913 research outputs found

    Take one: September 1984

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    This item contains two issues of the Take One newsletter: September 13, and 27, 1984Take One was published every two weeks and focused on short news items and announcements "for the people of University Hospital.

    Measuring Poverty in the Pacific

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    Measuring poverty in the Pacific is important to keep poor people on the policy agenda, to design effective policies and programs and to carry out rigorous evaluation so that we know what works and why. There are various definitions of poverty, ranging from a narrow focus on adequate calorie consumption through to broader concepts of capabilities. This paper takes a practical look at how to measure one conventional indicator of poverty: income (or consumption) poverty. In doing so, the paper highlights both the limitations of household datasets in the Pacific as well as opportunities to make better use of data for poverty analysis. Good progress is being made in improving the quality of household surveys, so the challenge now is to analyse these more fully to inform policies, program design and evaluation.aid

    Counting the number of correlated pairs in a nucleus

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    We suggest that the number of correlated nucleon pairs in an arbitrary nucleus can be estimated by counting the number of proton-neutron, proton-proton, and neutron-neutron pairs residing in a relative SS state. We present numerical calculations of those amounts for the nuclei 4^{4}He, 9^{9}Be, 12 ^{12}C, 27 ^{27}Al, 40 ^{40}Ca, 48 ^{48}Ca, 56 ^{56}Fe, 63 ^{63}Cu, 108 ^{108}Ag, and 197 ^{197}Au. The results are used to predict the values of the ratios of the per-nucleon electron-nucleus inelastic scattering cross section to the deuteron in the kinematic regime where correlations dominate.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figure

    Rising World Food Prices and Poverty in Fiji: A Developing Country Micro-Perspective

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    Until the world financial crisis struck, commodity and food prices seemed to be on an inexorable uptrend. The increases caused widespread concern about the effects of higher food prices on poverty. These concerns are relevant to the poor people everywhere but are especially relevant to poor people in developing countries who must spend high proportions of their incomes on food. In this analysis we use data from the Fiji Islands Household Income and Expenditure Survey of 2002 – 2003 to assess the likely effects of the increase in food prices in Fiji over 2002 to mid 2008 on the incidence of poverty in Fiji. We review and discuss the impacts of some of the Fiji Islands Government’s responses designed to alleviate the impacts on the Fiji Islands community.Food prices, development, poverty, household survey, case study, Fiji, Demand and Price Analysis, Food Security and Poverty,

    The mis-measurement of extreme global poverty : a case study in the Pacific Islands

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    Debate over the measurement of global poverty in low- and middle-income countries continues unabated. There is considerable controversy surrounding the 'dollar a day' measure used to monitor progress against the Millennium Development Goals. This article shines fresh light on the debate with new empirical analyses of poverty (including child poverty), inequality and deprivation levels in the Pacific island state of Vanuatu. The study focuses not only on economic and monetary metrics and measures, but also the measures of deprivation derived from sociology in relation to shelter, sanitation, water, information, nutrition, health and education. Until recently, there had been few, if any, attempts to study poverty and deprivation disparities among children in this part of the world. Different measures yield strikingly different estimates of poverty. The article, therefore, attempts to situate the study findings in the broader international context of poverty measurement and discusses their implications for future research and the post-2015 development agenda

    Domain Wall Fermions and the Eta Invariant

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    We extend work by Callan and Harvey and show how the phase of the chiral fermion determinant in four dimensions is reproduced by zeromodes bound to a domain wall in five dimensions. The analysis could shed light on the applicability of zeromode fermions and the vacuum overlap formulation of Narayanan and Neuberger for chiral gauge theories on the lattice.Comment: uuencoded file with 3 figures; uses macros harvmac, epsf. Revised discussion of the Chern-Simons form and SU(2) anomaly in section 4, as well as additional minor change
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