44 research outputs found

    Engineering Geological and Geotechnical Studies of Taprang Landslide, West-central Nepal: An Approach for Slope Stability Analysis

    Get PDF
    Detailed investigation of Taprang landslide was carried out in order tounderstand the surface, subsurface lithological information and physicalproperties of soil by using multi-disciplinary methods such as engineeringgeological, geophysical and geotechnical studies for the determinationof factor of safety for slope stability analysis. Geological study wascarried out by detail mapping of surface geology, soil condition, propertiesof bedrock and its discontinuities. The geophysical survey (ElectricalResistivity Tomography-ERT) were carried out to know the electricalresistivity of soil for identifying the groundwater table and slip surface ofthe landslide. Geotechnical analysis such as grain size analysis, liquid limitand direct shear test were carried out in order to evaluate soil classification,moisture content, cohesion and the angle of internal friction of soil forknowing the strength the soil. These soil parameters indicate the soil is verylow strength. The combination of these results were used for calculatingthe factor of safety (FoS) by Limit Equilibrium Method (LEM) proposedby Bishop and Janbu methods. The result of factor of safety in the Tapranglandslide demonstrates that the slope become stable in drained (dry)condition, remain ultimate stage in undrained (wet) condition and finallyfailure occurs if applied the seismic load in both drained and undrainedconditions

    From aspirations to “dream-trap”: nurse education in Nepal and Nepali nurse migration to the UK

    Get PDF
    The migration of nurses is stimulating international debate around globalisation, ethics, and the effects on health systems. This thesis examines this phenomenon through nurses trained in Nepal who migrate to the UK. Since 2000, increasing numbers of Nepali nurses have started crossing national borders to participate in the global healthcare market, particularly in the affluent west. By using qualitative multisited research and in-depth interviews with key stakeholders in both Nepal and the UK, this thesis explores why nurses aspire to migrate, how they fulfil these aspirations, and their experience of living and working in the UK. The thesis begins by examining the historical development of nurse training in Nepal, particularly from the mid 1950s. This period saw profound socio-political transformations, including in the position of women in Nepali society and in the perception of nursing in Nepal. Previously, many families were very reluctant to send their daughters into nursing. By the late 1990s, middle-class women and their families were increasingly attracted to nursing, both as a vocation and as a means to migrate. The thesis explores the rise of private training colleges to meet the increased demand for nurse training, and the new businesses that have grown up around the profession to facilitate nurse recruitment and migration. Around one thousand nurses have migrated to the UK since 2000, and the second part of the thesis presents their experiences of the migration process and of working and settling in the UK. Nurses have faced complex bureaucratic and professional hurdles, particularly after UK nurse registration and work-permit policies changed in 2006. The thesis also highlights how highly qualified nurses with many years of work experience in Nepal have become increasingly deskilled in UK. Frequently sent to rural nursing-homes by recruiting agencies, they create and join new diasporic support networks. Further, many have left their loved ones behind, and experience homesickness and the pain of family separation. Often, they plan for their husbands and children to join them after several years, and the research explores this and the issues faced by their families, as they relocate and adapt to life in the UK. Finally, the thesis makes some important policy recommendations. For Nepal, these relate to greater regulation of nurse training and the brokering of nurses abroad. In the UK, they relate to increasing the flexibility of registration and visa regulations to assist in supporting Nepali nurses' work choices, and to value and utilise their professional skills in the UK better

    ă‚±ăƒ–ă‚«ăƒăƒŠăƒăƒăźć–¶ć·Łç”Ÿæ…‹ă«é–ąă™ă‚‹ç ”ç©¶ïŒŒăšăă«æ–œèš­æ œćŸčにおける送çČ‰æ˜†è™«ăšă—ăŠăźćˆ©ç”šă«ă€ă„ăŠ

    Get PDF
    El presente trabajo analiza los distintos intereses que guiaron las polĂ­ticas exteriores del Reino de Arabia Saudita y de la RepĂșblica IslĂĄmica de IrĂĄn en la guerra civil de Yemen desde 2014 hasta 2017. Para ello, se abordarĂĄ a travĂ©s de una sĂ­ntesis teĂłrica dual (realista y constructivista) cuĂĄles han sido los intereses que guiaron las acciones externas de los actores involucrados.This paper analyzes the different interests that guided the foreign policy of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and the Islamic Republic of Iran at Yemens civil war from 2014 to 2017. For that aim, it will be addressed through a dual theoretical synthesis (realism and constructivism) which were the interests that guided the external actions of the actors involved.Fil: Dip Gilardone, AgustĂ­n. Universidad Nacional de Rosario; Argentin

    Loss and Damage from Climate Change: Building Knowledge and Capacity in the Most Vulnerable Countries

    Full text link
    Mitigation and adaptation are at the center of global climate negotiations. However, as climate change impacts become more frequent and more severe, these two well-accepted pillars of climate policy are not sufficient. Burgeoning damage and loss from climate change is inevitable, and it has become urgent to expedite international policy work on Loss and Damage (L&D) response. L&D has been identified as a policy action area within the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) system; however, progress has been extremely slow. By undertaking a review of the current situation, including country-level examples from Bangladesh, Nepal, and Vanuatu, we consider the immediate needs of the most vulnerable countries and suggest high-priority actions to move forward. These actions include: 1. Clarifying conceptual dilemmas around loss and damage vis-Ă -vis adaptation, mitigation, and disaster risk reduction, demonstrating how L&D policy concepts can be implemented. 2. Assisting developing and vulnerable countries in undertaking diagnostic assessments with respect to loss and damage and identifying policy and institutional options to advance L&D at national and sub-national levels. 3. Facilitating knowledge-sharing among developing and most vulnerable countries with regard to policy, risk governance, response to Loss and Damage, and ensuring socially inclusive responses. 4. Helping create learning opportunities for key policy and research champions in vulnerable countries. 5. Helping develop a dedicated L&D financing system at national and sub-national levels. 6. Providing technical assistance to Least Developed Countries (LDCs) and the Alliance of Small Island States (AOSIS) to formulate a coherent approach to L&D negotiation within the UNFCCC system as well as enhanced representation of Loss and Damage situations for the Global Stocktake 2023 international conventions. 7. Building the Research and Development (R&D) capacity of national research and training groups in most vulnerable countries vis-Ă -vis comprehensive risk management, including how national institutions can deliver with respect to multiple outcomes including the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), Disaster Risk Reduction (DRR), adaptation at large and L&D. 8. Developing and strengthening national database systems to facilitate loss and damage accounting and financial delivery
    corecore