25 research outputs found
El desafío de las drogas, el crimen organizado y el terrorismo en África Occidental y Central
África Occidental se ha convertido en un destino atractivo para las redes de delincuencia internacional. En asociación con redes locales, está surgiendo progresivamente un nuevo modelo específico de criminalidad que está comenzando a exportarse.
Existen numerosos factores que explican la creciente importancia de África Occidental y Central en el mapa mundial del crimen organizado y las organizaciones criminales transnacionales. La concurrencia de factores externos como el rápido crecimiento demográfico, el urbanismo descontrolado, gobiernos ineficaces y dinámicas diásporas regionales y mundiales amplifican los efectos de las dificultades políticas, económicas y sociales. Ante esta situación, las redes extranjeras de delincuencia transnacional bien asentadas y en busca de bases operativas seguras para llevar a cabo sus operaciones ilícitas (tráfico de narcóticos, trata de seres humanos, mercancías pirateadas, migración ilegal y recursos naturales) cooperan y cohabitan con las recientes y exitosas redes de delincuencia propias de África Occidental. Los esfuerzos realizados por los gobiernos nacionales para atajar la situación se han limitado hasta ahora a la redacción de marcos legales. Si no se ataja esta situación de forma oportuna y enérgica, cualquier progreso encaminado hacia la consecución de sociedades democráticas liberales quedará ralentizado, por no decir secuestrado
The New Transatlantic Bonanza: Cocaine on Highway 10.
The 10th Parallel marine and aerial routes linking South America and West Africa harbor a long history of trade between the two continents. More recently, these routes have become one of the preferred routes used by Latin American traffickers for shipping multi-tons of cocaine destined for the growing European market. The Parallel’s growing importance in cocaine trafficking has made it known as cocaine “Highway 10” among law enforcement.
Latin American cocaine trafficking organizations, particularly the Colombian ones, have established stable bases in West Africa, controlling and developing the route. West African facilitators, Nigerians as well as an increasing number of nationals from all countries where shipments are stocked, have developed a stronger capacity for taking over more ambitious and lucrative role in the business as transporters, partners, and final buyers. In one case (Guinea), the West African partner had already started developing his own trafficking and manufacturing capacity, reproducing the patterns that made Colombia the business model of the drug industry. In this reshaped context, of particular concern is the role played by the Colombian FARC (Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia) as provider of cocaine shipments to West African cocaine entrepreneurs, as well as the impact of drug trafficking money on the financing of terrorist and rebel groups operating in the Sahel-Saharan belt
Casimir effect between moving branes
We consider a supersymmetric model with a single matter supermultiplet in a
five-dimensional space-time with orbifold compactification along the fifth
dimension. The boundary conditions on the two orbifold planes are chosen in
such a way that supersymmetry remains unbroken on the boundaries. We calculate
the vacuum energy-momentum tensor in a configuration in which the boundary
branes are moving with constant velocity. The results show that the
contribution from fermions cancels that of bosons only in the static limit, but
in general a velocity-dependent Casimir energy arises between the branes. We
relate this effect to the particle production due to the branes motion and
finally we discuss some cosmological consequences.Comment: 14 pages, LaTeX. Final version with new references included, to be
published in Nucl. Phys.
Back reaction in the formation of a straight cosmic string
A simple model for the formation of a straight cosmic string, wiggly or
unperturbed is considered. The gravitational field of such string is computed
in the linear approximation. The vacuum expectation value of the stress tensor
of a massless scalar quantum field coupled to the string gravitational field is
computed to the one loop order. Finally, the back-reaction effect on the
gravitational field of the string is obtained by solving perturbatively the
semiclassical Einstein's equations.Comment: 29 pages, LaTeX, no figures. A postcript version can be obtained from
anonymous ftp at ftp://ftp.ifae.es/preprint.f
Semiclassical Equations for Weakly Inhomogeneous Cosmologies
The in-in effective action formalism is used to derive the semiclassical
correction to Einstein's equations due to a massless scalar quantum field
conformally coupled to small gravitational perturbations in spatially flat
cosmological models. The vacuum expectation value of the stress tensor of the
quantum field is directly derived from the renormalized in-in effective action.
The usual in-out effective action is also discussed and it is used to compute
the probability of particle creation. As one application, the stress tensor of
a scalar field around a static cosmic string is derived and the backreaction
effect on the gravitational field of the string is discussed.Comment: 35 pages, UAB-FT 316, Latex (uses a4wide.sty, a4.sty included in the
file)(replaced due to tex problems
Lopinavir/Ritonavir and Darunavir/Cobicistat in Hospitalized COVID-19 Patients: Findings From the Multicenter Italian CORIST Study
Background: Protease inhibitors have been considered as possible therapeutic agents for COVID-19 patients. Objectives: To describe the association between lopinavir/ritonavir (LPV/r) or darunavir/cobicistat (DRV/c) use and in-hospital mortality in COVID-19 patients. Study Design: Multicenter observational study of COVID-19 patients admitted in 33 Italian hospitals. Medications, preexisting conditions, clinical measures, and outcomes were extracted from medical records. Patients were retrospectively divided in three groups, according to use of LPV/r, DRV/c or none of them. Primary outcome in a time-to event analysis was death. We used Cox proportional-hazards models with inverse probability of treatment weighting by multinomial propensity scores. Results: Out of 3,451 patients, 33.3% LPV/r and 13.9% received DRV/c. Patients receiving LPV/r or DRV/c were more likely younger, men, had higher C-reactive protein levels while less likely had hypertension, cardiovascular, pulmonary or kidney disease. After adjustment for propensity scores, LPV/r use was not associated with mortality (HR = 0.94, 95% CI 0.78 to 1.13), whereas treatment with DRV/c was associated with a higher death risk (HR = 1.89, 1.53 to 2.34, E-value = 2.43). This increased risk was more marked in women, in elderly, in patients with higher severity of COVID-19 and in patients receiving other COVID-19 drugs. Conclusions: In a large cohort of Italian patients hospitalized for COVID-19 in a real-life setting, the use of LPV/r treatment did not change death rate, while DRV/c was associated with increased mortality. Within the limits of an observational study, these data do not support the use of LPV/r or DRV/c in COVID-19 patients
VIII Encuentro de Docentes e Investigadores en Historia del Diseño, la Arquitectura y la Ciudad
Acta de congresoLa conmemoración de los cien años de la Reforma Universitaria de 1918 se presentó como una ocasión propicia para debatir el rol de la historia, la teoría y la crítica en la formación y en la práctica profesional de diseñadores, arquitectos y urbanistas.
En ese marco el VIII Encuentro de Docentes e Investigadores en Historia del Diseño, la Arquitectura y la Ciudad constituyó un espacio de intercambio y reflexión cuya realización ha sido posible gracias a la colaboración entre Facultades de Arquitectura, Urbanismo y Diseño de la Universidad Nacional y la Facultad de Arquitectura de la Universidad Católica de Córdoba, contando además con la activa participación de mayoría de las Facultades, Centros e Institutos de Historia de la Arquitectura del país y la región.
Orientado en su convocatoria tanto a docentes como a estudiantes de Arquitectura y Diseño Industrial de todos los niveles de la FAUD-UNC promovió el debate de ideas a partir de experiencias concretas en instancias tales como mesas temáticas de carácter interdisciplinario, que adoptaron la modalidad de presentación de ponencias, entre otras actividades.
En el ámbito de VIII Encuentro, desarrollado en la sede Ciudad Universitaria de Córdoba, se desplegaron numerosas posiciones sobre la enseñanza, la investigación y la formación en historia, teoría y crítica del diseño, la arquitectura y la ciudad; sumándose el aporte realizado a través de sus respectivas conferencias de Ana Clarisa Agüero, Bibiana Cicutti, Fernando Aliata y Alberto Petrina. El conjunto de ponencias que se publican en este Repositorio de la UNC son el resultado de dos intensas jornadas de exposiciones, cuyos contenidos han posibilitado actualizar viejos dilemas y promover nuevos debates.
El evento recibió el apoyo de las autoridades de la FAUD-UNC, en especial de la Secretaría de Investigación y de la Biblioteca de nuestra casa, como así también de la Facultad de Arquitectura de la UCC; va para todos ellos un especial agradecimiento