, S Poland). A total of 164 sporocarps from 30 species of slime moulds were examined, and beetles were found in 112 sporocarps of 23 slime mould species. The sporocarps were inhabited by 674 individuals from 37 species of beetles. To date, this is the most comprehensive study of beetles associated with slime moulds in Europe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
242. The conceptual limits of the 'migration journey'. De-exceptionalising mobility in the context of West African trajectories.
- Author
-
Schapendonk, Joris, Bolay, Matthieu, and Dahinden, Janine
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY of emigration & immigration , *COUNTRY of origin (Immigrants) , *IMMIGRANTS , *ETHNOLOGY , *GOLD miners - Abstract
The 'migration journey' has proven to be a fruitful lens to question the simplistic notion that the outcome of migration solely depends on a momentous go/no-go decision in the countries of origin. At the same time, we argue that the normative/sedentarist principles of migration studies produce the risk to approach the journey as an exceptional phase of mobility, in-between presumed place-based lives. This paper therefore aims to explore the conceptual limits of the migration journey literature. To challenge the notion that the migration journey is fundamentally different from pre- and post-migratory mobilities, we combine two empirical research projects that have followed the im/mobility trajectories of West Africans. The first project focuses on the trajectories of itinerant gold miners within West Africa, the second concentrates on the im/mobility of West Africans within Europe. By juxtaposing the empirical insights of these seemingly different contexts, we stress the need to embed migratory movements in a continuous field of mobility practices across spaces in Africa and Europe. This results in our plea for a research agenda that does not see 'migrancy' as a pre-given marker of difference, but as a normative artefact of mobility regimes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
243. Energy recovery on the agenda. Waste heat: a matter of public policy and social science concern.
- Author
-
Fontaine, Antoine and Rocher, Laurence
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL policy , *GOVERNMENT policy , *POLICY sciences , *WASTE heat , *HEAT recovery , *ELECTRIC power consumption , *REFUSE as fuel - Abstract
Waste heat from industry or urban facilities represents a largely underused and long disregarded energy source, while heating and cooling count for half the final energy demand in Europe. From the early 2010s onwards, waste heat recovery (WHR) is being recognized as a key challenge for energy transition and tends to be integrated into energy strategies at different levels. This paper provides an analysis of how WHR became a matter of public policy in Europe and in France. Based on a literature review, the analysis shows that WHR has been framed as a techno-economic problem, while some barriers (legal, organizational) to its development remain largely unaddressed. A study of European and French energy agendas illustrates how WHR progressively started to be recognized as an energy resource next to renewables. As a result, questions are raised as to further social science contributions to an extended research agenda addressing WHR. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
244. Mapping the Ukrainian Foreign-language Press in Europe during the Ukrainian Revolution (1917–1921) in Western and Ukrainian Archives and Libraries.
- Author
-
Blavatskyy, Serhiy
- Subjects
- *
NATIONAL liberation movements , *UKRAINIANS , *UKRAINIAN language , *MAP collections , *INFORMATION resources , *EUROPEAN integration ,UKRAINIAN history - Abstract
This paper seeks to develop new avenues of research for the study of the Ukrainian press in Europe in a retrospective of the 20th century. Specifically, it aims to present here a comprehensive overview of the Ukrainian periodicals issued in the West European languages during the Ukrainian Revolution (1917–1921). In the process of the search work conducted during 2012–2019, the corpus of the Ukrainian foreign-language press in Europe spanning the Ukrainian national liberation movement/Ukrainian Revolution has been identified. This has been accomplished through a comprehensive study of the foreign-language bibliography (by means of the bibliographic heuristics' method) and scholarly reference sources, as well as systematic fieldwork in the holdings of both Western and Ukrainian archives and libraries. The Ukrainian press in the West European languages of Europe of that period serves as a barometer of receptions by different West European media outlets of the Ukrainian Revolution (1917–1921). Its structure, editorial policies, and content serve both as a record, as well as a digest of the foreign (i.e., West European) press receptions about the Ukrainian national revolution. The complex nature of this cluster of the Ukrainian press thus enables researchers (both Ukrainian, and foreign scholars) to use it as an important (and sometimes indispensable) source of information about the development and transformations of the Ukrainian Revolution. This study argues that this corpus of publications is a unique phenomenon in the history of Ukrainian journalism in terms of its transformation, diversification, internationalization and subsequent integration into the European public sphere. This study also shows that there are yet many gaps in the fields of media history, Slavic and East European Studies, and Ukrainian Studies of the interwar period awaiting attention of future bibliographers and scholars. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
245. Exploring Protest in Europe with a Multi-Level Cross-National Test of the Structural Cognitive Model.
- Author
-
Lavrinenko, Olga
- Subjects
- *
POLITICAL opportunity theory , *COGNITIVE testing , *PUBLIC demonstrations , *SUPPLY chain management , *PSYCHOLOGICAL factors - Abstract
To explain protest potential, the Structural Cognitive Model (SCM) suggests (i) a multi-level interaction between economic and political contexts ("structure") and individual-level social psychological factors ("cognitive") such that (ii) macro-level factors can amplify or dampen individual and group protest potential. This model has few cross-national tests because many of the cognitive concepts it suggests are not available in the major international survey projects. This paper explores the possibilities to test SCM with the European Values Study (33 countries, 2017–2018). I explain protest potential as a result of, at the macro level, economic inequality and the degree to which the Political Opportunity Structure is open or closed. Individual-level factors include economic structural disadvantage and being both politically interested and organizationally embedded. Cognitive factors include external political efficacy and internal social efficacy. I find that external political efficacy is sensitive to the political context and internal social efficacy is not. These results suggest that, to test SCM, the distinction between external political efficacy and internal social efficacy is essential because they have different relationships with the economic and political contexts. Overall, I find that the European Values Study can be used to explore SCM in cross-national perspective. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
246. Identifying "Vulnerable Agricultural Populations" at Risk for Occupational Injuries and Illnesses: A European Perspective.
- Author
-
Ramos, Athena K., Girdžiūtė, Laura, Starič, Jože, and Rautianinen, Risto H.
- Subjects
- *
OCCUPATIONAL disease risk factors , *WORK-related injuries risk factors , *CONSENSUS (Social sciences) , *IMMIGRANTS , *NOMADS , *AGRICULTURE , *RISK assessment , *REFUGEES , *AGRICULTURAL laborers - Abstract
Objectives: A common understanding of the term "vulnerable populations" in the European agricultural context is needed. Therefore, the purpose of this paper was to identify vulnerable populations working in European agriculture. Methods: Participatory dialogue with members of the Safety Culture and Risk Management in Agriculture (SACURIMA) network was used to identify and build consensus on the major vulnerable groups of people who work in European agriculture. Results: Five groups of vulnerable people were identified, which included: (1) foreign-born farmworkers (including both immigrants and refugees); (2) migrant and seasonal farmworkers; (3) beginning farmers (those with <5 years of experience); (4) farm families (including women, children, and older adults), and (5) farmers and farmworkers who have physical, mental health, or intellectual disabilities. Conclusion: By developing a consistent understanding of vulnerable populations working in European agriculture, we can promote consistency in health and safety messaging, measurement of health and safety constructs, and implementation and dissemination of health and safety programs and information. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
247. Social innovation: a preliminary exploration of a contested concept.
- Author
-
Slee, Bill, Burlando, Catie, Pisani, Elena, Secco, Laura, and Polman, Nico
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL innovation , *SOCIAL status , *SOCIAL reality - Abstract
This paper explores the contested concept of social innovation by using the ideas of discourse and framing as a lens to explore the contested definitions of social innovation. A selection of definitions is then deconstructed in relation to these discourses and framings. It is argued that the political pressures which create interest in social innovation have resulted in a confused and contested series of definitions, which remain largely unconnected to wider debates and theories about innovation. Instead, many authors contrive an almost alchemic status for social innovation when the reality of social innovation in practice may be rather more prosaic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
248. Unequally ageing regions of Europe: Exploring the role of urbanization.
- Author
-
Kashnitsky, Ilya, De Beer, Joop, and Van Wissen, Leo
- Subjects
- *
OLDER people , *URBANIZATION , *YOUNG adults , *AGE differences , *POPULATION aging - Abstract
Since young adults tend to move from rural to urban regions, whereas older adults move from urban to rural regions, we may expect to see increasing differences in population ageing across urban and rural regions. This paper examines whether trends in population ageing across urban and rural NUTS-2 regions of the EU-27 have diverged over the period 2003–13. We use the methodological approach of convergence analysis, quite recently brought to demography from the field of economic research. Unlike classical beta and sigma approaches to convergence, we focus not on any single summary statistic of convergence, but rather analyse the whole cumulative distribution of regions. Such an approach helps to identify which specific group of regions is responsible for the major changes. Our results suggest that, despite expectations, there was no divergence in age structures between urban and rural regions; rather, divergence happened within each of the groups of regions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
249. Integrated policy analysis to identify transformation paths to more sustainable legume-based food and feed value-chains in Europe.
- Author
-
Balázs, Bálint, Kelemen, Eszter, Centofanti, Tiziana, Vasconcelos, Marta W., and Iannetta, Pietro P.M.
- Subjects
- *
SUSTAINABLE agriculture , *POLICY analysis , *FOOD habits , *AGRICULTURAL extension work , *LEGUMES , *ECOSYSTEM health - Abstract
The food- and feed-value systems in the European Union are not protein self-sufficient. Despite their potential to improve the well-being of arable cropping systems, sufficient production of high-protein legume grains in Europe has not been achieved due to multiple barriers. The reasons are multiple and span economic, agronomic, research, and extension services, as well as aspects of culture and traditional dietary habits. Given the well-documented advantages of legume-supported production systems and diets, that include ecosystem and health provisions, acknowledging and promoting legumes as cornerstone species for more sustainable agri-food systems is a necessary and logical step. This paper provides an integrated analysis of case studies and current policies that shape the production and consumption of legumes in Europe. This study identified three key pathways, which can be integrated into sustainable farming systems to support current and future food security challenges via the use of legumes and legume-based products. At each pathway, we identified several enablers that support the sustainability transformation of legume production and consumption in Europe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
250. Hunter-gatherer carbohydrate consumption: plant roots and rhizomes as staple foods in Mesolithic Europe.
- Author
-
Bishop, Rosie R.
- Subjects
- *
PLANT roots , *MESOLITHIC Period , *CARBOHYDRATES , *FOOD composition , *NUTRITION - Abstract
Carbohydrate consumption in hunter-gatherer societies has been much debated, with dietary estimates from studies of modern hunter-gatherers used as a reference standard for modern human nutrition. However, relatively little is known about the role of carbohydrates in past hunter-gatherer diets in temperate Europe because farming has been the main mode of subsistence since early prehistory. Plant roots and rhizomes provide a major source of carbohydrates and archaeological evidence indicates that these resources were gathered, perhaps routinely for food by Mesolithic hunter-gatherers in Europe. This paper considers whether roots/rhizomes in Europe contained sufficient carbohydrates and energy to be utilised as staple foods using new food composition data, and considers the suitability of roots/rhizomes for intensive exploitation. The results reveal that the carbohydrate and energy content of wild roots/rhizomes can be higher than in cultivated potatoes, showing that they could have provided a major carbohydrate and energy source for hunter-gatherers in Europe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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