5,955 research outputs found

    Clews 2

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    Why HITnet kiosks didn\u27t hit the mark for sexual health education of Western Australian Aboriginal youth

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    Objective: To assess the use, appropriateness of, and staff feedback on specific sexual health modules, which were installed on Heuristic Interactive Technology (HITnet) kiosks at Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Services (ACCHS). The HITnet kiosks were aimed at Aboriginal youth visiting these sites. Methods: Modules on the HITnet kiosks were assessed for (1) cultural appropriateness using Yunkaporta’s Aboriginal pedagogy framework and (2) compliance with the World Health Organization’s (WHO) advice on key elements for comprehensive sexual health education for young people. Data measuring kiosk use were obtained through HITnet kiosk activity reports. An online survey of ACCHS staff was used to qualitatively assess use of, and staff perceptions of, HITnet kiosks. Results: Kiosk modules were consistent with seven of the eight elements of Yunkaporta’s framework and all of the WHO recommendations. The most popular module generated 3,066 purposeful sessions and the least popular module generated 724 purposeful sessions across nine sites in 2012. While teenagers were the most frequent of the kiosk user groups (39.5% in 2012), the majority of users (56%) were not in the target group (i.e. elders 4%, adults 25%, children 27%). Key issues reported by ACCHS staff (n=11) included: lack of clarity regarding staff responsibility for overseeing kiosk functionality; kiosks attracting “inappropriate ages”; and “lack of privacy” based on kiosk location, screen visibility, and absence of headphones preventing discreet access. Conclusions: The modules were tailored to a young Aboriginal audience through technology thought to be appealing to this group. However, barriers to use of the kiosk included kiosk design features, location, and lack of clarity around responsibility for kiosk operation. Implications: Aboriginal youth need easy access to sexual health messages in a ‘safe’, non-judgmental space. Information and communication that is accessible via personal and mobile devices may be a better vehicle than public kiosks

    Open Market operations: beyond the New Consensus

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    This paper examines the changing role of central bank open market operations within the new operating framework for monetary polic

    The history of the Quarterly Bulletin

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    This edition marks the 50th anniversary of the Quarterly Bulletin. Over the years, the Bulletin has been one of the main conduits through which the Bank has communicated its thinking to the wider public. This article reviews the history of the Bulletin — both its origins and its subsequent evolution — as well as examining some of the insights that can be gleaned from its pages on some of the key central banking issues of the time.

    Telling Our Story, Because No One Else Will: Cape Verdean Transnational Identity Formation as Knowledge Production

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    “This article was published as Gibau, G.S. (2015). Telling Our Story, Because No One Else Will: Cape Verdean Transnational Identity Formation as Knowledge Production. Mande Studies, 16-17, 107-117. No part of it may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, transmitted, or distributed in any form, by any means, electronic, mechanical, photographic, or otherwise, without the prior permission of Indiana University Press. For education reuse, please contact the Copyright Clearance Center http://www.copyright.com/. For all other permissions, contact IUPress at http://iupress.indiana.edu/rights/.”Seemingly from birth, Cape Verdeans are charged by their elders to go forth and "tell their story." Yet the Cape Verdean story remains relatively unknown despite its relevance to world history and ongoing processes of globalization. Nevertheless, Cape Verdeans refuse to be rendered "statistically insignificant" in the American imagination. This article explores recent scholarship and personal standpoints produced by people exploring Cape Verdean transnational identity as a means of making their truths known, thus redirecting the recurrent scholarly gaze from its focus on knowledge production among anglophone diaspora communities to the equally-relevant lusophone experience

    A second monoclinic polymorph of 2-amino-4,6-dichloro­pyrimidine

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    The title chloro-substituted 2-amino­pyrimidine, C4H3Cl2N3, is a second monoclinic polymorph of this compound which crystallizes in the space group C2/c. The structure was previously reported [Clews & Cochran (1948 ▶). Acta Cryst. 1, 4–11] in the space group P21/a. There are two crystallographically independent mol­ecules in the asymmetric unit and each mol­ecule is planar. The dihedral angle between the two pyrimidine rings is 30.71 (12)°. In the crystal structure, mol­ecules are linked via N—H⋯N inter­molecular hydrogen bonds, forming infinite one-dimensional chains along the a axis. These hydrogen bonds generate R 2 2(8) ring motifs. The chains are stacked along the b axis
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