4,103 results on '"periphery"'
Search Results
2. Misplaced archives, statehood and provenance out of place: the case of two personal records from the peripheries.
- Author
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Grondona, Ana, Trovero, Juan Ignacio, and Viedma, Celeste
- Subjects
WORK experience (Employment) ,MATHEMATICIANS ,NATION-state ,HEGEMONY ,ARCHIVES - Abstract
This article aims to reconsider some key aspects of the classical concept of "provenance". To do this, we draw on our experience working with two personal archives from the South: one from Argentine physicist and mathematician Carlos Mallmann, and the other from Italian-Argentinian sociologist Gino Germani. Unlike State archives in which preserving, organizing, identifying, and standardizing public documents are a regulated obligation, the safekeeping of documents in the case of personal records is a contingency. They must overcome multiple obstacles: interventions by their custodians, difficulties in their serialization and standardization, etc. However, we will argue that some sections of personal records, especially when their creators have played institutional roles, can function as institutional archives and even as public archives. In the case of the peripheries, this feature becomes an important patrimonial aspect, given the constitutive fragility of public archives. This fragility relates to problematic issues of statehood, such as hegemony, domination, and sovereignty. We argue that these archives are constitutively incomplete, precarious, contaminated, and hybrid, leading us to problematize some aspects of the archival ratio. The latter (surreptitiously) permeates and naturalizes the experience of the North Atlantic nation-state, universalizing a singular (and historical) form of producing hegemony as a totality. Finally, we propose some reflections and raise some questions regarding how institutionality/statehood is modulated in the archives from the peripheries, and how some aspects of the classical North Atlantic notion of "provenance" appears here "out of place". [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Retinal "sweet spot" for myopia treatment.
- Author
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Swiatczak, Barbara, Scholl, Hendrik P. N., and Schaeffel, Frank
- Subjects
- *
RETINA , *MONOCULARS , *MYOPIA , *COMPUTER software , *EYE tracking - Abstract
We studied which retinal area controls short-term axial eye shortening when human subjects were exposed to + 3.0D monocular defocus. A custom-built infrared eye tracker recorded the point of fixation while subjects watched a movie at a 2 m distance. The eye tracker software accessed each individual movie frame in real-time and covered the points of fixation in the movie with a uniform grey patch. Four patches were programmed: (1) foveal patch (0–3 degrees), (2) annular patch (3–9 deg), (3) foveal patch (0–3 deg) combined with an annular patch (6–9 deg), and (4) full-field patch where only 6–10 deg were exposed to the defocus. Axial eye shortening was elicited similarly with full-field positive defocus and with the foveal patch, indicating that the fovea made only a minor contribution (-11 ± 12 μm vs. -14 ± 17 μm, respectively, n.s.). In contrast, patching a 3–9 degrees annular area or fovea together with an annular area of 6–9 degrees, completely suppressed the effect when compared with full-field defocus (+ 3 ± 1 μm or -2 ± 13 μm vs. -11 ± 12 μm, respectively, p < 0.001). Finally, we found that the near-peripheral retina (6–10 degrees) is a "sweet spot" for positive defocus detection and alone can regulate eye growth control mechanism, and perhaps long-term refractive development (-9 ± 8 μm vs. full-field: -11 ± 12 μm, n.s.). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Knowledge coproduction at the periphery of the urban and academia: Insights from Acapulco's metropolitan area.
- Author
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Becerril, Hector
- Subjects
CITIES & towns ,METROPOLITAN areas ,DEVELOPING countries ,URBAN planning ,ACTOR-network theory - Abstract
In this paper I focus on the Coyuca Resilient to Climate project which was based on a coproduction process initiated by academics in Acapulco's Metropolitan Area. Using Actor-Network Theory (ANT), I trace project's implementation, considering the implications and complications of the process for the research team, and the role of coproduction for planning just cities. I argue that it is vital to consider the specific situation with regards to the urban and knowledge production systems from which researchers operate, connecting coproduction to broader political and academic contexts. I also argue that it is crucial to consider the multi-layered structure of power, specifically regarding academics situated at the periphery of the urban and academia, as it is from this double structure ('potestas' and 'potentia'), that they engage in coproduction and planning just cities. Lastly, I argue that knowledge coproduction relates to long-term processes that require nurturing capacities and alliances for building not only just cities and but also a more just knowledge system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Loss and autonomy: Making sense of rural life at the inner periphery.
- Author
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Pospěch, Pavel, Klíma, Ondřej, and Hubatková, Barbora
- Subjects
- *
CULTURE , *COUNTRY life , *INDIVIDUAL development , *CITIES & towns , *DISCOURSE - Abstract
We have studied how people make sense of their lives in peripheral rural regions. While there are disadvantages in terms of infrastructure, transportation and so forth, we have focused on the ways that people understand their specific position and how they feel about it. Using the tools of the Strong Programme in cultural sociology, we have identified two key discourses: the discourse of loss and the discourse of autonomy. Through the former, residents describe the decline of traditions, of rural community and, in particular, the vanishing ideal of rural childhood. Through the latter, they re‐frame these societal developments as problems of individuals. The dichotomy between individual autonomy and individual dependence is employed as a key cultural framework for explaining and understanding life in a peripheral rural region. The research is based on interviews with residents of small rural municipalities located at the inner periphery of the Czech Republic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. The 'structural pessimism' of the EU periphery: Measures to establish a new revitalisation paradigm.
- Author
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Jurić, Tado
- Subjects
PESSIMISM ,POLLUTION ,CLIMATE change ,YOUNG adults ,DISTANCE education - Abstract
Throughout the EU's history, developed regions have consistently drawn young people, with the phenomenon of 'escaping from the province' being a significant driver of youth migration. As peripheral regions become increasingly depopulated, the 'ring of desert' effect that appears in these areas also starts to impact developed regions (because depopulated areas are more vulnerable to illegal migration, the loss of social capital in the periphery results in the reduced competitiveness of the entire EU, social and political tensions increase, etc.). Instead of increasing solidarity, the opposite is happening. For example, Croatia has subsidised Germany by investing €18 billion in the education of its emigrated citizens. In the future, however, peripheral areas might become more attractive places to live due to an increase in threats such as pandemics, climate change, pollution and terrorism. Remote work could lead to a resurgence in the population of the EU's peripheries, provided there is access to broadband Internet, public transportation, mobile healthcare services and distance education in rural areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Can the periphery survive innovation-led growth? Insights from Israel
- Author
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Raphael Bar-El, Sharon Hadad, Liran Maymoni, Ran Ben-Malka, and Reut Megidish
- Subjects
Innovation ,high-tech ,periphery ,region ,labour supply ,labour demand ,O3 ,Regional economics. Space in economics ,HT388 ,Regional planning ,HT390-395 - Abstract
This article explores the question of the integration ability of peripheral regions into innovation-led growth. While previous research has suggested that peripheral regions may be at a disadvantage, recent studies have argued that there may be potential benefits to their integration into the innovation process. This article offers a different approach for the examination of this controversy. First, it uses knowledge-based occupations as a measure of innovation activity (instead of types of activities such as startups, high-tech activities or services). Second, it considers innovation advance under two perspectives: demand (as measured by types of occupations installed in a region) and supply (as measured by types of occupations of the resident labour force). We use regression analysis to compare trends in the last two decades in Israel.Although findings indicate a process of adaptation of both periphery and centre to the innovation trend (in terms of increasing relative growth of high-level occupations), both in terms of supply and demand, steady gaps between the growth coefficients lead to a process of degradation of the periphery: lower increase of skills in the periphery and lower adaptation of demand to increasing skills. This results in a higher commuting rate (or migration) of skilled workers from the periphery, a substantial relative concentration of blue-collar occupations and an increasing supply of unskilled workers to the centre.The prevention or attenuation of such a process requires the consideration of policy measures regarding the prevailing ecosystem factors.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Retinal 'sweet spot' for myopia treatment
- Author
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Barbara Swiatczak, Hendrik P. N. Scholl, and Frank Schaeffel
- Subjects
Retina ,Defocus ,Axial length ,Fovea ,Periphery ,Emmetropization ,Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract We studied which retinal area controls short-term axial eye shortening when human subjects were exposed to + 3.0D monocular defocus. A custom-built infrared eye tracker recorded the point of fixation while subjects watched a movie at a 2 m distance. The eye tracker software accessed each individual movie frame in real-time and covered the points of fixation in the movie with a uniform grey patch. Four patches were programmed: (1) foveal patch (0–3 degrees), (2) annular patch (3–9 deg), (3) foveal patch (0–3 deg) combined with an annular patch (6–9 deg), and (4) full-field patch where only 6–10 deg were exposed to the defocus. Axial eye shortening was elicited similarly with full-field positive defocus and with the foveal patch, indicating that the fovea made only a minor contribution (-11 ± 12 μm vs. -14 ± 17 μm, respectively, n.s.). In contrast, patching a 3–9 degrees annular area or fovea together with an annular area of 6–9 degrees, completely suppressed the effect when compared with full-field defocus (+ 3 ± 1 μm or -2 ± 13 μm vs. -11 ± 12 μm, respectively, p
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Medzi totožným a rôznorodým v súčasnom literárnovednom výskume
- Author
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Ivana Taranenková
- Subjects
slovak literary studies ,literary-historical model ,culture ,centre ,periphery ,cultural homogeneity ,cultural heterogeneity ,Literature (General) ,PN1-6790 - Abstract
The article offers a methodological reflection on the trends that have shaped literary historical research from the postmodern cultural turn in the late 20th century to the present. It maps and analyses postmodern tendencies that have challenged the model of literatures based on the principle of homogeneous and unified identity, emphasised hybridity and syncretism, and shifted attention from the centre of cultures to their peripheries. However, it becomes evident that similar strategies inherent in the previously rejected cultural models – such as the construction of a unified identity and the projection of a teleological, emancipatory trajectory – are also present here. The paper highlights contemporary initiatives that correct these approaches and conceptualise new relations between diversity and homogeneity and centre – periphery dichotomy. The article also applies these processes to the study of Slovak literature conceptualised as a “small” literature – an approach rooted in principles that the current cultural paradigm views with scepticism. Drawing on the methodological impulses of Yuri M. Lotman’s theory of culture, the paper points to the potential of a methodological starting point that accepts the processual nature of identity, as well as the dynamic character of the centre and periphery of cultures. Thus, the processes shaping both culture and the history of literature as its “institutionalized discourse” (Galin Tihanov) aim for a unified identity as an ideal, yet are fundamentally rooted in diversity and pluralistic movements.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. The contemporary Polish borders in a state of change.
- Author
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Więckowski, Marek
- Abstract
The paper develops a conceptual framework for interpreting the process of border changes in Poland since 1945. In this article, the author presents directions of change, and the functions, characterising Poland's borders. A synthesis of relevant literature on borders shows how the specific functions of borderlands can be categorised into at least four overarching types, including by reference to barriers, peripherality and isolation, line of differentiation, and axis of integration. This then gains verification through empirical analysis of processes actually taking place along the borders of Poland. It proves possible to identify and take account of periods of isolation, transformation and European integration. However, the analysis also takes account of the most recent phenomena characterising the last few years (2020–2024), during which the Polish borders have moved back in a "rebordering" direction. The Author proposes the new concept of dynamic (cyclical) change of border function types after using Polish borders as an example of empirical analysis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Transposition of Substantive Word Forms into Adverbs of Interval: Stages, Signs, Limit
- Author
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Victor V. Shigurov
- Subjects
russian language ,grammar ,transposition ,noun ,adverb ,scale of transitivity ,core ,periphery ,Language and Literature - Abstract
This study presents the experience of calculating the differential features of substantive word forms that explicate in speech different degrees of functional and functional-semantic convergence with the class of adverbs of interval. Using the example of the instrumental case form poroj (sometimes), the combinatorics and proportion of features of nuclear and peripheral nouns, as well as nuclear substantive adverbs, that explicate different stages of adverbialization in typical contexts, are demonstrated. The application of oppositional analysis in the study of different conditions for the use of the instrumental case form made it possible to identify the main stages of its adverbialization – the starting and final points of transposition, as well as the zone of peripheral nouns. The absence of intermediate (hybrid) structures and peripheral, functional proper adverbs in the transition zone between the nuclear noun and the nuclear adverb is substantiated. The dynamics of semantic and grammatical features of the substantive word form poroj (sometimes) are analyzed in different contexts in modern Russian language. The adverbial transposition of the word form under consideration is established to have a functional and semantic character. It is associated with the loss of semantic and grammatical features of a noun and the acquisition of categorical properties of adverbs, as well as with violation of the semantic identity of the original substantive lexeme and the formation of not only a grammatical, but also a lexical homonym, which is included in the subclass of adverbs of an interval exceeding a certain situational norm. The conclusion is relevant for the general theory of transitivity and syncretism in the field of semantics and grammar.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Attracting medical school graduates to residency programs in remotely located hospitals: the challenge lies beyond financial incentives
- Author
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Shalev Fried, Ofira Zloto, Avia Doron, Zeev Feldman, Alexey Belinsky, Gad Segal, Yael Frenkel-Nir, and Arnon Afek
- Subjects
Residency ,Recruitment ,Periphery ,Remote location ,Financial incentive ,Monetary grant ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Recruitment to residency programs in hospitals located in other than major hubs (“remotely located”) is a challenge in many countries. In 2011, the Israeli Ministry of Health launched a 10-year financial incentive to encourage physicians to enroll in residency programs in such hospitals. Nearly 1 billion New Israeli Shekels (260 million US$) were invested in that program which had only limited success. As a new physician association’s collective agreement is impending, we aimed to measure the effectiveness of selected incentives in attracting medical school graduates to residencies in remotely located hospitals. Methods This study included Israeli medical students in their final year of medical school. We used an online questionnaire with multiple-choice demographic questions and a 5-point Likert scale to gauge the effect of various incentives on their preference for residency location. Results Between July and November 2022, 522 students responded (405 studied in Israeli medical schools [out of 705 students] and 117 in foreign medical schools [out of 1936 students]). Forty-two percent had at least one clerkship in a remotely located hospital, and 24% had included at least one remotely located hospital among their top five choices for internship. Only 13% reported that they prefer a residency program in those institutions. The incentive selected by students as most persuasive was government assistance in acceptance to and financial support for a fellowship abroad, followed by a financial grant and fewer on-call hours. Only 7% of the students indicated that no incentive would influence them to choose a remotely located hospital for their residency training. Medical education in a remotely located university and the choice of at least one remotely located hospital among the top five choices for internship were significantly associated with positive incentive receptivity, whereas male sex and older age were associated with negative receptivity. Conclusion This study on the attitudes of Israeli medical school graduates toward incentives aimed at attracting them to residencies in remotely located institutions revealed that career development opportunities and assistance in obtaining fellowships might influence their choice.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Investigating the crowding effect on letters and symbols in deaf adults
- Author
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Veena Kamble, Margot Buyle, and Virginie Crollen
- Subjects
Deaf ,Visual crowding ,Letter identification ,Reading ,Periphery ,Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Reading requires the transformation of a complex array of visual features into sounds and meaning. For deaf signers who experience changes in visual attention and have little or no access to the sounds of the language they read, understanding the visual constraints underlying reading is crucial. This study aims to explore a fundamental aspect of visual perception intertwined with reading: the crowding effect. This effect manifests as the struggle to distinguish a target letter when surrounded by flanker letters. Through a two-alternative forced choice task, we assessed the recognition of letters and symbols presented in isolation or flanked by two or four characters, positioned either to the left or right of fixation. Our findings reveal that while deaf individuals exhibit higher accuracy in processing letters compared to symbols, their performance falls short of that of their hearing counterparts. Interestingly, despite their proficiency with letters, deaf individuals didn’t demonstrate quicker letter identification, particularly in the most challenging scenario where letters were flanked by four characters. These outcomes imply the development of a specialized letter processing system among deaf individuals, albeit one that may subtly diverge from that of their hearing counterparts.
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
14. Peripheries and their internal structure: an empirical analysis of left- and right-peripheral sequences across written English discourse.
- Author
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Klumm, Matthias
- Subjects
- *
DISCOURSE analysis , *WRITTEN communication , *EYEWITNESS accounts , *DISCOURSE , *CORPORA - Abstract
This article investigates the distribution, linear ordering and functions of sequences of linguistic elements occurring at the left and right peripheries of discourse units across three genres of written English discourse. Based on a corpus of news reports, commentaries and personal narratives, the paper aims to account for discourse-genre-specific preferences in the use of peripheral two-part sequences such as
and so ,but I think ornow though . The data show considerable variation across genres in terms of (i) which formal types of sequences occur at the peripheries, (ii) how peripheral elements are sequentially ordered, and (iii) which discourse-pragmatic functions left- and right-peripheral sequences fulfil in written English discourse. The observed variation in the use of peripheral sequences across news reports, commentaries and personal narratives can be explained by discourse-related factors as well as the specific communicative purposes of each genre. The present article argues for a prototype-anchored conceptualization of the internal structure of discourse units: On the one hand, the left and right peripheries are conceptualized as containing a wide range of – more and less prototypical – linguistic elements (i.e. extra-clausal constituents and adjuncts); on the other hand, the boundary betweencore andperiphery is conceptualized as fuzzy and gradient. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Latin American Neostructuralism and Its Differentiation from Latin American Structuralism.
- Author
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Ormaechea, Emilia
- Subjects
- *
STRUCTURALISM , *NEOLIBERALISM , *CAPITALISM , *CLASSIFICATION - Abstract
Latin American neostructuralism emerged within the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean by 1990. As such, it was aimed at reviewing original Latin American structuralism and updating those contributions to the new phase of global capitalism. Notwithstanding this institutional point of view, this article argues that neostructuralism did not represent an update to Latin American structuralism but rather a differentiation from its critical and original contributions, which relies mainly on the displacement of the center-periphery concept. In the framework of the neoliberal offensive, this change toward capitalism was the result of the greater influence of theories and approaches generated in the center to problematize Latin America's development, as well as of the requirement to depoliticize the discussion of development. JEL Classification : B2, B5, O1 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Medzi totožným a rôznorodým v súčasnom literárnovednom výskume.
- Author
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Taranenková, Ivana
- Subjects
TWENTIETH century ,HOMOGENEITY ,CULTURAL centers ,SKEPTICISM ,CULTURE - Abstract
Copyright of Slovenská Literatúra: Revue Pre Literárnu Vedu is the property of Institute of Slovak Literature and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Investigating the nexus of urban expansion, wetlands, and livelihoods from 1991 to 2021: evidence from Hawassa, Ethiopia.
- Author
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Girma, Firehiywet, Tesema, Tesfahun, Bergene, Mihretu, and Sinore, Tamrat
- Subjects
- *
URBAN growth , *ANIMAL droppings , *OVERGRAZING , *AGRICULTURE , *LAND cover - Abstract
Urban expansion in Ethiopia, particularly informal construction, has led to complex and dynamic changes in livelihoods and wetlands. This study examined the effects of urban expansion on the Cheleleka Wetland and the livelihood of the peripheral community in Hawassa. A mixed research design was used to quantitatively analyze Landsat imagery (1991, 2001, 2011, 2021) and socioeconomic data. Key informant interviews and focus group discussion data were narrated qualitatively. The built-up area substantially increased from 718.11 ha in 1991 to 4820.71 ha in 2021. However, agricultural and wetland areas decreased from 8807.58 ha and 8177.04 ha in 1991 to 6382.44 ha and 7030.26 ha in 2021, respectively. Water and forest areas fluctuated. Built-up areas had a significant advantage over other land use and cover classes, with agricultural, wetland, and forest areas being converted into built-up areas throughout the study period. As a result, the area of Lake Hawassa expanded. Currently, the Cheleleka Wetland has been negatively impaired by overgrazing, cutting of grass, animal dung dumps, eucalyptus plantations, agricultural expansion, and urban expansion. Urban expansion has exacerbated social and economic divisions, resulting in the concentration of poor-quality neighborhoods in the peripheral community. To protect the wetlands, alternative livelihoods and participatory land-use planning are crucial. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. A Post-Soviet Experiment.
- Author
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Matuszak, Joanna
- Subjects
- *
ART , *COINAGE , *METROPOLIS , *EXHIBITIONS , *ARTISTS - Abstract
AbstractThis article revisits the politics of naming and investigates the origins of the term ‘Moscow Actionism’. Why was the term introduced in curatorial literature published around 1995 in Western Europe? Why was it coined to present performances by Anatolii Osmolovskii, Aleksandr Brener and Oleg Kulik, if these artists had already made names for themselves in Russia? Touted by the Moscow press as ‘revolutionaries’, they were already invited to participate in exhibitions abroad. Their success came prior to the term ‘Moscow Actionism’.The author argues that the term was coined to counteract persistent Western stereotypes about Russia as wild, primitive and exotic. The coinage mimicked Western art history nomenclature in an attempt to secure a positive reception for Russian artists, yet it simultaneously succumbed to the hegemony of the Western art history lexicon. As the term entered scholarly literature, it prevailed and generated the erroneous view that Moscow Actionism stands for all Russian performance art in the 1990s. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Attracting medical school graduates to residency programs in remotely located hospitals: the challenge lies beyond financial incentives.
- Author
-
Fried, Shalev, Zloto, Ofira, Doron, Avia, Feldman, Zeev, Belinsky, Alexey, Segal, Gad, Frenkel-Nir, Yael, and Afek, Arnon
- Subjects
VOCATIONAL guidance ,CAREER development ,MEDICAL students ,INCENTIVE (Psychology) ,MEDICAL school graduates ,MONETARY incentives - Abstract
Background: Recruitment to residency programs in hospitals located in other than major hubs ("remotely located") is a challenge in many countries. In 2011, the Israeli Ministry of Health launched a 10-year financial incentive to encourage physicians to enroll in residency programs in such hospitals. Nearly 1 billion New Israeli Shekels (260 million US$) were invested in that program which had only limited success. As a new physician association's collective agreement is impending, we aimed to measure the effectiveness of selected incentives in attracting medical school graduates to residencies in remotely located hospitals. Methods: This study included Israeli medical students in their final year of medical school. We used an online questionnaire with multiple-choice demographic questions and a 5-point Likert scale to gauge the effect of various incentives on their preference for residency location. Results: Between July and November 2022, 522 students responded (405 studied in Israeli medical schools [out of 705 students] and 117 in foreign medical schools [out of 1936 students]). Forty-two percent had at least one clerkship in a remotely located hospital, and 24% had included at least one remotely located hospital among their top five choices for internship. Only 13% reported that they prefer a residency program in those institutions. The incentive selected by students as most persuasive was government assistance in acceptance to and financial support for a fellowship abroad, followed by a financial grant and fewer on-call hours. Only 7% of the students indicated that no incentive would influence them to choose a remotely located hospital for their residency training. Medical education in a remotely located university and the choice of at least one remotely located hospital among the top five choices for internship were significantly associated with positive incentive receptivity, whereas male sex and older age were associated with negative receptivity. Conclusion: This study on the attitudes of Israeli medical school graduates toward incentives aimed at attracting them to residencies in remotely located institutions revealed that career development opportunities and assistance in obtaining fellowships might influence their choice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The formation of external innovation linkages of the periphery within multiplex regional networks: a multilayer exponential random graph modelling approach.
- Author
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Li, Luqi
- Subjects
- *
RANDOM graphs , *MULTIPLEXING - Abstract
Innovation in peripheral areas relies more on external linkages to overcome peripherality than in core areas. We study how these linkages are formed, especially through the interaction with diverse networks like transport and investment networks that connect the periphery with external areas. Using data from peripheral Zhejiang, China, we construct a four-layer network with co-patenting and three explanatory layers: transport, investment, and university headquarters-branch linkages. We use multilayer exponential random graph modelling to examine factors driving the formation of the co-patent network, specifically cross-layer interactions between co-patenting and the other three networks. Results show a tendency for the periphery to be linked to the core through co-patenting. All the other three layers have a positive association with the co-patent network, and their intersections show a stronger correlation with the network. This is especially true for the university headquarter-branch network and its intersection with the investment network. The main contribution of this paper is expanding the analysis of peripheral innovation by considering broader intercity networks rather than solely focusing on innovation linkages. Our findings also have policy implications for overcoming innovation constraints in peripheral areas and reducing spatial disparities in Zhejiang and similar regions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Semantica periferiei în Sînt o babă comunistă și Voci la distanță.
- Author
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POPESCU, Stelian
- Subjects
- *
ROMANIAN literature , *FICTIONAL characters , *IDENTITY crises (Psychology) , *COMMUNISTS , *COMMUNISM - Abstract
Representations of the periphery in contemporary Romanian literature appear in various forms. The novels I’m an Old Communist Hag by Dan Lungu (2007) and Voices from Afar by Gabriela Adameșteanu (2022) are based on a less obvious representation of two types of peripheries. Containing the reflections of two female characters on the communist period in Romania and, in the latter case, also on the pandemic situation in recent years, the structure of the two novels is configured by relating the narrative essences to peripheral frames. In Dan Lungu’s writing, the periphery suggests the selfexclusion of the female character from the natural course of post-December society due to deeply rooted beliefs in the protagonist’s mentality. The peripheral space is significant not for examining the communist regime but for shaping a complex image of the transition to another world, hindered by nostalgia for security and, ultimately, by an identity crisis. In Gabriela Adameșteanu’s text, the periphery takes on different valences: it becomes a space that offers the protagonist the opportunity to distance herself from the daily life disrupted by the pandemic, to contemplate the present and, in the second part of the novel, the last decade of communism. On the other hand, the structure of the two novels is synonymous through the identification of another common element, complementary to the peripheries. Voices constitute an important coordinate of the narrative fabric in both cases, as the protagonists dialogue with other characters from various types of distances, spatial or mental. These distances between the voices of the characters finalize the outlining of the peripheries as spaces from the midst of which the structure of the novels is built. In other words, this paper aims to draw a parallel between the two novels, considering the relationship created between their peripheral spaces and the voices that not only dialogue but become a constitutive aspect of the mechanisms through which the authors provide images of the transition and evolution of post-December Romanian society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Constructing and Consuming the Periphery: The Naxalite imaginary in postcolonial Bengali and anglophone-diasporic novels.
- Author
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Purkayastha, Sharmila and Sengupta, Saswati
- Subjects
- *
ADIVASIS , *CORE & periphery (Economic theory) , *REALISM , *NAXALITE movement , *VIOLENCE - Abstract
In August 2021, Mahasweta Devi's iconic short story "Draupadi" (1978), which brings alive the long tradition of adivasi/tribal resistance against systemic oppression and its brutal reprisal, was deleted from the English Honours syllabus of Delhi University on the grounds of "hurt" sentiments. Why would a story of tribal resistance ruffle postcolonial sentiments? Triggered by this excision, our essay attends to the context of "Draupadi" – the Naxalite movement (1967–1975), the armed uprising that contested the feudal-bourgeois hegemony of the postcolonial Indian state – and examines the representation of the restless periphery in contemporary fiction, Bengali and English, in terms of political and attendant aesthetic negotiations. The Naxalite movement inspired a specific genre of literature in Bengali, Naxal Sahitya, whose growth was contemporaneous with the movement itself. It explored the possibility of a new modernity and subjectivity, tangling with the inherited forms of narrative in both poetry and prose. Globally, which signifies still a western platform, the Naxal made an appearance in Jhumpa Lahiri's The Lowland (2013) and Neel Mukherjee's The Lives of Others (2014). In both, the questions raised by movement, of land and of the tiller, are imaginatively resolved by the diasporic journey of select individuals to the United States of America. Our essay offers an intertextual reading of these two anglophone, global novels by Lahiri and Mukherjee with the Bengali, local narratives of Samaresh Majumdar's Kalbela/Dark Times (1983) and Mahasweta Devi's Operation? Bashai Tudu (1978/2003). We address the ways in which imaginative literature embeds a movement that challenged the hierarchies of a decolonized nation, the possibilities of the novel's – a form hegemonically associated with the individual rather than the collective – investment in the construction of the periphery, the hierarchy of the local and the global, and the territoriality of the marketable consumptions of stories. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Artisanal Public Transport In Niamey: A Service That Has Become Essential For The Vitality Of A City.
- Author
-
Ilyassou, Sanoussi, Dandonougbo, Iléri, and Motcho, Henri Kokou
- Subjects
SUBURBS ,PRODUCTIVITY suites (Computer software) ,CITIES & towns ,PUBLIC transit ,PASSENGER traffic - Abstract
Sub-Saharan cities are relatively young and are undergoing rapid demographic and spatial growth, one of the consequences of which is the impact on population mobility. After independence, most of these cities had public passenger transport companies. In the 1980s, we witnessed the "gradual disappearance of large public companies following various restructuring plans or even liquidation". This led to the proliferation of various forms of small-scale passenger transport, including motorcycle cabs in Porto-Novo in the 1980s, Woro-Woro cabs in Abidjan in 1994, and Talladjé-Talladjé in the 1970s. The aim of this article is to determine the share of home-made collective transport in the mobility of households living in the outlying districts of the city of Niamey. We opted for a cross-sectional method involving a series of observations and a household survey on the mobility conditions of the population living in Niamey's outlying districts. Data processing was carried out using SPSS and Office Suite software. At the end of this study, it emerged that the population living on the outskirts of the city of Niamey is mainly made up of civil servants and shopkeepers, and that 47.99% of these households are captive to artisanal means of transport. Cabs dominate this supply, accounting for 68.18%. The 52.01% of households equipped with a means of transport mainly use motorized two-wheelers (62.73%), followed by cars (34.55%). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
24. Peripheral Modernisms and Parody of the Bildungsroman: A Comparative Case Study on Italo Svevo and A. H. Tanpınar.
- Author
-
Dolcerocca, Özen Nergis
- Subjects
- *
MODERNISM (Literature) , *BILDUNGSROMANS , *PSYCHOANALYSIS , *NARRATIVES - Abstract
This article offers a comparative reading of Italo Svevo and Ahmet Hamdi Tanpınar's mock-development novels in light of the history of economic development in Italy and Turkey and their trajectories of integration into global capitalism. These authors from the semi-peripheries of Euromodernity employ strikingly similar modernist techniques in order to unsettle the bildungsroman and its humanist ideals. This article argues that the farcical use of psychoanalysis as a thematic attack on the unity of the subject, chronopathology in both form and content, and parody in style, situation, and plot represent peripheral narrative strategies developed as a response to being always already late vis-a-vis the hegemonic core culture. The classical bildungsroman is comically distorted and creatively adapted to the peripheral condition, becoming a key vehicle for reflecting on disintegrated subject positions, temporal shifts, untimely interruptions, and discordances. The form is simultaneously subverted and creatively adapted to the peripheral condition, reflecting the inevitable encounter with the hegemonic culture and the nation-state. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Are categories' cores more isomorphic than their peripheries?
- Author
-
Cai, Yingying and De Smet, Hendrik
- Subjects
ISOMORPHISM (Crystallography) ,SEMANTICS ,SPATIAL analysis (Statistics) ,STATISTICAL hypothesis testing - Abstract
Isomorphism holds that, ideally, a single meaning is expressed by a single form. However, despite long-standing support, the theoretical viability of the isomorphic principle has been called into question. There is widespread recognition that the coexistence of (near-) synonymous expressions--variation--is actually very common in language. In this study, we explore a possible path toward reconciling the theoretical notion of isomorphism with the observable fact of variation. To this end, we adopt an analogy to tool use inspired by Zipf (1949). Tools largely monopolize their core functional domains (e.g., for cutting, knives are overwhelmingly preferred over screwdrivers) but compete over more peripheral functions (for puncturing, knives and screwdrivers have more equal chances of selection). In the same way, we hypothesize forms can code a prototypically organized network of senses, whereby they largely monopolize the core but are more likely to come into competition with other forms in the periphery. To test this hypothesis, a case study is conducted on variation in the use of two prepositions: at and with. For each, a semantic core and periphery are established. Using a corpus consisting of parallel translations of the same source text, it is then tested whether translators are more likely to converge on the same preposition to express one of that preposition's core senses than to express one of its peripheral senses. This is the pattern one would expect if isomorphic pressure is stronger for semantic cores than for peripheries. The results are promising but inconclusive. They confirm that the sense most prone to competition is arguably the most peripheral but also reveal a surprisingly high level of competition for the spatial core use of at. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Humour and conflict in the Global South.
- Author
-
Hoefel, Diego, Paulo Capelotti, João, and Date, Rujuta
- Subjects
DEVELOPING countries ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,EUROCENTRISM ,DISCOURSE ,COLLECTIONS - Abstract
This special issue focusses on humour studies scholarship from and about the Global South. It addresses a critical gap of underrepresentation, as identified in a previous conference of the International Society for Humour Studies and explored in subsequent panels. The issue brings together diverse contributions that examine urgent and emerging questions in Africa, Asia, and South America, highlighting how humour interacts with socio-political dynamics, cultural tensions, and historical contexts in these regions. By shedding light on these perspectives, this collection seeks to broaden the discourse in humour studies and encourage deeper engagement with global voices and experiences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Civil society in Brazilian urban peripheries during the early COVID-19 pandemic.
- Author
-
Holanda, Bruna de Morais
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,CIVIL society ,SOLIDARITY ,EMPLOYEE well-being ,COLLECTIVE action - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Journal of Latin American & Caribbean Studies (Routledge) is the property of Routledge and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Cultural Tourism and Governance in Peripheral Regions.
- Author
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Harfst, Jörn, Syrbe, Ralf‐Uwe, Kern, Carmen, Wirth, Peter, Sandriester, Jasmin, Pstrocka‐Rak, Malgorzata, and Dolzblasz, Sylwia
- Subjects
CULTURE & tourism ,TOURISM management ,TOURISM policy ,ASSET management - Abstract
Peripheral regions are seen in the literature as disadvantaged in various dimensions, struggling to valorise their existing (cultural) assets. Networking is often considered an integral part in unlocking these assets, an approach also fostered by different regional policies. In this article, we analyse governance arrangements around tourism assets in three central European regions. The comparison provides an important input to existing discussions on cultural tourism, regional development and governance in peripheral places. The analysis shows that formal governance structures in the case study regions are often well developed but that policy‐making capacities are limited by a low stakeholder base. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Can infrastructure help 'left behind' places 'catch up?' Theorizing the role of built infrastructure in regional development.
- Author
-
Gansauer, Grete, Haggerty, Julia H, Smith, Kristin K, Haggerty, Mark N, and Roemer, Kelli F
- Subjects
REGIONAL development ,INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) ,ECONOMIC geography ,AREA studies ,CAPITAL investments - Abstract
The application of infrastructure as a regional development tool in resource peripheries has received little direct inquiry in both policy and scholarly debates. This article synthesizes theoretical and empirical directions across economic geography, regional studies and critical infrastructure studies to form a research agenda for investigating the role of built infrastructure in the development of 'left behind' peripheral regions in the USA. We argue that infrastructural systems' material, social, fiscal and political dimensions potentially deepen rather than mitigate structural 'left behind-ness'. Future research and policy design must account for such dynamics if infrastructure interventions are to prove generative for regional development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. КОНЦЕПТ ТОЛЕРАНТНОСТЬ В СВЕТЕ АССОЦИАТИВНОГО ЭКСПЕРИМЕНТА
- Author
-
А. С., Базарбаева and К. Е., Алибекова
- Subjects
PARENT attitudes ,STUDENT attitudes ,RUSSIAN language ,TRUST ,CULTURAL values - Abstract
Copyright of Bulletin of Ablai Khan KazUIRandWL: Series 'Philological sciences' is the property of Kazakh Ablai Khan University of International Relations & World Languages and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Symbolic knowledge innovation through bricolage in the periphery: the Bauhaus movement.
- Author
-
Kesidou, Effie, Plakoyiannaki, Emmanuella, and Tardios, Janja Annabel
- Subjects
BAUHAUS ,AESTHETICS ,ECONOMIC geography ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations - Abstract
In this article, we examine how symbolic knowledge innovation—that is, the recombination of ideas on aesthetic value in new ways—emerges in the periphery. While symbolic knowledge innovation drives growth, its role in creating new paths in the periphery is largely under-investigated. New path creation has been largely envisaged through macro (e.g. policy) or meso (e.g. industrial R&D) aggregates, overlooking micro-level actors (e.g. individuals), and their agency in mobilizing heterogeneous resources vital for innovation. Viewed in this light, we investigate how the interaction of actors at different levels (macro, meso, and micro) shapes symbolic knowledge innovation in the periphery. We draw on the case of Bauhaus movement to investigate symbolic knowledge innovation in the peripheries of Weimar and Dessau. Our findings illustrate symbolic knowledge innovation at the Bauhaus in terms of three phases, namely, semiotic codes: Bauhaus idea generation and articulation; material basis: development of Bauhaus artefacts; and material basis: Bauhaus commercial success. We further unpack actors' agency and show how each phase of symbolic knowledge innovation emerges through bricolage. We contribute to the economic geography literature by showing the role of bricolage and actors' agency in symbolic knowledge innovation for new path creation in the periphery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Complex systems: Introductory notes on a dialogue among political economy, evolutionary economics and physics
- Author
-
Eduardo da Motta e Albuquerque
- Subjects
technological revolutions ,periphery ,complex systems ,metamorphoses of capitalism ,simulation models ,Political science ,Economic theory. Demography ,HB1-3840 - Abstract
Complex systems may be a useful methodological tool to address “challenges for research in development”. There is a huge and growing literature on complex systems and economic theory that might be related to early intuitions of classical economists on the workings of capitalist economies. Kondratiev and Slutsky have worked with features of complex systems – how technological revolutions change the system. This may underlie one peculiarity of capitalism – a complex system that changes its level of complexity over time. The inclusion of the periphery broadens its turbulent nature: a complex system that combines regions with self-organization dynamics – the center – and regions with random behavior – the periphery.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. From the Periphery to the Centre – Beyond the Traditional Destination Experiences
- Author
-
Pechlaner, Harald, author and Olbrich, Natalie, author
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Microenterprises in the Agricultural Sector and (Lack of) Insurance: A Study of Fresh Fruit Farmers and Retailers in Northern Pakistan
- Author
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Arslan, Ahmad, Baig, Saranjam, Khan, Aftab Ahmed, Muschert, Glenn W., editor, Pereira, Vijay, editor, Ramiah, Vikash, editor, and Cansin Doker, Asli, editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Conclusion: Until we meet again in academe
- Author
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Wallace, Wendell C. and Wallace, Wendell C., editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Brazilian Journalists’ New Media Arrangements: Journalism Made in the Periphery
- Author
-
Lago, Cláudia, Nonato, Cláudia, Barkho, Leon, editor, Lugo-Ocando, Jairo Alfonso, editor, and Jamil, Sadia, editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Territorial Voting
- Author
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Mazzoleni, Oscar, Ruzza, Carlo, Series Editor, Trenz, Hans-Jörg, Series Editor, and Mazzoleni, Oscar
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Borges in the Eastern Bloc
- Author
-
Scholz, László, Balderston, Daniel, book editor, and Benedict, Nora, book editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Positive and negative facial valence perception are modulated differently by eccentricity in the parafovea: Replication from KDEF to NimStim
- Author
-
Vasilisa Akselevich and Sharon Gilaie-Dotan
- Subjects
Emotional valence ,Face expression ,Periphery ,Replication study ,Emotion perception ,Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract While perceiving the emotional state of others may be crucial for our behavior even when this information is present outside of central vision, emotion perception studies typically focus on central visual field. We have recently investigated emotional valence (pleasantness) perception across the parafovea (≤ 4°) and found that for briefly presented (200 ms) emotional face images (from the established KDEF image-set), positive (happy) valence was the least affected by eccentricity (distance from the central visual field) and negative (fearful) valence the most. Furthermore, we found that performance at 2° predicted performance at 4°. Here we tested (n = 37) whether these effects replicate with face stimuli of different identities from a different well-established image-set (NimStim). All our prior findings replicated and eccentricity-based modulation magnitude was smaller with NimStim (~ 16.6% accuracy reduction at 4°) than with KDEF stimuli (~ 27.3% reduction). Our current investigations support our earlier findings that for briefly presented parafoveal stimuli, positive and negative valence perception are differently affected by eccentricity and may be dissociated. Furthermore, our results highlight the importance of investigating emotions beyond central vision and demonstrate commonalities and differences across different image sets in the parafovea, emphasizing the contribution of replication studies to substantiate our knowledge about perceptual mechanisms.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. PERIPHERAL WRITING AND WRITING ON THE PERIPHERY IN TRAVELOGUES BY JAY NORWOOD DARLING
- Author
-
Olena V. Yufereva
- Subjects
travelogue ,periphery ,chronotope ,representation ,visualization ,non-place ,Philology. Linguistics ,P1-1091 - Abstract
The article is devoted to the little-known literary work of the American cartoonist Jay Norwood Darling. The current study was conducted on the travelogues “Ding Goes to Russia” (1932) and “The Cruise of the Bouncing Betsy. A Trailer Travelogue” (1937). This article aims to reveal and contextualize the features of J.N. Darling’s travel texts as peripheral genres. The main objective of this work is to analyze the deep structures of the travelogues chronotope, based on which the hypothesis will be put forward. Its essence is that the intensity of the crisis time experience in different spaces and through these spaces modifies the involved genre clichés, giving rise to a tragic (for Soviet space) and optimistic (for American space) premonition. The research methodology is based on the study of the interaction between the centre and periphery of the literary system, in particular, the concept of “semiosphere” formulated by Yu. Lotman. Genre analysis includes comparative and contextual methods of studying texts. The cultural-historical method deepens the understanding of the context of Darling’s literary work. Particularly, it is used to discover the historical and social factors that impact the peculiarities of others and one’s own world perception and image reconstruction. Genre analysis of travelogues with various graphic components, including caricatures, involves an intermedia method of studying the semantic connections between visual and verbal in travelogues. The examination of Darling’s travelogues “Ding Goes to Russia” and “The Cruise of the Bouncing Betsy. A Trailer Travelogue”, which inherited different genre traditions, revealed their conceptual and poetic affinities. In both texts, the author investigates the common issues of civilization and its advancement, as well as the significance of technological progress for a human being. The features of the unmanifested future or hidden phenomena of the present are felt more strongly at a distance from the centre, at the intersection of transit paths. Geography in these travels is perceived through anthropological optics, implemented, among other things, through the concepts of the mutual influence of society and space in an unstable world. The experience of alienation is constructed through images of places displayed identically in both travelogues. In Darling’s travelogues, places outside of symbolic meaning come to the fore of the spatio-temporal structure. According to the concept of M. Auger, their features can be attributed to non-places. The key features of the chronotope of both travelogues are the peripheralization of space, the transformation of places into space, and the related process, the representation of non-places. The caricaturists’ texts exhibit genre peripherality through the dual nature of their poetic codes. Behind the secondary nature of the genre constructions of both texts, one cannot help but see individual searches reflected in the unique role and methods of spatial metaphors and imaginary topoi explication. Their semantic and visual density force us to recall and re-estimate the factual writing of the cartoonist in the context of future genre development.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Core-Periphery and Peripherality in Regional Science
- Author
-
Larisa Victorovna Melnikova
- Subjects
core ,center ,periphery ,concept ,agglomeration ,dispersion ,spatial structure ,economic activity ,regional inequality ,model ,Economics as a science ,HB71-74 - Abstract
The article presents an analytical review of the development of the core-periphery and peripherality concepts in economic theory. The stages of formation of the core-periphery approach are marked by the contributions of the school of Latin American structuralism, theories of polarized development, dependency theory and world-system theory associated with the names of R. Prebisch, J. Friedmann, F. Perroux, S. Furtado, I. Wallerstein. The core-periphery concept has proved to be a useful analytical tool in studies of international trade and economic growth in the world economy. At the same time, uneven structures of distribution of economic activity in space, similar to the core-periphery structure, appear in many models of regional economy, starting with the model of agricultural production location by I. Thunen and ending with the core-periphery model by P. Krugman. These structures emerge without the help of the core-periphery concept, but as a result of the interaction of two fundamental factors – transport costs and economies of scale – and represent various combinations of dispersion and agglomeration. With regional inequality growing worldwide, the combination of the core-periphery approach and basic concepts of regional economics allows us to analyze the complex mechanisms of spatial polarization of economic space. Over time, the periphery has gone beyond the core-periphery dichotomy and developed into an independent category defined, defined by a combination of low accessibility of large markets, low population density and remoteness from decision-making centers. The concept of peripherality allows us to understand the processes of peripheralisation of previously prosperous territories through the interaction of power asymmetry and agglomeration effects
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Positive and negative facial valence perception are modulated differently by eccentricity in the parafovea: Replication from KDEF to NimStim.
- Author
-
Akselevich, Vasilisa and Gilaie-Dotan, Sharon
- Subjects
- *
EMOTION recognition , *EMOTIONAL state , *STIMULUS & response (Psychology) , *EMOTIONS , *FACE perception , *VISUAL fields - Abstract
While perceiving the emotional state of others may be crucial for our behavior even when this information is present outside of central vision, emotion perception studies typically focus on central visual field. We have recently investigated emotional valence (pleasantness) perception across the parafovea (≤ 4°) and found that for briefly presented (200 ms) emotional face images (from the established KDEF image-set), positive (happy) valence was the least affected by eccentricity (distance from the central visual field) and negative (fearful) valence the most. Furthermore, we found that performance at 2° predicted performance at 4°. Here we tested (n = 37) whether these effects replicate with face stimuli of different identities from a different well-established image-set (NimStim). All our prior findings replicated and eccentricity-based modulation magnitude was smaller with NimStim (~ 16.6% accuracy reduction at 4°) than with KDEF stimuli (~ 27.3% reduction). Our current investigations support our earlier findings that for briefly presented parafoveal stimuli, positive and negative valence perception are differently affected by eccentricity and may be dissociated. Furthermore, our results highlight the importance of investigating emotions beyond central vision and demonstrate commonalities and differences across different image sets in the parafovea, emphasizing the contribution of replication studies to substantiate our knowledge about perceptual mechanisms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Ruling the Periphery: Pakistan state ruling practices in Lower Dir.
- Author
-
Khan, Usman, Ullah, Shakir, and Rui, Tao
- Subjects
- *
GOVERNMENTALITY , *COLONIAL administration , *POSTCOLONIALISM , *ACQUISITION of data , *ETHNOLOGY - Abstract
This article examines Pakistan State's ruling practices in Lower Dir, a peripheral region. It argues that this peripheral region was ruled by a colonial logic of governmentality. Through a "thick" ethnography of Lower Dir, I documented the militarized and fragmented state practices that Tsing refers to as the "sticky materiality of practical encounters" of the local people with the state apparatuses. The study collected data through anthropological methods such as mobile ethnography at checkpoints, casual conversations with locals, and firsthand observations of state ruling practices in the region. This article concludes that it is the Pakistan state's strategic interest that keeps the region out of the mainstream, and its security status is now even more important for Pakistan state following the Taliban's takeover of Kabul in August 2021. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Rethinking the implications of sprawl to building sustainable secondary cities; case of Tamale, Ghana.
- Author
-
Abdul Somed, Arimiyaw, Rashid Adam, Abdul, and Osei Asibey, Michael
- Subjects
- *
SUSTAINABLE urban development , *TAMALES , *CITY dwellers , *LAND cover , *REAL estate development - Abstract
There are two major debates on the discussion of urban sprawl; those who maintain that it has positive implications on development and sustainability of cities and those who are otherwise. This study contributes to this intellectual debate by examining both sides of the phenomenon in a single investigation, based on the perspectives of urbanites of a secondary city. The mixed-methods research approach was adopted for the inquiry. Using Tamale Metropolis as a case, primary data were collected from 386 household respondents and three agencies for the cross-sectional survey and key informant interviews, respectively. The results revealed that urbanisation is rapid with a correspondingly high rate of sprawl. The majority of the respondents (98%) reported an increased urban concentration in the area over the past decade. There has been a 60.7% increase in population increase between 2010 and 2021. Land cover analysis revealed that in 2010, approximately 9% of the total land area of the metropolis was built up, attributed to increasing population and corresponding increased demand for land for development. This increased to 16% and 26% in 2016 and 2022, respectively. The sprawling phenomenon was largely associated with rapid population growth, economic growth, availability of automobiles, improvement in road infrastructure and family nuclearisation. Though the study unravelled some benefits associated with sprawl, Tamale is still not an exception in terms of the documented adverse implications of sprawl. Relevant recommendations were thus made for capitalising on the positive impacts of sprawl while mitigating the associated challenges. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Navigating Academic Identity: Autoethnography of Otherness and Embarrassment Among First-Generation College Students.
- Author
-
Ben-Lulu, Elazar
- Subjects
- *
FIRST-generation college students , *AUTOETHNOGRAPHY , *EMBARRASSMENT , *OTHER (Philosophy) , *PERSONAL space , *SOCIAL marginality - Abstract
As a first-generation college student (FGCS), I have never felt entirely comfortable with this label, both in academic spaces and in various personal family situations. The notion of being a FGCS has evoked internal embarrassment, a sense of academic otherness, and external micro-aggressions. Through an autoethnographic analysis of my participation in the FGCS annual workshop, I explore the strengths and weaknesses of this category. The workshop provided insights into the diverse experiences of FGCSs, revealing it to be a fluid academic construct with multiple voices and narratives. However, when intersecting with other identities, the fragility of the FGCS category emerged, leading to conflicting conversations and resistance among participants. A rigid definition of FGCS overlooks its historical context of social exclusions and disregards the unique sensitivities and differences among ethnic and national groups within it. This approach weakens the struggle of marginalized groups and perpetuates their exclusion, both on and off campus. Acknowledging the complexity and diversity within the FGCS category can foster a more inclusive environment that respects the unique experiences of each individual. This approach paves the way for a comprehensive understanding of the challenges faced by FGCSs and empowers them to navigate their academic journeys with confidence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Where do French cabinet ministers come from? Towards representation and democracy.
- Author
-
Harguindéguy, Jean-Baptiste and Ramirez Leiva, Francisco Javier
- Abstract
Though the territorial dimension of ministerial recruitment has been explored in several countries, it remains a blind spot in France. Nevertheless, the geography of political elites matters, since it tends to channel debates and national policies around specific areas. Therefore, this research note aims to fill this gap by investigating the regional origin of cabinet ministers under the Fifth Republic through an original data set entitled GeoMin. This descriptive analysis stresses the existence of three concentric circles in terms of ministerial appointments: Paris (overrepresented), mainland regions (underrepresented) and peripheral territories (almost absent). The sharing of portfolios follows the same logic. Parisian ministers have occupied all the possible positions—especially the highest ones—but most ministers from mainland France have also led important ministries. Though the matching is far from perfect, some portfolios are more frequently attributed to ministers from a given region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. GLOBAL THREADS, UNVEILING UNEVENNESS: CONTEMPORARY MAXIMALIST PROJECTS INTERROGATING CULTURAL HYBRIDISATION AND MARGINALITY.
- Author
-
VĂSIEȘ, Alex
- Subjects
LITERARY form ,TWENTIETH century ,STORYTELLING - Abstract
Copyright of Studia Universitatis Babes-Bolyai, Philologia is the property of Babes-Bolyai University, Cluj-Napoca, Romania and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Boosting Development through Population Growth in the Greek Periphery: The Case of Rodopi, Greece.
- Author
-
Tsertekidis, Georgios and Polyzoidis, Periklis
- Subjects
POPULATION ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,SUSTAINABLE development ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Rodopi (Rhodope), a peripheral region in northeastern Greece, faces significant demographic challenges characterized by population decline, aging, and negative net migration. This policy brief explores these challenges and proposes a set of policy recommendations to revitalize Rodopi's demographics and stimulate regional development. The recommendations focus on attracting and retaining young people, supporting families, and promoting economic opportunities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. La identidad del diseño en la periferia.
- Author
-
Gaitto, Jorge
- Subjects
DESIGN services ,HEGEMONY ,SCARCITY - Abstract
Copyright of Cuadernos del Centro de Estudios de Diseño y Comunicación is the property of Cuadernos del Centro de Estudios de Diseno y Comunicacion and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
50. Prólogo: La periferia de la periferia. Diseño en el territorio.
- Author
-
Pittaluga, Mariana
- Subjects
GROUP identity ,DESIGN education ,DECOLONIZATION ,MODERNITY ,BASIC needs - Abstract
Copyright of Cuadernos del Centro de Estudios de Diseño y Comunicación is the property of Cuadernos del Centro de Estudios de Diseno y Comunicacion and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
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