21,758 research outputs found
The Two Futures of Governing: Decentering and Recentering Processes in Governing. IHS Political Science Series Paper No. 114, January 2008
Reforms of the public sector have helped create a more efficient and effective public sector, but also have created a number of problems. Both, the New Public Management and “governance” reforms have contributed to the contemporary problems in governing. These problems have been political to a great extent, reflecting the tendency to emphasize administrative rather than democratic values. Governments have begun to react to the real and perceived problems within the public sector by developing a number of “meta-governance” instruments that can help steer public organizations but which involve less direct command and control. This paper addresses the contemporary governance tasks of restoring political direction and policy coherence while at the same supporting the autonomy of public organizations, and the involvement of policy networks, in governing
Equilibrium relationships for non-equilibrium chemical dependencies
In contrast to common opinion, it is shown that equilibrium constants
determine the time-dependent behavior of particular ratios of concentrations
for any system of reversible first-order reactions. Indeed, some special ratios
actually coincide with the equilibrium constant at any moment in time. This is
established for batch reactors, and similar relations hold for steady-state
plug-flow reactors, replacing astronomic time by residence time. Such
relationships can be termed time invariants of chemical kinetics
Environmental Volunteering: Motivations, Modes and Outcomes
Volunteers play a key role in natural resource management: their commitment, time and labour constitute a major contribution towards managing environments in Australia and throughout the world. From the point of view of environmental managers much interest has focussed on defining tasks suitable to volunteers. However, we argue that an improved understanding of what motivates volunteers is required to sustain volunteer commitments to environmental management in the long term. This is particularly important given that multiple government programs rely heavily on volunteers in Australia, a phenomenon also noted in the UK, Canada, and the USA. Whilst there is considerable research on volunteering in other sectors (e.g. health), there has been relatively little attention paid to understanding environmental volunteering. Drawing on the literature from other sectors and environmental volunteering where available, we present a set of six broad motivations underpinning environmental volunteers and five different modes that environmental volunteering is manifested. We developed and refined the sets of motivations and modes through a pilot study involving interviews with volunteers and their coordinators from environmental groups in Sydney and the Bass Coast. The pilot study data emphasise the importance of promoting community education as a major focus of environmental volunteer groups and demonstrate concerns over the fine line between supporting and abusing volunteers given their role in delivering environmental outcomes.environment, volunteering, motivation, Natural Resource Management (NRM)
Heart-Lung Interactions in Aerospace Medicine
Few of the heart-lung interactions that are discussed have been studied in any detail in the aerospace environment, but is seems that many such interactions must occur in the setting of altered accelerative loadings and pressure breathing. That few investigations are in progress suggests that clinical and academic laboratory investigators and aerospace organizations are further apart than during the pioneering work on pressure breathing and acceleration tolerance in the 1940s. The purpose is to reintroduce some of the perennial problems of aviation physiology as well as some newer aerospace concerns that may be of interest. Many possible heart-lung interactions are pondered, by necessity often drawing on data from within the aviation field, collected before the modern understanding of these interactions developed, or on recent laboratory data that may not be strictly applicable. In the field of zero-gravity effects, speculation inevitably outruns the sparse available data
Cytoskeletal turnover and Myosin contractility drive cell autonomous oscillations in a model of Drosophila Dorsal Closure
Oscillatory behaviour in force-generating systems is a pervasive phenomenon
in cell biology. In this work, we investigate how oscillations in the
actomyosin cytoskeleton drive cell shape changes during the process of Dorsal
Closure, a morphogenetic event in Drosophila embryo development whereby
epidermal continuity is generated through the pulsatile apical area reduction
of cells constituting the amnioserosa (AS) tissue. We present a theoretical
model of AS cell dynamics by which the oscillatory behaviour arises due to a
coupling between active Myosin-driven forces, actin turnover and cell
deformation. Oscillations in our model are cell-autonomous and are modulated by
neighbour coupling, and our model accurately reproduces the oscillatory
dynamics of AS cells and their amplitude and frequency evolution. A key
prediction arising from our model is that the rate of actin turnover and Myosin
contractile force must increase during DC in order to reproduce the decrease in
amplitude and period of cell area oscillations observed in vivo. This
prediction opens up new ways to think about the molecular underpinnings of AS
cell oscillations and their link to net tissue contraction and suggests the
form of future experimental measurements.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figures; added references, modified and corrected Figs. 1
and 3, corrected typos, expanded discussio
Fiduciary Duty And Implied Promises In Prospectus - United Funds, Inc. v. Carter Products,Inc.
Neurals Networks for Projecting Named Entities from English to Ewondo
Named entity recognition is an important task in natural language processing.
It is very well studied for rich language, but still under explored for
low-resource languages. The main reason is that the existing techniques
required a lot of annotated data to reach good performance. Recently, a new
distributional representation of words has been proposed to project named
entities from a rich language to a low-resource one. This representation has
been coupled to a neural network in order to project named entities from
English to Ewondo, a Bantu language spoken in Cameroon. Although the proposed
method reached appreciable results, the size of the used neural network was too
large compared to the size of the dataset. Furthermore the impact of the model
parameters has not been studied. In this paper, we show experimentally that the
same results can be obtained using a smaller neural network. We also emphasize
the parameters that are highly correlated to the network performance. This work
is a step forward to build a reliable and robust network architecture for named
entity projection in low resource languages
Analytic results for two-loop Yang-Mills
Recent Developments in computing very specific helicity amplitudes in two
loop QCD are presented. The techniques focus upon the singular structure of the
amplitude rather than on a diagramatic and integration approachComment: Talk presented at 13th International Symposium on Radiative
Corrections, 24-29 September, 2017,St. Gilgen, Austria, 9 page
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