1,024 research outputs found
Labour after Land Reform: The Precarious Livelihoods of Former Farmworkers in Zimbabwe
What happens to labour when major redistributive land reform restructures a system of settler colonial agriculture? This article examines the livelihoods of former farmworkers on largeâscale commercial farms who still live in farm compounds after Zimbabwe's land reform. Through a mix of surveys and inâdepth biographical interviews, four different types of livelihood are identified, centred on differences in land access. These show how diverse, but often precarious, livelihoods are being carved out, representing the âfragmented classes of labourâ in a restructured agrarian economy. The analysis highlights the tensions between gaining new freedoms, notably through access to land, and being subject to new livelihood vulnerabilities. The findings are discussed in relation to wider questions about the informalization of the economy and the role of labour and employment in a postâsettler agrarian economy, where the old âfarmworkerâ label no longer applies
Ethnic Minorities and their Health Needs: Crisis of Perception and Behaviours
There is considerable evidence to suggest that racial and ethnic disparities exist in the provision of emergency and wider healthcare. The importance of collecting patient ethnic data has received attention in literature across the world and eliminating ethnic and racial health equalities is one of the primary aims of healthcare providers internationally. The poor health status of certain racial and ethnic groups has been well documented. The improvement of racial and ethnic disparities in healthcare is at the forefront of many public health agendas. This article addresses important policy, practice, and cultural issues confronted by the pre-hospital emergency care setup. This aspect of care plays a unique role in the healthcare safety net in providing a service to a very diverse population, including members of ethnic and racial minorities. Competent decision making by the emergency care practitioners requires patient-specific information and the health provider's prior medical knowledge and clinical training. The article reviews the current ethnicity trends in the UK along with international evidence linking ethnicity and health inequalities. The study argues that serious difficulties will arise between the health provider and the patient if they come from different backgrounds and therefore experience difficulties in cross-cultural communication. This adversely impacts on the quality of diagnostic and clinical decision making for minority patients. The article offers few strategies to address health inequalities in emergency care and concludes by arguing that much more needs to be done to ensure that we are hearing the voices of more diverse groups, groups who are often excluded from engagement through barriers such as language or mobility difficulties
Convergence calls: multimedia storytelling at British news websites
This article uses qualitative interviews with senior editors and managers from a selection of the UK's national online news providers to describe and analyse their current experimentation with multimedia and video storytelling. The results show that, in a period of declining newspaper readership and TV news viewing, editors are keen to embrace new technologies, which are seen as being part of the future of news. At the same time, text is still reported to be the cornerstone for news websites, leading to changes in the grammar and function of news video when used online. The economic rationale for convergence is examined and the article investigates the partnerships sites have entered into in order to be able to serve their audience with video content. In-house video is complementing syndicated content, and the authors examine the resulting developments in newsroom training and recruitment practices. The article provides journalism and interactive media scholars with case studies on the changes taking place in newsrooms as a result of the shift towards multimedia, multiplatform news consumption
Comparing nuclear power trajectories in Germany and the UK: from âregimes' to âdemocraciesâ in sociotechnical transitions and Discontinuities
This paper focuses on arguably the single most striking contrast in contemporary major energy politics in Europe (and even the developed world as a whole): the starkly differing civil nuclear policies of Germany and the UK. Germany is seeking entirely to phase out nuclear power by 2022. Yet the UK advocates a ânuclear renaissanceâ, promoting the most ambitious new nuclear construction programme in Western Europe.Here,this paper poses a simple yet quite fundamental question: what are the particular divergent conditions most strongly implicated in the contrasting developments in these two countries. With nuclear playing such an iconic role in historical discussions over technological continuity and transformation, answering this may assist in wider understandings of sociotechnical incumbency and discontinuity in the burgeoning field ofâsustainability transitionsâ. To this end, an âabductiveâ approach is taken: deploying nine potentially relevant criteria for understanding the different directions pursued in Germany and the UK. Together constituted by 30 parameters spanning literatures related to socio-technical regimes in general as well as nuclear technology in particular, the criteria are divided into those that are âinternalâ and âexternalâ to the âfocal regime configurationâ of nuclear power and associated âchallenger technologiesâ like renewables.
It is âinternalâ criteria that are emphasised in conventional sociotechnical regime theory, with âexternalâ criteria relatively less well explored. Asking under each criterion whether attempted discontinuation of nuclear power would be more likely in Germany or the UK, a clear picture emerges. âInternalâ criteria suggest attempted nuclear discontinuation should be more likely in the UK than in Germanyâ the reverse of what is occurring.
âExternalâ criteria are more aligned with observed dynamics âespecially those relating to military nuclear commitments and broader âqualities of democracyâ. Despite many differences of framing concerning exactly what constitutes âdemocracyâ, a rich political science literature on this point is unanimous in characterising Germany more positively than the UK. Although based only on a single case,a potentially important question is nonetheless raised as to whether sociotechnical regime theory might usefully give greater attention to the general importance of various aspects of democracy in constituting conditions for significant technological discontinuities and transformations. If so, the policy implications are significant. A number of important areas are identified for future research, including the roles of diverse understandings and specific aspects of democracy and the particular relevance of military nuclear commitmentsâ whose under-discussion in civil nuclear policy literatures raises its own questions of democratic accountability
A tale of two capitalisms: preliminary spatial and historical comparisons of homicide rates in Western Europe and the USA
This article examines comparative homicide rates in the United States and Western Europe in an era of increasingly globalized neoliberal economics. The main finding of this preliminary analysis is that historical and spatial correlations between distinct forms of political economy and homicide rates are consistent enough to suggest that social democratic regimes are more successful at fostering the socio-cultural conditions necessary for reduced homicide rates. Thus Western Europe and all continents and nations should approach the importation of American neo-liberal economic policies with extreme caution. The article concludes by suggesting that the indirect but crucial causal connection between political economy and homicide rates, prematurely pushed into the background of criminological thought during the âcultural turnâ, should be returned to the foreground
Thermopower in the strongly overdoped region of single-layer Bi2Sr2CuO6+d superconductor
The evolution of the thermoelectric power S(T) with doping, p, of
single-layer Bi2Sr2CuO6+d ceramics in the strongly overdoped region is studied
in detail. Analysis in term of drag and diffusion contributions indicates a
departure of the diffusion from the T-linear metallic behavior. This effect is
increased in the strongly overdoped range (p~0.2-0.28) and should reflect the
proximity of some topological change.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Forty years of Landscape research
Papers of four decades published in Landscape Research are reviewed in
order to chronicle the journalâs development and to assess the academic
performance of the journal relative to its own aims. Landscape Research
intends to reach a wide audience, to have a broad thematic coverage and to
publish different types of papers with various methodological orientations.
Cutting across these first aims are the interdisciplinary ambition of the journal,
and its overall focus on landscape. These aims are evaluated based upon
categorisation of article content, authorship and methodology, using data
derived through interpretative inquiry and quantitative analyses. The results
tell the story of how Landscape Research has developed from a newsletter
of the Landscape Research Group, mainly aimed at practitioners, into an
interdisciplinary, international journal with academic researchers as its
primary community of interest. The final section discusses the current profile
of the journal and identifies issues for its future direction and development
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