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Markets and Violence
In this commentary, I address different forms of corporate violence, in particular how some contemporary corporate practices result in violence. Violence is carried out often without impunity by a market-state nexus that enables accumulation by dispossession. Structural violence concentrates power on certain groups while creating a class of disposable labour. Epistemic violence involves using language and law to disempower specific groups of people. The state often uses instrumental violence to quell resistance. I discuss how violence operates in the political economy by discussing conflicts in the extractive industries
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Modern Slavery Is an Enabling Condition of Global Neoliberal Capitalism: Commentary on Modern Slavery in Business
A Study on the structure of proton
The structure function of the proton has been investigated and has been found
to possess the power law behaviour in conformity with the empirical fits to the
experimental findings. We have estimated F(x, Q)/F(x,
Q) with the anomalous dimension D predicted from the
statistical model as an input and the result is found to be in good agreement
with the recent data available in the deep inelastic region.Comment: 3 page
Holographic Brownian Motion in 1+1 Dimensions
We study the motion of a stochastic string in the background of a BTZ black
hole. In the 1+1 dimensional boundary theory this corresponds to a very heavy
external particle (e.g, a quark), interacting with the fields of a CFT at
finite temperature, and describing Brownian motion. The equations of motion for
a string in the BTZ background can be solved exactly. Thus we can use
holographic techniques to obtain the Schwinger-Keldysh Green function for the
boundary theory for the force acting on the quark. We write down the
generalized Langevin equation describing the motion of the external particle
and calculate the drag and the thermal mass shift. Interestingly we obtain
dissipation even at zero temperature for this 1+1 system. Even so, this does
not violate boost (Lorentz) invariance because the drag force on a constant
velocity quark continues to be zero. Furthermore since the Green function is
exact, it is possible to write down an effective membrane action, and thus a
Langevin equation, located at a "stretched horizon" at an arbitrary finite
distance from the horizon.Comment: 39 pages, 4 figures; New discussion on holographic RG in subsection
5.1 and new section 6 on different time scales. Modified discussion on zero
temperature dissipation in section 3. Typos corrected , references added.
Revised version to appear in Nucl. Phys.
Interpolating Action for Strings and Membranes - a Study of Symmetries in the Constrained Hamiltonian Approach
A master action for bosonic strings and membranes, interpolating between the
Nambu--Goto and Polyakov formalisms, is discussed. The role of the gauge
symmetries vis-\`{a}-vis reparametrization symmetries of the various actions is
analyzed by a constrained Hamiltonian approach. This analysis reveals the
difference between strings and higher branes, which is essentially tied to a
degree of freedom count. The cosmological term for membranes follows naturally
in this scheme. The conncetion of our aproach with the Arnowitt--Deser--Misner
representation in general relativity is illuminated.Comment: LaTex, 23 pages; discussion on ADM representation included and new
references adde
Star formation in evolving molecular clouds
Molecular clouds are the principle stellar nurseries of our universe, keeping
them in the focus of both observational and theoretical studies. From
observations, some of the key properties of molecular clouds are well known but
many questions regarding their evolution and star formation activity remain
open. While numerical simulations feature a large number and complexity of
involved physical processes, this plenty of effects may hide the fundamentals
that determine the evolution of molecular clouds and enable the formation of
stars. Purely analytical models, on the other hand, tend to suffer from rough
approximations or a lack of completeness, limiting their predictive power. In
this paper, we present a model that incorporates central concepts of
astrophysics as well as reliable results from recent simulations of molecular
clouds and their evolutionary paths. Based on that, we construct a
self-consistent semi-analytical framework that describes the formation,
evolution and star formation activity of molecular clouds, including a number
of feedback effects to account for the complex processes inside those objects.
The final equation system is solved numerically but at much lower computational
expense than, e.g., hydrodynamical descriptions of comparable systems. The
model presented in this paper agrees well with a broad range of observational
results, showing that molecular cloud evolution can be understood as an
interplay between accretion, global collapse, star formation and stellar
feedback.Comment: 11 pages, 11 figures. Accepted for publication in A&
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