17,691 research outputs found
FY 1998 Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act Compliance Monitoring Report
This report was superseded by an amended FY 1998 compliance monitoring report prepared by Eric W. Weatherby, Juvenile Probabation Officer IV, Alaska Division of Juvenile Justice, July 2001.The Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act (JJDPA) mandates removal of status offenders and nonoffenders from secure detention and correctional facilities, sight and sound separation of juveniles and adults, and removal of juveniles from adult jails and lockups. In Alaska, 3 instances of status offenders held in secure detention were recorded in FY 1998, compared with 485 violations in the baseline year of CY 1976. 2 separation violations were recorded in FY 1998, representing a 99.8% reduction from the CY 1976 baseline of 824 violations. 57 jail removal violations were projected (52 (actual), representing an 93% reduction from the CY 1980 baseline.Alaska Department of Health and Social Services, Division of Family and Youth ServicesA. General Information /
B. Removal of Status Offenders and Nonoffenders from Secure Detention and Correctional Facilities /
C. Full Compliance Request /
D. Progress Made in Achieving Removal of Status Offenders and Nonoffenders from Secure Detention and Correctional Facilities /
E. Separation of Juveniles and Adults /
F. Removal of Juveniles from Adult Jails and Lockups /
G. De Minimis Request: Substantive /
APPENDICES /
I. Method of Analysis /
II. Fiscal Year 1998 Violations by Offense Type and Location /
III. Common Offense Acronym
Quantifying stretching and rearrangement in epithelial sheet migration
Although understanding the collective migration of cells, such as that seen
in epithelial sheets, is essential for understanding diseases such as
metastatic cancer, this motion is not yet as well characterized as individual
cell migration. Here we adapt quantitative metrics used to characterize the
flow and deformation of soft matter to contrast different types of motion
within a migrating sheet of cells. Using a Finite-Time Lyapunov Exponent (FTLE)
analysis, we find that - in spite of large fluctuations - the flow field of an
epithelial cell sheet is not chaotic. Stretching of a sheet of cells (i.e.,
positive FTLE) is localized at the leading edge of migration. By decomposing
the motion of the cells into affine and non-affine components using the metric
D, we quantify local plastic rearrangements and describe the motion
of a group of cells in a novel way. We find an increase in plastic
rearrangements with increasing cell densities, whereas inanimate systems tend
to exhibit less non-affine rearrangements with increasing density.Comment: 21 pages, 7 figures This is an author-created, un-copyedited version
of an article accepted for publication in the New Journal of Physics. IOP
Publishing Ltd is not responsible for any errors or omissions in this version
of the manuscript or any version derived from it. The Version of Record is
available online at doi:10.1088/1367-2630/15/2/02503
'If I cannot access services then there is no reason for me to test': the impact of health service charges on HIV testing and treatment amongst migrants in England
Policy governing entitlement to access government health care for foreign nationals in England is a subject of debate, controversy and confusion. Of particular concern to health providers has been the impact of National Health Service charges on delaying HIV testing and anti-retroviral treatment uptake and adherence amongst certain migrant groups. Data obtained through focus groups with 70 migrants from southern Africa, suggest that confusion over health care entitlements exists amongst those seeking health care and is reported amongst health service providers. This confusion, as well as financial difficulties and fears over deportation facing some migrants, can in turn be a factor influencing their decisions to avoid formal health services, resort to alternative and often ineffective or potentially adverse forms of therapy, and delay HIV testing and treatment uptake
NASTRAN used in a production environment
A finite element analysis procedure built around the NASTRAN system is assessed. A number of support programs that were either written or modified to interface with NASTRAN and some improvements that were made to NASTRAN itself are noted. Some typical models are analyzed and an actual schedule is followed for constructing and analyzing the models to support a large design program
Optimum maneuvers of hypervelocity vehicles
Optimum maneuvering of glide vehicle at hypersonic speed
Task 6 storable propellant module environmental control technology Summary report
Thermal control concepts for space storable fluorine hydrazine propulsion modul
Who does what now? How physics lab instruction impacts student behaviors
While laboratory instruction is a cornerstone of physics education, the
impact of student behaviours in labs on retention, persistence in the field,
and the formation of students' physics identity remains an open question. In
this study, we performed in-lab observations of student actions over two
semesters in two pedagogically different sections of the same introductory
physics course. We used a cluster analysis to identify different categories of
student behaviour and analyzed how they correlate with lab structure and
gender. We find that, in lab structures which fostered collaborative group work
and promoted decision making, there was a task division along gender lines with
respect to laptop and equipment usage (and found no such divide among students
in guided verification labs).Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, 3 table
Climates of Warm Earth-like Planets I: 3-D Model Simulations
We present a large ensemble of simulations of an Earth-like world with
increasing insolation and rotation rate. Unlike previous work utilizing
idealized aquaplanet configurations we focus our simulations on modern
Earth-like topography. The orbital period is the same as modern Earth, but with
zero obliquity and eccentricity. The atmosphere is 1 bar N-dominated with
CO=400 ppmv and CH=1 ppmv. The simulations include two types of
oceans; one without ocean heat transport (OHT) between grid cells as has been
commonly used in the exoplanet literature, while the other is a fully coupled
dynamic bathtub type ocean. The dynamical regime transitions that occur as day
length increases induce climate feedbacks producing cooler temperatures, first
via the reduction of water vapor with increasing rotation period despite
decreasing shortwave cooling by clouds, and then via decreasing water vapor and
increasing shortwave cloud cooling, except at the highest insolations.
Simulations without OHT are more sensitive to insolation changes for fast
rotations while slower rotations are relatively insensitive to ocean choice.
OHT runs with faster rotations tend to be similar with gyres transporting heat
poleward making them warmer than those without OHT. For slower rotations OHT is
directed equator-ward and no high latitude gyres are apparent. Uncertainties in
cloud parameterization preclude a precise determination of habitability but do
not affect robust aspects of exoplanet climate sensitivity. This is the first
paper in a series that will investigate aspects of habitability in the
simulations presented herein. The datasets from this study are opensource and
publicly available.Comment: 27 pages ApJS accepted. Expanded Introduction and several additional
figure
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