8,527 research outputs found

    Identity, Power, and Prestige in Switzerland's Multilingual Education

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    Switzerland is known for its multilingualism, yet not all languages are represented equally in society. The situation is exacerbated by the influx of heritage languages and English through migration and globalization processes which challenge the traditional education system. This study is the first to investigate how schools in Grisons, Fribourg, and Zurich negotiate neoliberal forces leading to a growing necessity of English, a romanticized view on national languages, and the social justice perspective of institutionalizing heritage languages. It uncovers power and legitimacy issues and showcases students' and teachers' complex identities to advocate equitable multilingual education

    Emerging research and priorities for elasmobranch conservation.

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    Over the past 4 decades there has been a growing concern for the conservation status of elasmobranchs (sharks and rays). In 2002, the first elasmobranch species were added to Appendix II of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES). Less than 20 yr later, there were 39 species on Appendix II and 5 on Appendix I. Despite growing concern, effective conservation and management remain challenged by a lack of data on population status for many species, human−wildlife interactions, threats to population viability, and the efficacy of conservation approaches. We surveyed 100 of the most frequently published and cited experts on elasmobranchs and, based on ranked responses, prioritized 20 research questions on elasmobranch conservation. To address these questions, we then convened a group of 47 experts from 35 institutions and 12 countries. The 20 questions were organized into the following broad categories: (1) status and threats, (2) population and ecology, and (3) conservation and management. For each section, we sought to synthesize existing knowledge, describe consensus or diverging views, identify gaps, and suggest promising future directions and research priorities. The resulting synthesis aggregates an array of perspectives on emergent research and priority directions for elasmobranch conservation

    The Digital Continent:Placing Africa in Planetary Networks of Work

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    Only ten years ago, there were more internet users in countries like France or Germany than in all of Africa put together. But much has changed in a decade. The year 2018 marks the first year in human history in which a majority of the world’s population are now connected to the internet. This mass connectivity means that we have an internet that no longer connects only the world’s wealthy. Workers from Lagos to Johannesburg to Nairobi and everywhere in between can now apply for and carry out jobs coming from clients who themselves can be located anywhere in the world. Digital outsourcing firms can now also set up operations in the most unlikely of places in order to tap into hitherto disconnected labour forces. With CEOs in the Global North proclaiming that ‘location is a thing of the past’ (Upwork, 2018), and governments and civil society in Africa promising to create millions of jobs on the continent, the book asks what this ‘new world of digital work’ means to the lives of African workers. It draws from a year-long fieldwork in South Africa, Kenya, Nigeria, Ghana, and Uganda, with over 200 interviews with participants including gig workers, call and contact centre workers, self-employed freelancers, small-business owners, government officials, labour union officials, and industry experts. Focusing on both platform-based remote work and call and contact centre work, the book examines the job quality implications of digital work for the lives and livelihoods of African workers

    Human impacts and their interactions in the Baltic Sea region

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    Coastal environments, in particular heavily populated semi-enclosed marginal seas and coasts like the Baltic Sea region, are strongly affected by human activities. A multitude of human impacts, including climate change, affect the different compartments of the environment, and these effects interact with each other. As part of the Baltic Earth Assessment Reports (BEAR), we present an inventory and discussion of different human-induced factors and processes affecting the environment of the Baltic Sea region, and their interrelations. Some are naturally occurring and modified by human activities (i.e. climate change, coastal processes, hypoxia, acidification, submarine groundwater discharges, marine ecosystems, non-indigenous species, land use and land cover), some are completely human-induced (i.e. agriculture, aquaculture, fisheries, river regulations, offshore wind farms, shipping, chemical contamination, dumped warfare agents, marine litter and microplastics, tourism, and coastal management), and they are all interrelated to different degrees. We present a general description and analysis of the state of knowledge on these interrelations. Our main insight is that climate change has an overarching, integrating impact on all of the other factors and can be interpreted as a background effect, which has different implications for the other factors. Impacts on the environment and the human sphere can be roughly allocated to anthropogenic drivers such as food production, energy production, transport, industry and economy. The findings from this inventory of available information and analysis of the different factors and their interactions in the Baltic Sea region can largely be transferred to other comparable marginal and coastal seas in the world

    Introduction: Locating the Mediterranean

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    In recent years, the Mediterranean region has reasserted itself in the world: popular uprisings have unsettled long-standing political regimes, economic crises have generated precarity, and nationalist movements have reified some borders while condemning others. The circulation and stagnation of people, ideas, and objects provoked by these events draw attention to regional connections and separations that, in turn, challenge strict geopolitical renderings of Europe, the Middle East, and North Africa. In considering this resurgence of interest in the Mediterranean, this introduction asks: what role does ‘location’ play in our conception of region and region-formations? What kinds of locations are generated in the contemporary Mediterranean? How do historical, legal, political, and social connections and separations shape the experience of being located somewhere in particular? Furthermore, the introduction explores how, by placing in dialogue diverse approaches and traditions, this collective volume works on two levels at once. First, each contribution posits its own Mediterranean ‘constellation’. Second, the collective volume presents a wider understanding of what historically inclined anthropologists might conceive of as a Mediterranean ‘constellation’. In doing this, the introduction proposes a theoretical apparatus through which we can understand cultural and historical values of region and region-making in and beyond the Mediterranean

    Harmful Algal Blooms (HAB) in a changing world : the case of S and W Iberian Bays

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    This thesis aimed to investigate, in two wide-open sheltered bays (Lisbon and Lagos) influenced by upwelling, how the meteorological and oceanographic (MetOc) setting may affect phytoplankton communities. Results of a 9-year time series data showed a high interannual variability of phytoplankton biomass, estimated as chlorophyll a (Chl-a). Nevertheless, the Chl-a sinusoidal model showed different temporal variability patterns in each bay: a uni-modal pattern with a short peak and low Chl-a concentrations in Lagos, and a weak bi-modal pattern with a long period of high Chl-a concentrations in Lisbon. Cross-correlation analyses performed for Chl-a and different MetOc variables indicated that PAR contributed most to Chl-a in winter/early-spring, while upwelling and SST were the main drivers in late-spring/summer. Analysis performed during 1-year showed significant spatial differences in phytoplankton assemblages between the bays. On a temporal scale, significant differences were observed on phytoplankton communities in both bays in the 4-meteorological seasons. However, results from a nearshore station studied in Lagos only indicated the occurrence of 3-biological seasons, with no significant differences between summer and autumn communities. This study suggests that Lagos region has a higher probability for the occurrence of HABs (in higher cell concentrations and persistence). The ecology of the benthic genus Ostreopsis was studied based on 7-years of water samples. Two species were identified reaching maximum cell densities in late-summer/early-autumn: Ostreopsis cf. ovata restricted to the south coast and Ostreopsis cf. siamensis present in both Portuguese coasts. Ostreopsis was much more abundant in Lagos (nearshore) and maxima concentrations were related to positive SST anomalies. High densities in the plankton were often recorded after a period of more than 2-weeks of low sea state, followed by short-time events of onshore wind and moderate waves. In Lisbon, O. cf. siamensis was seldom recorded in the plankton and no clear relationship could be established with the studied MetOc drivers. The recent records of Ostreopsis in this bay are interpreted as an early colonization stage of an invasion process. The present work highlights the relevance of the peculiarities of regional setting in determining phytoplankton dynamics in wide-open coastal bays influenced by upwelling, even at short latitudinal distance.Instituto Português do Mar e da Atmosfera (MAR2020-P02M01-1490P)Centro de Ciências do Mar e do Ambiente da Faculdade de Ciências da Universidade de Lisboa (UIDB/04292/2020)Centro de Ciências do Mar da Universidade do Algarve (UID/Multi/04326/2020
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