46 results
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2. 'Something else'?: international co-production, postcolonial crime fiction and the representation of sexual orientation in The No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency TV series.
- Author
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Beattie, Melissa Anne
- Subjects
POSTCOLONIAL literature ,MYSTERY fiction ,SEXUAL orientation ,TELEVISION series ,AFRICAN American actors - Abstract
The No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency is both a successful series of novels and a television series which ran for one series on the BBC in 2008. While the books have been criticised on a number of aspects, including its representation of Botswana, the television series has received very little academic attention at all. The television series was an international co-production between the United States, United Kingdom and South Africa, using a mix of American and South African actors in regular and recurring roles with British guest artists and production team despite being shot in Botswana. While the main features of the adaptation were primarily related to a reordering of vignettes from the books into the series, the television series added in a new character, the camp, gay hairdresser BK. At the time the series was airing, same-sex sexual activity was illegal in Botswana though that has since been changed. As such, this paper will discuss the addition of this liminal character into the series through close reading of the text and paratexts (including industrial context). Ultimately the paper will contextualise the addition with regard to both national and sexual identity and debates surrounding African queer identities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Climate Change Adaptation for Food Security and Gendered-Land Rights in Western Kenya.
- Author
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Etale, Linda and Simatele, Mulala Danny
- Subjects
CLIMATE change adaptation ,FOOD security ,STATISTICAL sampling ,PROPERTY rights ,CULTURAL values - Abstract
This paper argues that for any community transformation to be achieved, cultural values and legal frameworks, which influence issues relating to land rights and food security, must form an integral part of any policy intervention efforts. We adopted feminism as both a methodological and an analytical framework. The dominant research paradigm was qualitative. The study sample was 184 people obtained using a systematic sampling method. Data collection was through focus groups and interviews. We challenge contemporary development initiatives, in terms of their intentions and sustainability. Finally, it is important that any development initiatives facilitate the participation and involvement of all genders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Surviving cell-sharing: Resistance, cooperation and collaboration.
- Author
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Muirhead, Aimee, Butler, Michelle, and Davidson, Gavin
- Subjects
PRISONERS ,IMPRISONMENT ,SEMI-structured interviews ,PRISONS - Abstract
For decades, researchers have sought to understand the impact of imprisonment; yet we have a limited understanding of the lived experience of cell-sharing. To address this gap in knowledge, this paper draws on 37 semi-structured interviews with imprisoned adult men in Northern Ireland. While demonstrating that, for most, cell-sharing was a negative experience, imbued with discomfort, unease and distress, a new conceptual framework is presented that seeks to understand the tactics people use to manage cellsharing, influences on their choice of tactics and the potential repercussions of these tactics. Potential implications for policy and practice are also discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Tracing palimpsestic text-worlds of key moments in rewrites of King Lear - A Thousand Acres and Dunbar.
- Author
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Fan, Yi
- Subjects
- *
LITERARY adaptations , *FILM adaptations , *METAPHOR , *NEGOTIATION , *ALLEGORY - Abstract
In recent years, Text World Theory has been extended and elaborated to explain readers' understanding of discoursal phenomena where toggling between separate text-worlds is sustained at length, such as extended metaphor and allegory. Similarly, experiencing adaptation, that is, reading a rewrite of a source text, may also involve readers deriving cognitive effects from shifting attention between two ontologically separate sets of worlds throughout a discourse. However, Text World Theory has not been previously applied to the study of this area. This paper deploys Text World Theory to examine the stylistic manipulation of text-worlds in A Thousand Acres by Jane Smiley and Dunbar by Edward St. Aubyn, novels that are both modern rewrites of Shakespeare's King Lear. It aims to contribute on the one hand to Text World Theory by enriching and elaborating a Text World basis for explaining adaptation, and on the other to adaptation studies by demonstrating the utility of a cognitive stylistic approach for analyzing literary adaptation. Specifically, it investigates how the construction of intertextually-relevant text-world patterns serves to draw the reader's attention to assign significance to certain narrative moments, and to allow the reader to access an additional layer of meaning. This study sheds some light on the possible contribution of special types of contextual information to the negotiation of text-worlds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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6. Glocalization of Subway in India: How a US Giant Has Adapted in the Asian Subcontinent.
- Author
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Simi, Demi and Matusitz, Jonathan
- Subjects
GLOCALIZATION - Abstract
This paper examines how Subway, the US fast food restaurant franchise, has adapted to Indian culture. Glocalization theory will be the guiding framework used in this analysis. Glocalization rests on the premise that a universal concept must change to fit and function in a local culture. Blending the local and the global, it provides a passage to empowerment where modifications to a particular commodity can make it prosper in various traditions. Four important themes of glocalization emerged from this analysis: (1) adjustment of restaurant ambience; (2) adoption of Jain values; (3) adjustment of advertising practices; and (4) adjustment of the use of social media. An important conclusion is that, although India is embracing modernity, Subway has honoured many religious and cultural views in that nation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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7. Exploring the consequences of climate-related displacement for just resilience in Vietnam.
- Author
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Miller, Fiona
- Subjects
INVOLUNTARY relocation ,CLIMATE change ,LAND settlement ,FORCED migration - Abstract
Connections to place and relations between people are being radically reconfigured in response to climate risks. Climate change is likely to increase the scale of displacement in the Asia Pacific region, leading to intensified patterns of migration as well as resettlement. These two processes, though differing in terms of individual agency and the role of the state, are likely to further exacerbate pressure on urban areas. As the limits to adaptation in risky places are reached, people are increasingly pursuing migration as a way of coping. This strategy demonstrates people's agency to respond to risks and opportunities. Resettlement, in contrast, tends to undermine people's agency. This risk response is increasingly being implemented by states as part of climate change adaptation plans, yet, it often results in the creation of new vulnerabilities for those forcibly resettled. Through a focus on the 'climate hotspot' of the Mekong Delta, Vietnam, this paper explores how communities and governments might anticipate and resolve some of the humanitarian, livelihood and ecological challenges associated with resettlement in an increasingly resource-constrained and risky climate future. The concept of just resilience is proposed as a lens through which the consequences of resettlement for people's connections to place, each other and familiar ways of life can be understood. It is argued that a focus on just resilience reveals opportunities and threats to procedural, distributive and recognition elements of justice associated with adapting to climate change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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8. Recognition in urban climate justice: marginality and exclusion of migrants in Indian cities.
- Author
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Chu, Eric and Michael, Kavya
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CLIMATE change ,URBANIZATION - Abstract
This paper explores the recognitional dimensions of urban climate change justice in a development context. Through the lens of migrants in the Indian cities of Bengaluru and Surat, we highlight how experiences of environmental marginality can be attributed to a lack of recognition of citizenship rights and informal livelihood strategies. Specifically, the drivers of non-recognition in this situation relate to broken social networks and a lack of political voice, as well as heightened exposure to emerging climate risks and economic precariousness. We find that migrants experience extreme forms of climate injustice as they are often invisible to the official state apparatus, or worse, are actively erased from cities through force or discriminatory development policies. Current theories must therefore engage more seriously with issues of recognition to enable more radical climate justice in cities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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9. Political ethics and social movement: The virtues and vices of a 'fishing scab'.
- Author
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Lang, Luciana
- Subjects
POLITICAL ethics ,SOCIAL movements ,MANGROVE swamps - Abstract
In the 1980s, local mobilization to turn a mangrove swamp, the Manguezal do Jequiá, into an environmentally protected area in the urban periphery of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, brought distinct motivations together under one vision: that of regenerating what was once a resource-rich commons for local fishers. However, conflicts emerged when framings ceased to coincide, thereby curtailing the network, and compromising the co-existence of humans, fish and mangroves. Prompted by the ethnographic category of pelego, or 'scab', used by people from outside the community to explain political disengagement amongst fishers, this paper sheds light on what being political means. Following the tropes of nets and networks, it unveils the tension between adaptation and resistance. At the threshold between traditional ways of living and progress, between continuity and change, adaptation emerges as a means to survive for both the mangroves and the fishers, who are political insofar as they affect the relations that constitute the network. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Climate change and water in the UK – past changes and future prospects.
- Author
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Watts, Glenn, Battarbee, Richard W., Bloomfield, John P., Crossman, Jill, Daccache, Andre, Durance, Isabelle, Elliott, J. Alex, Garner, Grace, Hannaford, Jamie, Hannah, David M., Hess, Tim, Jackson, Christopher R., Kay, Alison L., Kernan, Martin, Knox, Jerry, Mackay, Jonathan, Monteith, Don T., Ormerod, Steve J., Rance, Jemima, and Stuart, Marianne E.
- Subjects
CLIMATE change ,RAINFALL ,TEMPERATURE ,WATERSHEDS ,HYDROLOGY - Abstract
Climate change is expected to modify rainfall, temperature and catchment hydrological responses across the world, and adapting to these water-related changes is a pressing challenge. This paper reviews the impact of anthropogenic climate change on water in the UK and looks at projections of future change. The natural variability of the UK climate makes change hard to detect; only historical increases in air temperature can be attributed to anthropogenic climate forcing, but over the last 50 years more winter rainfall has been falling in intense events. Future changes in rainfall and evapotranspiration could lead to changed flow regimes and impacts on water quality, aquatic ecosystems and water availability. Summer flows may decrease on average, but floods may become larger and more frequent. River and lake water quality may decline as a result of higher water temperatures, lower river flows and increased algal blooms in summer, and because of higher flows in the winter. In communicating this important work, researchers should pay particular attention to explaining confidence and uncertainty clearly. Much of the relevant research is either global or highly localized: decision-makers would benefit from more studies that address water and climate change at a spatial and temporal scale appropriate for the decisions they make. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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11. Unscented Kalman-filter to manage the handling-comfort trade-off of quarter-of-vehicle.
- Author
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Muhammed, Alhelou and Gavrilov I, Alexander
- Subjects
- *
MOTOR vehicle springs & suspension , *KALMAN filtering , *AIR filters - Abstract
This paper investigates managing the comfort-handling trade-off of a quarter car suspension system using a Kalman filter. Using the unscented Kalman filter, the adapted feedback input signal is extracted based on the vertical acceleration signals of the chassis and wheel. Considering the chassis acceleration signal as the primary feedback to maintain a required comfort level, it is continuously adapted to keep an acceptable level of road handling. Compared with the traditional methods, which rely on the combination of the two modes of comfort and handling through an intermediate variable to manage the contradiction, this method focuses on comfort and improves the process of the road handling automatically. The proposed strategy is evaluated using simulation in MATLAB and the results show the feasibility of this method in managing the handling-comfort trade-off. In addition, mathematical relationships that allow this control strategy to be derived were shown. Moreover, the effects of road disturbances amplitudes and road quality on the performance of the proposed control strategy were investigated. Furthermore, the performance of the proposed method is compared with that of the hybrid-hook and the results show the superiority of the proposed algorithm. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. A novel approach to work towards gender-responsive urban climate policy.
- Author
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Alber, Gotelind
- Subjects
URBAN climatology ,URBAN policy ,GOVERNMENT policy on climate change ,CLIMATE justice ,INDIAN women (Asians) - Abstract
In collaboration with women's organizations in India, Indonesia, Mexico and South Africa, an approach for a novel gender assessment of urban climate policies was developed and tested. The Gender Assessment and Monitoring of Mitigation and Adaptation (GAMMA) methodology allows for an in-depth analysis of the institutional framework and the mitigation and adaptation policies of cities. Its application by the women's organizations in 14 pilot cities led to policy recommendations on how to integrate gender equality into urban mitigation and adaptation actions. The results of a monitoring exercise show that the project has made a significant step forward in raising awareness of gender issues and gender-responsive action at the urban level. It provides civil society organizations working on climate justice with a tool to push local governments to work towards low-carbon, resilient, gender-just and inclusive cities. It can also be used by local governments for self-assessment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Community-level adaptation to minimize vulnerability and exploit opportunities in Kampala’s wetlands.
- Author
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Isunju, John Bosco, Orach, Christopher Garimoi, and Kemp, Jaco
- Subjects
WETLAND ecology ,BIOLOGICAL adaptation ,ECOSYSTEM services ,ENVIRONMENTAL economics - Abstract
This paper discusses benefits that informal wetland communities in Kampala, Uganda derive from their location in the wetland and how they adapt to minimize vulnerability to hazards such as floods and disease vectors. We focus on the mechanisms, preferences and ability to adapt. A total of 551 households were interviewed in addition to four focus group discussions and five key informant interviews. Free water from spring wells and cheaper rental units topped the benefits from location, while the main benefit associated with the wetland is that it supports crop farming. Tenure status was significantly associated with the preference and perceived ability to adapt: tenants were less likely to prefer to adapt, and less likely to perceive themselves as able to afford adaptation, than landlords. There is a need for coordinated adaptation strategies that involve all stakeholders and that enhance equitable utilization of wetland resources without compromising their ecosystem services and economic benefits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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14. Mental health and current issues of migrant workers in Japan: A cross-sectional study of Vietnamese workers.
- Author
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Uezato, Akihito, Sakamoto, Kohei, Miura, Mieko, Futami, Akane, Nakajima, Toshihiko, Quy, Pham Nguyen, Jeong, Soi, Tomita, Shigeru, Saito, Yoshihisa, Fukuda, Yui, Yoshizawa, Nonoka, and Taguchi, Atsuko
- Subjects
WORK environment ,CROSS-sectional method ,ACCULTURATION ,MENTAL health ,MIGRANT labor ,BLUE collar workers ,COMPARATIVE studies ,PHYSIOLOGICAL adaptation ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,VIETNAMESE people ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,PSYCHOLOGICAL distress - Abstract
Background: Over the past 5 years, the number of Vietnamese migrant workers in Japan has grown rapidly to become the largest group of migrant workers in the country. They hold various statuses of residence and are subjected to multifactorial stressors. Aims: The current study's aim is to investigate the association between psychological distress experienced by Vietnamese workers and their work environment. Another aim is to discuss issues involving migrant workers by comparing the characteristics of workers in the major statuses of residence. Methods: The study applied a cross-sectional design, and included a nationwide self-administered online questionnaire that was conducted in Vietnamese in 2022. The questionnaire included the Kessler Psychological Distress Scale (K10), workplace interpersonal factors as well as factors related to work and health. A multiple logistic regression analysis was conducted to investigate factors associated with psychological distress. Results: Of 933 Vietnamese workers, 37% were grouped as distressed under the K10 cutoff. Fewer opportunities to speak with Japanese co-workers, lower welfare and workload ratings, and the visa statuses including 'Technical Intern Training' were significantly associated with psychological distress. Unexpectedly, those in 'Engineer/Specialist in Humanities/International Services (ESI)' category who are deemed to hold better conditions demonstrated the highest amounts of distress. Conclusion: Outside of unsatisfactory working environments, differing situations depending on status of residence could produce various sources of distress. The difficult aspects of Japan's distinct culture seem to contribute to their distress, especially for those who have more interactions with Japanese co-workers. A push for a multicultural society, where migrant workers can pursue proactive life designs of their own choosing, is warranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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15. The Parent Health Literacy Questionnaire (HLQ-Parent). Adaptation and validity testing with parents of children with epilepsy.
- Author
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Wahl, Astrid K., Hermansen, Åsmund, Tschamper, Merete B., Osborne, Richard H., Helseth, Sølvi, Jacobsen, Rita, and Larsen, Marie H.
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EPILEPSY prevention ,RESEARCH evaluation ,RESEARCH methodology evaluation ,CROSS-sectional method ,INTERVIEWING ,SURVEYS ,CRONBACH'S alpha ,PSYCHOMETRICS ,QUESTIONNAIRES - Abstract
Aims: The aim of this study was to adapt the Health Literacy Questionnaire (HLQ) in English and Norwegian for use with parents. Methods: The research group evaluated all HLQ items and, where relevant, modified them to refocus the attribution of care to that of a child by a parent. Five cognitive interviews with parents were undertaken to gain a detailed depiction of the meanings and processes they used to respond to the HLQ items. Assessment of the psychometric properties of the revised HLQ was undertaken using data from a cross-sectional survey of 254 parents of children with epilepsy. Analysis included internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha) and confirmatory factor analysis (CFA). Results: Some 22 out of 44 items and the names of three domains were modified (e.g. attribution changed from 'me' to 'my child'). Cognitive interviews indicated that parents interpreted the HLQ-Parent items in the way intended. All but three factor loadings were high to acceptable. All nine HLQ scales showed satisfactory to good internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha 0.70 to 0.87). When fitting one-factor CFA models, correlated residuals were required for four scales to generate an acceptable fit. One scale, '8. Ability to find good health information', required inclusion of two correlated residuals to generate an acceptable CFA model fit, indicating that further work on this scale is warranted. Conclusions: The results from both the adaptation process and the CFA analysis supported the relevance, understanding and theoretical structure of the instrument in a parental context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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16. A medium-rise 1970s maternity hospital in the east of England: Resilience and adaptation to climate change.
- Author
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Short, C Alan, Renganathan, Giridharan, and Lomas, Kevin J
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WOMEN'S hospitals ,ECOLOGICAL resilience ,CLIMATE change ,NATIONAL health services - Abstract
The late 1970s design for the Rosie Maternity Hospital on the Addenbrookes campus in Cambridge is a recurring type across the UK National Health Service, a framed three-storey courtyard configuration in brick masonry. It was selected as a case study project for the ‘Design and Delivery of Robust Hospitals in a Changing Climate’ project, pursuing the methodology developed for that research. Temperature data were collected in representative spaces within the hospital, over a two-year period. These revealed overheating in mild conditions relative to an observed 24℃ threshold for sleep but concealed within the customary 28℃ threshold marking the upper limit of acceptable conditions. The building was modelled using current climate data to predict 2010 conditions. The model was then calibrated against the observed 2010 data and used to predict the likely internal temperatures in current and 2030s. The results indicated an increase in peak temperatures. Four adaptive intervention schemes were subsequently developed: an ‘enlightened’ industry standard ‘Passivhaus’-type option providing superinsulation, sealed glazing and heat recovery; a lower technology-based scheme promoting natural cross-ventilation by providing greater opening glazing area, opening up the plan, sunshading and additional insulation; an enhanced natural ventilation scheme glazing over the courtyards to provide supply air winter gardens, and an advanced natural ventilation option pursuing passive downdraught cooling. All four schemes were modelled using the projected current and 2030s weather data and their performance was compared. The schemes were fully costed to yield relative ‘value for money’ guidance to National Health Service Trusts.Practical application: The Heat wave Plan for England 2014 warns National Health Service (NHS) organisations of the risks to patients, particularly the very young, the elderly and the seriously ill, from extreme summer heat events.1 The Chief Medical Officer in her introduction challenges each NHS locality to plan well in advance of hot spells, as appropriate. This paper describes the likely extent of overheating risk and a series of potential adaptation plans for a recurring NHS hospital building type. As a consequence, estates and facilities decision makers in NHS organisations and Public Health England officers charged with the mitigation of risk resulting from overheating of wards and clinical spaces will benefit directly in their necessary decision making from the findings. Policy makers in the Department of Health and policy advisors in the NHS Sustainable Development Unit and the Climate Change Committee Adaptation Sub-Committee will benefit from the evidence presented in advising the NHS and Department of Health. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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17. Bharti-Wal-Mart: A Glocalization Experience.
- Author
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Matusitz, Jonathan
- Subjects
GLOCALIZATION ,INDIAN economy, 1991- ,ECONOMICS & culture ,MARKETING research - Abstract
This paper analyzes the experience of Bharti-Wal-Mart, a joint venture between Wal-Mart and Bharti Enterprises (an Indian telecommunications company), based on the principles of glocalization theory. By and large, glocalization refers to the adaptation of multinational corporations (MNCs) to local cultures. MNCs achieve this by immersing themselves into local cultures and by adopting unconventional marketing techniques. A major finding of this analysis is that globalization is not monolithic. It is not a homogenizing factor that forces local cultures to follow the norms, practices, and values of a big corporation. In fact, Wal-Mart executives quickly learned that imposing the Bentonville blueprint on local Indian populations would be doomed to failure from the beginning. An important focus of this analysis is to establish a framework for greater understanding of the strategies adopted by Wal-Mart in India. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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18. Quality of teleoperator adaptive control for telerobotic operations.
- Author
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Jia, Yunyi, Xi, Ning, Liu, Shuang, Wang, Yunxia, Li, Xin, and Bi, Sheng
- Subjects
TELEROBOTICS ,ADAPTIVE control systems ,ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY ,MOBILE robot control systems ,PERFORMANCE evaluation - Abstract
Extensive studies have been conducted on telerobotic operations for decades due to their widespread applications in a variety of areas. Most studies have been focused on two major issues: stability and telepresence. Few have studied the influence of the operation status of the teleoperator on the performance of telerobotic operations. As subnormal operation status of the teleoperator may result in insufficient and even incorrect operations, the quality of teleoperator (QoT) is an important impact on the performance of the telerobotic operations in terms of the efficiency and safety even if both the stability and telepresence are guaranteed. Therefore, this paper investigates the online identification of the QoT and its application to telerobotic operations. The QoT is identified based on five QoT indicators which are generated based on the teleoperator’s brain EEG signals. A QoT adaptive control method is designed to adapt the velocity and responsivity of the robotic system to the operation status of the teleoperator such that the teleoperation efficiency and safety can be enhanced. The online QoT identification method was conducted on various teleoperators and the QoT adaptive control method was implemented on a mobile manipulator teleoperation system. The experimental results demonstrated the effectiveness and advantages of the proposed methods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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19. Fidelity and Adaptation of Programs: Does Adaptation Thwart Effectiveness?
- Author
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Nolt, Kate L. and Leviton, Laura C.
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CHANGE theory ,INFORMATION needs ,EVALUATORS - Abstract
Evidence-based programs and grassroots programs are often adapted during implementation. Adaptations are often hidden, ignored, or punished. Although some adaptations stem from lack of organizational capacity, evaluators report other adaptations happen in good faith or are efforts to better fit the local context. Program implementers, facilitators who need to adapt during implementation, do not always report adaptations because they fear losing funding if the program is not implemented with fidelity. Program personnel including program evaluators need this information to improve effectiveness of programs, and to determine whether an adaptation is still consistent with the theory of change. Evaluators also need this information for generalizing results to varied settings and populations. Following the PRECEDE–PROCEED model, we recommend a hybrid approach to fidelity and adaptation. We argue in favor of advance planning to accommodate potential adaptations. Such planning also establishes evaluation criteria for determining whether adaptations are helpful, harmful, and appropriate to the context. We illustrate some types of adaptations that can occur, why they may be needed, and how to structure transparent reporting about adaptations to program developers and funding organizations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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20. Adaptive nonsingular integral-type dynamic terminal sliding mode synchronizer for disturbed nonlinear systems and its application to secure communication systems.
- Author
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Vaseghi, Behrouz, Mobayen, Saleh, Din, Sami ud, Hashemi, Seyedeh Somayeh, and Vu, Mai The
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TELECOMMUNICATION systems ,NONLINEAR systems ,SLIDING mode control ,DATA transmission systems ,CHAOTIC communication ,ADAPTIVE fuzzy control ,DIGITAL communications - Abstract
This study proposes an adaptive nonsingular integral dynamic terminal sliding mode tracker/synchronizer for disturbed nonlinear systems along with its usage in safe communication systems. The convergence of the closed-loop structure under unknown uncertainty and disturbances is guaranteed via Lyapunov analysis. Furthermore, a parameter-tuning method is planned to approximate the upper bound of uncertainty and disturbance terms, since this latter is typically unknown in practice. The proposed approach is used to design a digital secure transmission scheme according to the chaotic systems. The effectiveness of the suggested approach is validated using computer simulations on a benchmark example of chaotic system. The obtained outcomes clearly confirm the ability of the planned control approach enables to attain the desired tracking/synchronizing performance despite the disturbances. Additionally, when implemented to the data encryption of a communication system, the proposed control and secure communication techniques enabled the complete and secure retrieval of the original digital sequences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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21. What to Expect When You Don't Know What You are Expecting: Vigilance and the Monitoring and Evaluation of an Uncertain World.
- Author
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Goble, Rob, Carr, Edward R., and Anderson, Jon
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DESIGN - Abstract
Complexity and uncertainty are long-standing challenges for global development projects. Coping with both requires flexibility and adaptation, the ability to identify unexpected circumstances, seize opportunities, and respond to threats. Vigilance is critical; it resides within the domains of monitoring, evaluation, and learning. In practice, maintaining vigilance is difficult, partly because effective vigilance has a dual nature. Normal, Type 1 vigilance, is anchored in knowing what to look for. It demands focus and attention to designated indicators. Type 2 vigilance looks for what project preparations failed to anticipate. It demands defocusing and openness; it sits outside contemporary design of monitoring and evaluation as it must question the assumptions in project design and implementation. We consider the role of both types of vigilance in global development and difficulties in maintaining both simultaneously. We identify pathways for improving the practice of vigilance and suggest practical steps in a template for pilot efforts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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22. Climate change and water in the UK: Recent scientific evidence for past and future change.
- Author
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Garner, Grace, Hannah, David M., and Watts, Glenn
- Subjects
- *
CLIMATE change , *WATER , *GROUNDWATER temperature , *EVAPOTRANSPIRATION , *WATER quality - Abstract
A changing climate is anticipated to alter hydroclimatological and hydroecological processes across the UK and around the world. This paper builds on a series of reports commissioned in 2012 (Water Climate Change Impacts Report Card [WCCRC], 2012) and published in a special issue of Progress in Physical Geography in 2015 that interpreted and synthesised the relevant, peer-reviewed scientific literature of climate change impacts on the UK's water environment. It aims to provide reliable, clear information about the potential impacts of climate change on hydrology and the water environment. We review new evidence since 2012 for historical and potential future changes in precipitation and evapotranspiration, river flows and groundwater levels, river and groundwater temperature/quality and, finally, aquatic ecosystems. Some new evidence exists for change in most of these hydrological components, typically in support of the spatial and temporal trends reported in WCCRC 2012. However, it remains the case that more research has been conducted on rainfall and river flows than evapotranspiration, groundwater levels, river and groundwater temperature, water quality or freshwater ecosystems. Consequently, there remains a clear disparity of robust evidence for historical and potential future change between the top and bottom of the hydroclimatological-hydroecological process chain. As was the case in WCCRC 2012, this remains a significant barrier to informed climate change adaptation in these components of the water environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Institutional complementarities and technological transformation: IVET responsiveness to Industry 4.0 – meeting emerging skill needs in the European steel industry.
- Author
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Antonazzo, Luca, Stroud, Dean, and Weinel, Martin
- Subjects
INDUSTRY 4.0 ,STEEL industry ,EMPLOYMENT changes ,DIGITAL technology - Abstract
Digital technology is gradually changing the organisation of production and work. In this article, the authors explore the implications of such developments for workers through the lens of skill, and the skill needs developing out of the shift towards Industry 4.0 technologies now being employed within the European steel industry. Specifically, the article examines the preparedness of initial vocational training systems to support adaptation to Industry 4.0 and the changes in work and employment that will follow. The article addresses such developments from the point of view of institutional theory, analysing how different institutional architectures influence responses to change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Adaptive communication and perceptions in long-distance dating: Evidence from self-reported and behavioral data.
- Author
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Jiang, Li Crystal
- Subjects
CONFIDENCE intervals ,SELF-evaluation ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,COMMUNICATION ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,HYPOTHESIS ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,DATING (Social customs) ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
Romantic partners in long-distance relationships tend to adapt their communication and their perceptions of the relationship to suit their relational goals. Guided by this premise, the aim of this study was to provide a more nuanced understanding of how communication and perceptions are adapted. For this purpose, self-reports and behavioral data pertaining to 61 heterosexual dating couples were gathered, who all kept a diary for a week, while communicating via a texting platform. By comparing the daily communication and perceptions of the relationship of couples in long-distance relationships to those of couples in geographically close relationships, the study offered solid evidence of behavioral adaption, as the former self-reported greater self-disclosure and greater self-responsiveness to their partners. These findings were supported by human coding and linguistic analysis results. Moreover, while relative to geographically close partners, long-distance partners demonstrated larger differences between partner perceptions and the partner's self-report for both self-disclosure and responsiveness. The effect of long-distance status on perceived differences was mediated by relationship uncertainty and one's own adaptive behaviors. The findings suggest that long-distance relationships are maintained through behavioral and perceptual adaptations, which are also meaningful for maintaining geographically close relationships. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Sedimentary legacy and the disturbing recurrence of the human in long-term ecological research.
- Author
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Hirsch, Shana Lee, Ribes, David, and Inman, Sarah
- Subjects
HUMAN beings - Abstract
Even as new elements of a research infrastructure are added, older parts continue to exert persistent and consequential influence. We introduce the concept of sedimentary legacy to describe the relationship between infrastructure and research objects. Contrary to common accounts of legacy infrastructure that underscore lock-in, static, or constraining outcomes, sedimentary legacy emphasizes how researchers adapt infrastructure to support the investigation of new research objects, even while operating under constraining legacies. To illustrate the implications of sedimentary legacy, we track shifting objects of investigation across the history of the Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) Network, focusing especially on recurrent ecological investigations of 'human disturbance' as researchers shift to study socioecological objects. We examine the relationship between scientific objects and the resources collected and preserved to render such objects tractable to scientific investigations, and show how the resources of a long-term research infrastructure support the assembly of certain objects of investigation, even while foreclosing others. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Knowledge integration: a step forward? Continuities and changes in Arequipa’s water governance system.
- Author
-
Filippi, María Evangelina, Hordijk, Michaela, Alegría, Julio, and Rojas, José Denis
- Subjects
WATER supply management ,DECISION making ,WATER distribution ,STAKEHOLDERS ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
The new Peruvian Water Law (2009) inaugurated a transition phase in the country’s water governance model, in theory changing the power relations among the actors involved in the decision-making process. Formerly excluded actors were invited to participate and bring their particular views into multi-stakeholder spaces. While this diversity of actors, informed by different types of knowledge, has been highlighted as an attribute of more adaptive systems, it does not necessarily lead to a real change in the constellation of power. The case of Arequipa illustrates this shift towards a new water governance system, with the creation of a river basin council based on a prior (and exceptional) example of informal multi-stakeholder water management. Yet the growing participation of a large mining company in financing water-related infrastructure, and its alliances with other actors, might challenge the potential of the new participatory body to represent equally the interests and views of all its members, and therefore to question the existing norms to bring about transformative change.(1) [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. The Tacit Dimension of Touch: Tactile Recognition, Tangibility and Self-touch in Kurt Goldstein's Studies on Agnosia.
- Author
-
Ladewig, Rebekka
- Subjects
HUMAN body ,MUSCULAR sense ,NEUROLOGISTS ,CONCRETE - Abstract
In his experimental studies on tactile recognition, the German neurologist Kurt Goldstein observes a peculiar 'twitching movement' of the body in neurologically impaired patients suffering from mind-blindness. Drawing on Goldstein's interpretation of these bodily movements as kinaesthetic reactions, the present article advances a symmetrical conception of tactility that relocates the bipolarity of the sense of touch within the human body. In line with this symmetrical approach, the kinaesthetic reactions will be construed as tactile self-activation or self-touch of the body and conceptualized, following Michael Polanyi's epistemological notion, as the 'tacit dimension of touch'. Combining neuropathological aspects with a media theoretical and epistemological trajectory, this article aims at re-evaluating the centrality of the registers of the sense of touch as the fundamental ground for grasping the world in its concrete encounters as well as in its symbolic abstractions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Adaptation by intelligent adversaries to defensive measures: framing adaptation options and demonstrating assessment of attacker preferences using proxy intelligence data.
- Author
-
Jackson, Brian A, Frelinger, David R, Kavanagh, Jennifer, and Wallace, Brett A
- Abstract
Addressing adaptation by intelligent adversaries and its implications for risk modeling and security planning requires understanding the ways attackers can respond to new defensive measures. Adversaries can make various types of tactical or target substitutions, seek to hide from defenses, avoid them without changing targets or locations, attack them directly, simply absorb and tolerate their effects, or make other organizational changes to compensate for them. Each of these options has distinct risk effects created directly or due to opportunity costs. Operationalizing this type of analysis requires linking the theoretical options adversaries have to what is known about their behavior. We illustrate that process by using a set of data sources to demonstrate how attacker preferences can be assessed. We use open-source historical data on past responses by al-Qa'ida and associated groups as a way to characterize the groups' "expressed adaptation preferences." As a prospective data set, we use a convenience sample of material from jihadist internet posting boards and a small selection of publicly released seized documents using quantitative coding for attacker preferences or decision drivers. The results of both sets of analyses demonstrate complementary ways for exploring preferences that have advantages for taking adversary adaptation into account in risk analysis and security planning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Temperatures, food riots, and adaptation: A long-term historical analysis of England.
- Author
-
De Juan, Alexander and Wegenast, Tim
- Subjects
TEMPERATURE ,FOOD riots ,HISTORICAL analysis ,SOCIAL unrest ,SOCIAL conflict - Abstract
A large body of research indicates that environmental conditions can influence the risk of social unrest. However, we know little about how these effects may change in the long run. Are they likely to remain constant or do they change over time – for example as a consequence of human adaptation? To investigate this question, we rely on a disaggregated analysis of England over a period of more than 300 years. Combining data on geo-referenced food riots with reconstructed climate data, we first assess the impact of annual temperatures on social unrest over the period 1500–1817. We then use our long-term time-series dataset to assess the temporal heterogeneity of year-to-year associations between temperatures and social conflict. Our models show a substantive negative correlation between temperatures and food riots in the aggregate. This association, however, seems to be highly inconsistent over time and largely confined to the 18th century. In addition, we find evidence of decadal processes of adaptation: past exposure to adverse weather conditions dampens the effect of current exposure. Taken together, these findings underline the importance of considering temporal heterogeneities when assessing the climate–conflict nexus and caution against any simple extrapolations of observable present-day effects of environmental conditions into the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Local Government Financing of Climate Change in Ghana: Politics of Aid and Central Government Dependency Syndrome.
- Author
-
Musah-Surugu, Issah Justice, Ahenkan, Albert, and Bawole, Justice Nyigmah
- Subjects
CLIMATE change mitigation ,FINANCING of environmental protection ,LOCAL government ,PUBLIC spending ,GOVERNMENT accountability - Abstract
Uncertainties about the amount of resources needed to combat climate change, dwindling local resources, limited local autonomy and limited expertise constrain local governments (LGs) in their response to the effects of climate change. As a result, financing climate change remains a major nightmare for LG actors across diverse nested territorial containers. It certainly requires the embracing of a multifaceted approach – the use of system thinking where local governments' resource husbandry is optimised to support external aid and central government transfer. A multifaceted approach brings onboard blended resources, diverse stakeholders, diverse resource mobilisation skills and schemes, and accountability measures. Also, given projected increases in future climate-induced public expenditure, albeit with uncertainties, reliance on a single resource mobilisation approach will be a recipe for inefficiency. This article argues that developmental aid and central government's transfer remains inadequate to meet the increasing demand for adaptation cost at the local level in Ghana. In the face of the unequivocal impact of climate change risk, we contend that local resource husbandry must be optimised through different innovations to complement other major sources of financing. Our contention resonates with the school of thought that argues local level resources are more resilient to politicisation, are stable, and are predictable compared to international aid and central government transfer. Through qualitative in-depth interviews, empirical data has been drawn from local governments in Ghana to justify our claims. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Short-term and long-term adaptation algorithm for low-pressure exhaust gas recirculation estimation in spark-ignition engines.
- Author
-
Siokos, Konstantinos, Koli, Rohit, and Prucka, Robert
- Abstract
Low-pressure exhaust gas recirculation systems are capable of increasing fuel efficiency of spark-ignition engines; however, they introduce control challenges. The low available pressure differential that drives exhaust gas recirculation flow, along with the significant pressure pulsations in the exhaust environment of a turbocharged engine hamper the accuracy of feed-forward estimation models. For that reason, feedback measurements are required in an effort to increase prediction accuracy. Additionally, the accumulation of deposits in the exhaust gas recirculation system and the aging of the valve, change the flow characteristics over time. Under these considerations, an adaptation algorithm is developed which handles both short-term (operating-point-dependent errors) and long-term (system aging) corrections for exhaust gas recirculation flow estimation. The algorithm is based on an extended Kalman filter for joint state and parameter estimation and uses the output of an intake oxygen sensor to adjust the feed-forward prediction by creating an online adaptation map. Two different exhaust gas recirculation estimation models are developed and coupled with the adaptation algorithm. The performance of the algorithm for both estimation models is evaluated in real-time through transient experiments with a turbocharged spark-ignition engine. It is demonstrated that this methodology is capable of creating an adaptation map which captures system aging, while also reduces the estimation bias by more than four times resulting in a prediction error of less than 1%. Finally, this approach proves to be a valuable tool that can significantly reduce offline calibration efforts for such models. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Understanding the role of acculturative stress on refugee youth mental health: A systematic review and ecological approach to assessment and intervention.
- Author
-
d'Abreu, Ana, Castro-Olivo, Sara, and Ura, Sarah K.
- Subjects
ACCULTURATION ,COMMUNAL living ,ECOLOGICAL research ,MENTAL health ,PSYCHOLOGY of refugees ,RISK assessment ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,CHILDREN ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
In this article, we conduct a systematic review of the extant literature on the risk and protective factors that impact the healthy resettlement of refugee children around the world. We identify acculturative stress as a main risk factor to consider for assessment and intervention given that is often overlooked in the literature for refugee children, but has been found to strongly impact their socio-emotional development. In addition, we discuss ecologically framed/culturally responsive interventions and assessment practices that could aid in the successful resettlement of refugee children. We also discuss the limitations of the extant research on refugee children and make recommendations for future research directions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. A multi-modal adaptive tuned mass damper based on shape memory alloys.
- Author
-
Berardengo, Marta, Della Porta, Giovanni E. P., Manzoni, Stefano, and Vanali, Marcello
- Subjects
SHAPE memory alloys ,TUNED mass dampers ,VIBRATION (Mechanics) ,EIGENFREQUENCIES ,AXIAL loads - Abstract
This article deals with the design of an innovative adaptive multi-modal tuned mass damper able to change its eigenfrequencies to recover shifts of the natural frequencies of the primary system which needs to be damped. This is accomplished using systems of shape memory alloy wires connected to a number of masses equal to the number of modes to be damped. This article presents the analytical model used to describe the behaviour of the adaptive tuned mass damper, showing which parameters can affect the performances of the device. The layout proposed for the tuned mass damper proves to be able to act on a wide frequency range and to work adaptively on at least two eigenfrequencies at the same time with a given level of independence. The last goal is accomplished, thanks to the special features of the shape memory alloys, by heating (or cooling) each wire of the device independently and allowing the exploitation of two different effects: the change of the axial load in the wires and the change of the geometry of the device. The reliability of both the design approach and the model of the new device is proved by means of an experimental campaign performed considering a random disturbance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Adaptation in a dialogical perspective—From acculturation to proculturation.
- Author
-
Gamsakhurdia, Vladimer
- Subjects
ACCULTURATION ,SOCIAL adjustment ,COGNITIVE ability ,COLLECTIVE representation ,HUMAN Development Index ,PHYSIOLOGICAL adaptation - Abstract
This article aims to provide a reconsideration of the adaptive processes unfolding while meeting novel cultural elements in a dialogical perspective. The mainstream acculturation studies are criticized for seeing sociocultural transformations in a mechanistic and essentialist way and the term of proculturation is proposed instead, to emphasize constructive and subjective nature of human adaptation to novelties. Proculturation develops when a person faces any kind of novelties. It is a continuous process. Each proculturative experience inevitably makes imprint on personality, as any meeting with new ideas is interpreted subjectively and becomes part of a cognitive and affective experience. Proculturation can be initiated even without leaving home as globalization and modern mass media spread cultural elements from culture to culture easily throughout the whole world. Cultures overlap and constitute worldwide web of meanings. I propose ways for the integration of dialogical self theory (DST) and social representation theory (SRT). The term of social representation should be integrated in DST by replacing the term of meta-position as they serve essentially the same meaning in their theories respectively. In this way, dialogical self (DS) obtains processual dimension mediating through the personal and societal processes. Human subjectivity is contemplated as the stem of a semiotically mediated system of persons, cultures, and societies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Global climate adaptation governance: Why is it not legally binding?
- Author
-
Hall, Nina and Persson, Åsa
- Subjects
CLIMATE change ,UNITED Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (1992) ,PUBLIC goods ,INTERNATIONAL cooperation ,LEGALIZATION - Abstract
In the last decade, the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change has moved from a strong focus on mitigation to increasingly address adaptation. Climate change is no longer simply about reducing emissions, but also about enabling countries to deal with its impacts. Yet, most studies of the climate regime have focused on the evolution of mitigation governance and overlooked the increasing number of adaptation-related decisions and initiatives. In this article, we identify the body of rules and commitments on adaptation and suggest that there are more attempts to govern adaptation than many mitigation-focused accounts of the international climate regime would suggest. We then ask: to what degree are adaptation rules and commitments legalized in the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change? We examine the degree of precision and obligation of relevant decisions through an extensive analysis of primary United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change documents, secondary literature on adaptation initiatives and institutions, interviews with climate change experts and negotiators, and participant observation at climate negotiations. Our analysis finds that adaptation governance is low in precision and obligation. We suggest that this is partly because adaptation is a contested global public good and because ‘package deals’ are made with mitigation commitments. This article makes a vital contribution to the global environmental politics literature given that adaptation governance is under-studied and poorly understood. It also contributes to the legalization literature by highlighting how contested global public goods may be governed globally, but with low obligation and precision. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Dealing with disturbances: Intervention and adaptation in Finnish neighbourhoods.
- Author
-
Kouvo, Antti and Haverinen, Risto
- Subjects
NEIGHBORHOODS & society ,SOCIAL dynamics ,ADAPTABILITY (Personality) ,SOCIAL interaction - Abstract
This article investigates neighbourhood social dynamics with the help of two attitude dimensions discovered in earlier qualitative research: the threshold of intervention and adaptation. The data come from a nationally representative Finnish Neighbourhood Survey (N = 760) conducted in 2012. Our results show that adaptation and intervention characterise neighbourhood interaction in our survey data set as well. The threshold of intervention is higher among the residents of detached houses and those without strong ties in the neighbourhood. Adaptation is associated with low income and living in a detached house. However, different types of neighbours created on the basis of adaptation and intervention provide a richer picture of the phenomenon and more powerful explanations. The suggestions for future research and theoretical implications of the results are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. The framing of two major flood episodes in the Irish print news media: Implications for societal adaptation to living with flood risk.
- Author
-
Devitt, Catherine and O'Neill, Eoin
- Subjects
FLOOD risk ,NEWSPAPERS ,ATTITUDE change (Psychology) ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,CONJOINT analysis - Abstract
Societal adaptation to flooding is a critical component of contemporary flood policy. Using content analysis, this article identifies how two major flooding episodes (2009 and 2014) are framed in the Irish broadsheet news media. The article considers the extent to which these frames reflect shifts in contemporary flood policy away from protection towards risk management, and the possible implications for adaptation to living with flood risk. Frames help us make sense of the social world, and within the media, framing is an essential tool for communication. Five frames were identified: flood resistance and structural defences, politicisation of flood risk, citizen as risk manager, citizen as victim and emerging trade-offs. These frames suggest that public debates on flood management do not fully reflect shifts in contemporary flood policy, with negative implications for the direction of societal adaptation. Greater discussion is required on the influence of the media on achieving policy objectives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Lives on hold: A qualitative study of young refugees’ resilience strategies.
- Author
-
Sleijpen, Marieke, Mooren, Trudy, Kleber, Rolf J., and Boeije, Hennie R.
- Subjects
AUTHORSHIP ,EXPERIMENTAL design ,GROUNDED theory ,INTERVIEWING ,LONGITUDINAL method ,RESEARCH methodology ,PARENTS ,REFUGEES ,PSYCHOLOGY of refugees ,PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience ,SOCIAL skills ,QUALITATIVE research ,HEALTH facility translating services ,DATA analysis ,EMPIRICAL research ,NARRATIVES ,THEMATIC analysis ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Although the literature on positive adjustment following traumatic events is growing, only a few studies have examined this phenomenon in young refugees. Using the social-ecological framework, the aim of this study was to identify factors and processes that according to young refugees promote their resilience. A total of 16 treatment-seeking refugees aged 13–21 years, living in the Netherlands, were interviewed. Data analysis revealed four resilience strategies: (1) acting autonomously, (2) performing at school, (3) perceiving support from peers and parents, and (4) participating in the new society. These strategies interacted with one another and demonstrated the interrelatedness between individuals and their social context. Having to wait long for a residence permit and being older appeared to negatively influence participants’ resilience strategies. These findings suggest that resilience refers to a dynamic process that is context and time specific. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Climate change, equity and the Sustainable Development Goals: an urban perspective.
- Author
-
Reckien, Diana, Creutzig, Felix, Fernandez, Blanca, Lwasa, Shuaib, Tovar-Restrepo, Marcela, Mcevoy, Darryn, and Satterthwaite, David
- Subjects
SUSTAINABLE development ,CLIMATE change ,CITY dwellers - Abstract
Climate change is acknowledged as the largest threat to our societies in the coming decades, potentially affecting large and diverse groups of urban residents in this century of urbanization. As urban areas house highly diverse people with differing vulnerabilities, intensifying climate change is likely to shift the focus of discussions from a general urban perspective to who in cities will be affected by climate change, and how. This brings the urban equity question to the forefront. Here we assess how climate change events may amplify urban inequity. We find that heatwaves, but also flooding, landslides, and even mitigation and adaptation measures, affect specific population groups more than others. As underlying sensitivity factors we consistently identify socioeconomic status and gender. We synthesize the findings with regard to equity types – meaning outcome-based, process-oriented and context-related equity – and suggest solutions for avoiding increased equity and justice concerns as a result of climate change impacts, adaptation and mitigation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Flooding in the suburbs of Dakar: impacts on the assets and adaptation strategies of households or communities.
- Author
-
CISSÉ, OUMAR and SÈYE, MOUSTAPHA
- Subjects
FLOODS ,SUBURBS ,DRAINAGE design & construction ,HYDRAULIC structure design & construction ,STORM water retention basins ,LAND settlement - Abstract
Since 2005, Senegal has experienced severe and recurrent flooding. In Pikine, the most populous suburb of Dakar, the 2009 floods affected a third of the population. The government mobilized major investment for drainage and water retention infrastructure, as well as for development of resettlement sites for affected households. However, little is known about the responses, expectations and solutions of those affected. To address this gap we examine the experiences of people living in the commune of Yeumbeul Nord in the city of Pikine around the flood events of 2005, 2009 and 2012. In response to flood hazard and its impact, local residents developed a set of actions to preserve their housing, workplace, goods, family health and security, and children's schooling. Household mobilization was focused on flood water management and physical adaptations, including raising septic tanks and toilets. Affected households preferred the strategy of housing upgrading and neighbourhood improvement over the option of resettlement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Women’s adaptation to STEM domains promotes resilience and a lesser reliance on heuristic thinking.
- Author
-
Di Bella, Laura and Crisp, Richard J.
- Subjects
GENDER stereotypes ,ACHIEVEMENT motivation in women ,HEURISTIC ,STEREOTYPES ,ADAPTABILITY (Personality) ,JUDGMENT (Psychology) ,SEX discrimination - Abstract
Experiences that compel people to challenge social stereotypes can promote enhanced cognitive flexibility on a range of judgmental domains. Women in STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math) fields are chronically exposed to such experiences and may therefore also demonstrate these benefits. Two studies examined the differential effects of counterstereotypical experiences on women from STEM and non-STEM fields. Results showed that imagining or recollecting these experiences led women from STEM fields to exhibit a lesser reliance on heuristic thinking compared to women from non-STEM fields, and this difference was mediated by self-perceived resilience to the negative impact of gender stereotyping. Implications for psychologists’ and educators’ understanding of the relationship between counterstereotypical experiences and heuristic thinking are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Institutional barriers to climate change adaptation in decentralised governance structures: Transport planning in England.
- Author
-
Walker, Benjamin J. A., Adger, W. Neil, and Russel, Duncan
- Subjects
GOVERNMENT policy on climate change ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,CLIMATE change laws ,TRANSPORTATION & the environment ,TRANSPORTATION policy - Abstract
Climate change poses governance challenges at diverse scales and across the dimensions of risk and responsibility. Local governments are central to the delivery of action on both decarbonisation and adapting to the risks of climate change. Yet there are likely to be significant differences across local governments in terms of their capacity to act on climate change. This research documents and explains differences in the capacity to act within response spaces to risks to transport infrastructure and systems. We examine 80 Transport Plans across local governments in England, specifically their efforts to incorporate climate change adaptation. Data are generated from content analysis of the 80 documents and key informant interviews in a sample of 15% of authorities. The results show significant disparities across authorities. We explain differential outcomes as dependent on internal coordination, local prioritisation processes and political opposition. The results highlight that there are significant governance barriers associated with differential response capacity in the face of climate change risks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Climate change, water and gender: Impact and adaptation in North-Eastern Hills of India.
- Author
-
Singh, Nandita and Singh, Om Prakash
- Subjects
ACTION research ,ADAPTABILITY (Personality) ,CLIMATOLOGY ,FIELDWORK (Educational method) ,INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH methodology ,RURAL conditions ,SEX distribution ,WATER supply ,ETHNOLOGY research - Abstract
Water resources in India are projected to face severe climate-induced stress. In the North-Eastern Hill region, where lifestyles are closely connected to nature, this holds great implications for human development. While scientific knowledge regarding climate change and water is growing at global and regional scales, an equally diverse body of knowledge on the human dimensions of the same at local levels is weak. This article attempts to bridge this knowledge gap by presenting micro-level evidence on the gendered impact of increasing water stress and the innovative gendered local adaptive strategies in this region. It urges for the need to re-think on adaptation planning, basing it on local templates for greater sustainability. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Climate change adaptation in low-resource countries: Insights gained from an eco-social work and feminist gerontological lens.
- Author
-
Kwan, Crystal and Walsh, Christine A
- Subjects
ADAPTABILITY (Personality) ,AGRICULTURAL laborers ,AGRICULTURE ,CLIMATOLOGY ,FEMINISM ,GERIATRICS ,SEX distribution ,SOCIAL case work - Abstract
Climate change research requires integrative and collaborative research from multiple disciplines because of its complexity and sizeable consequences. Eco-social work has an important role to play. Relatively new, scholarship on eco-social work is growing and identifying ways in which the discipline’s unique values, theories, perspectives and practices can contribute to this body of research. The aim of this article is twofold: (a) to contribute to this emerging scholarship by identifying climate change adaptation as an area of research for international social work and (b) to examine the utility of applying an integrated theoretical lens of eco-social work and feminist gerontology within this area. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Reply to Critics.
- Author
-
Brunkhorst, Hauke
- Subjects
SOCIAL evolution ,COEVOLUTION ,STATE formation ,RELIGION & law ,PROGRESS ,SOCIAL conflict - Abstract
In responding to the comments, I will begin with the problem of Eurocentrism, the notion of progress and the Dialectic of Enlightenment. Then I will try to address the methodological queries concerning theory construction. Thereafter, I will make some remarks on the role of religion for social evolution and the formation of the Kantian mindset. Finally, I will discuss the problem of cosmopolitan state formation, co-evolution and societal differentiation. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Do they adapt or react? A comparison of the adaptation model and the stress reaction model among South African unemployed.
- Author
-
Griep, Yannick, Baillien, Elfi, Vleugels, Wouter, Rothmann, Sebastiaan, and De Witte, Hans
- Subjects
ADAPTABILITY (Personality) ,AFFECTIVE education ,EXPERIENCE ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress research ,SOUTH African economy ,UNEMPLOYED people ,DURATION of unemployment ,TWENTY-first century ,ECONOMICS ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
This study investigates affective experience as a function of unemployment duration in South Africa. The study contrasts two models. The stress reaction model proposes a linear decrease of affective experience as unemployment prolongs. The adaptation model assumes a curvilinear pattern between affective experience and unemployment duration. Analysis of variance (ANOVA) with contrast revealed no differences in affective experience between short-term (N = 101), long-term (N = 152) and very long-term (N = 119) unemployed. The findings do not favour either of the models, yet indicate that unemployment is a severe stressor regardless of its duration. These results underline the need for structural changes (e.g. delivering unemployment benefits, stimulating job creation) in order to overcome the negative affective experiences of the South African unemployed. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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