121 research outputs found
What Is Justice? Perspectives of Victims-Survivors of Gender-Based Violence
This article explores âhow do victims-survivors of gender-based violence (GBV) experience and perceive justice?â based on interviews with 251 victims-survivors with experience of different types of GBV and criminal, civil, and family justice systems. Victims-survivors were found to have multiple perceptions of justice, related to different points in their journey following abuse and regarding individual, community, and societal responses. Perceptions relate to accountability; fairness in outcome and process; protection from future harm; recognition; agency; empowerment; affective justice; reparation; and social transformation. Current understandings of justice in legislative and policy approaches reproduce the âjustice gapâ by failing to take account of how survivors themselves understand and demand justice
Using Nonionic Surfactants for Production of Semiconductor-type Carbon Nanotubes by Gel-based Affinity Chromatography
Single-wall carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) have remarkable properties based on their electronic properties, i.e., metallic or semiconducting types, but as-grown SWCNTs contain a mixture of both types. Presented here is an improved and detailed method for producing highly enriched semiconducting SWCNTs from a colloidal suspension of as-grown SWCNTs through agarose gel column-based affinity chromatography. After a 2 wt% sodium dodecyl sulphate (SDS) aqueous dispersion of SWCNTs is passed through the gel column, metal-type SWCNTs preferentially elute out using a 1.5 wt% SDS solution. Semiconductor-type SWCNTs are subsequently recovered from the column using a 2 wt% Pluronic F77 surfactant solution eluent. The semiconductor-enriched fraction purity is in the 90-95% range, based on detailed UV-vis-NIR absorption and resonant Raman spectroscopy characterization of the particulate suspension. Semiconductor-type SWCNTs are recovered in solid form by evaporating the suspension fluid, and heating the dried sample in air to a temperature just above the Pluronic decomposition temperature. Using Pluronic and other nonionic-type surfactants can aid the scalability of the chromatographic production of semiconducting SWCNT samples
Rapid inactivation of airborne bacteria using atmospheric pressure dielectric barrier grating discharge
IEEE Transactions on Plasma Science, 35(5): pp. 1501-1510.Dielectric barrier discharge plasma has been known
to inactivate many different microorganisms on surfaces when
treatment times are on the order of seconds or minutes in duration.
In this paper, a unique plasma air cleaning facility was created
which combines a dielectric barrier grating discharge (DBGD)
with a filterless laboratory-scale ventilation system and is used
to treat concentrated bacterial bioaerosol in a moving air stream
at air flow rates of 25 L/s. Results indicate that plasma treatment
times on the order of milliseconds corresponding to one
pass through the DBGD device can achieve 1.5-log reduction in
culturable E. coli immediately after contact with plasma and 5-log
reduction totally following in the minutes after the plasma treatment.
A numerical characterization study was performed to help
predict and understand the mechanism of bacteria inactivation in
the DBD plasma from a variety of plasma factors
Debateable Marriages: Marriage and child marriage in Saudi Arabia
This article examines marriage and the constitution of familial relationships in Saudi Arabia, with a specific focus on one form of marriage that has recently become an issue of public, political, and religious discussion, that of âchild marriage.â The situation within Saudi Arabia is compared with gendered relationships in other countries, most notably those in Western Europe, with specific attention given to the United Kingdom. It is argued that policy developments in Saudi Arabia need to be seen in the context of wider Saudi culture, Sharia law, and religious interpretations of the Koran
âThe Mosques Are the Biggest Problem Weâve Got Right Nowâ â Key Agent and Survivor Accounts of Engaging Mosques with Domestic and Honour-Based Violence in the United Kingdom.
This article considers the role of mosques in addressing domestic violence (DV) and honor-based violence (HBV) in the United Kingdom. Utilizing data extracted from interviews with 38 key agents and survivors, this article will highlight that some mosques can be difficult to engage with when attempting to raise awareness on violence against women (VAW). Participants explained that the patriarchal nature of mosques contributes to this difficulty together with their exclusion of women within organizational structures. Some mosques also deny that VAW is even a problem within their communities. This is a worrying trend as those on the pulpit often possess significant powers of influence across large congregations and are perfectly placed to help provoke dialogue on these issues. Furthermore, it adds yet another layer of inequality experienced by Muslim women that makes reporting abuse and seeking intervention that much more difficult. In the face of this resistance, this article will consider some ways in which mosques can raise awareness about VAW and where Muslim women can access support. It will also explore additional strategies and recommendations in relation to overcoming mosques unwilling to support VAW initiatives
Law in social work education: reviewing the evidence on teaching, learning and assessment
This paper presents the findings from a systemic review of knowledge relating to current practice in the teaching, learning and assessment of law in social work education. The research comprised an internationally conducted systematic review of the literature, together with a survey of current education practice in the four countries of the UK. Two consultation events sought the views of a range of stakeholders, including the perspectives of service users and carers. Set in the context of debates about the relationship between law and social work practice, this paper identifies the common themes emerging from the review and offers an analysis of key findings, together with priorities for future directions in education practice
Key Agent and Survivor Recommendations for Intervention in Honour-Based Violence in the UK
This paper concerns recommendations for intervention in honour-based violence (âHBVâ) as recommended by individuals who face such violence in their everyday lives. Utilising data extracted from interviews conducted with 30 key agents and 8 South-Asian female survivors in the UK, this paper will argue that UK public agencies are struggling to cope with how to respond to HBV. This is despite the UK government recognising shortcomings in the support for victims in the House of Commons Home Affairs Committee report in 2008. In particular, participants identified that (a) the police, healthcare, and social services are particularly poor at supporting victims; (b) public sector workers require appropriate training and awareness on HBV; (c) education on HBV and forced marriages is absent in schools, colleges, and universities; and (d) more needs to be done to engage and educate communities about HBV and where victims can access support
Gender, migration and exclusionary citizenship regimes: conceptualizing transnational abandonment of wives as a form of violence against women
Based on life-history narratives of 57 women in India who married Indian-origin men settled
(primarily) in the West and interviews with 21 practitioners, we document the neglect, abuse and
instrumental deprivation of the womenâs rights in the process of transnational abandonment.
Gendered local socio-cultural milieus and economic norms contribute to these harms in a context
where womenâs identity and social status are closely connected to marriage. However, these
harms are enabled and sustained by transnational formal-legal frameworks which make women
subordinate citizens. Widening the explanatory lens for understanding domestic violence beyond
the family and community, we argue that in a globalised world, (inter)state policies serve to
construct categories of âdisposable womenâ who can be abused and abandoned with impunity
A review of gas turbine engine with inter-stage turbine burner
Society is going through transformations at a rate that is unprecedented in human history. One such transformation is the energy transition, which will affect almost every facet of our society. Gas turbine engines are state of the art machines, a backbone of modern society, and used in various applications, right from power generation to propelling aircraft and ships. This paper reviews the possibilities offered by the Inter-stage Turbine Burner (ITB) configuration for both aviation and power generation with a view on sustainability and fuel flexibility. First, the thermodynamic characteristics of a Brayton-Joule cycle with ITB is elaborated, followed by discussions on the design and the off-design performance characteristics of such a gas turbine architectural variation. Finally, the viability of ITB architecture in reducing emissions and enabling âEnergy Mixâ in aviation is elaborated. The paper concludes with an outlook on the technological readiness ladder that the engineering community will have to address in the future
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