508 research outputs found
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A scoping study on the functioning of commodity markets
Commodity production, whether for export or for domestic and subsistence consumption, plays a dominant role in sustaining the livelihoods of many millions of small producers throughout the developing world, as well as greatly influencing the incomes received by intermediaries, processors and governments. Over the past fifteen years, the liberalisation of commodity markets in many countries has had a major impact on smallholder operations and created many new challenges. While market liberalisation and the associated new international policy environment has created many opportunities for commodity sector participants, the price and financial risks have increased and new systems are needed to reduce the severe constraints to smallholder development and improve their livelihoods. Extensive research has shown that in many countries there is still relatively little understanding of the new marketing conditions and problems faced by smallholder commodity producers and intermediaries. The major objectives of this scoping study are: a) to identify the opportunities and constraints created by the liberalisation and globalisation of commodity markets, particularly for the smallholder sector (Part 1 ); (b) to provide an initial assessment of possible options and solutions to overcome these marketing constraints within the current international policy environment and thus improve the functioning of markets (Part 2); (c) to outline areas and strategies for possible future work aimed at improving the functioning of markets in favour of smallholders and, thus, improving their livelihoods
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Strategies for the development of a competitive pyrethrum-based pesticide sector in Kenya. Final report (NRI report no. 2695)
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Economic viability of Brazil nut trading in Peru (NRI report no. 2520)
DFID's Forestry Research Programme is funding a three-year project to research the role that ethical trade can play in improving the lives of forest dependent people in developing countries. The project asks fundamental questions about whether such trade can deliver appropriate benefits, how effectively current ethical initiatives operate, and what practical steps can be taken to improve performance. The research summarised in this report forms one of three comparative studies that will address the questions of how current ethical trade practitioners operate in the forest products context and whether the trade brings incremental benefits to forest dependent people. It examines ethical trade of brazil nuts in the context of Candela, an alternative trade organisation operating in Peru. Evidence was gathered on the type of financial improvements that Candela brings to brazil nut collectors, the size of these benefits, and how the organisation manages to deliver them. The research also analyses the international part of the ethical brazil nut trading chain and draws conclusions on the appropriateness of the commodity for ethical trade. The basis for the study is a comparison with the conventional brazil nut trade. A separate study conducted by a social development expert examines the impact that ethical trading has had on the brazil nut collectors in Peru
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Value chains: lessons from Kenya tea and Indonesia cocoa sectors. Summary (The Resource Centre In Focus series 3)
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Value chains: lessons from Kenya tea and Indonesia cocoa sectors. Report (The Resource Centre In Focus series 3)
Trace element cycling in a subterranean estuary : part 2. Geochemistry of the pore water
Author Posting. © The Authors, 2005. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Elsevier B.V. for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 70 (2006): 811-826, doi:10.1016/j.gca.2005.10.019.Submarine groundwater discharge (SGD) is an important source of dissolved elements to
the ocean, yet little is known regarding the chemical reactions that control their flux from sandy
coastal aquifers. The net flux of elements from SGD to the coastal ocean is dependent on
biogeochemical reactions in the groundwater-seawater mixing zone, recently termed the
"subterranean estuary". This paper is the second in a two part series on the biogeochemistry of
the Waquoit Bay coastal aquifer/subterranean estuary. The first paper addressed the
biogeochemistry of Fe, Mn, P, Ba, U, and Th from the perspective of the sediment composition
of cores (Charette et al., 2005). This paper uses pore water data from the subterranean estuary,
along with Bay surface water data, to establish a more detailed view into the estuarine chemistry
and the chemical diagenesis of Fe, Mn, U, Ba and Sr in coastal aquifers.
Nine high-resolution pore water (groundwater) profiles were collected from the head of
the bay during July 2002. There were non-conservative additions of both Ba and Sr in the
salinity transition zone of the subterranean estuary. However, the extent of Sr release was
significantly less than that of its alkaline earth neighbor Ba. Pore water Ba concentrations
approached 3000 nM compared with 25-50 nM in the surface waters of the bay; the pore water
Sr-salinity distribution suggests a 26% elevation in the amount of Sr added to the subterranean
estuary. The release of dissolved Ba to the mixing zone of surface estuaries is frequently
attributed to an ion-exchange process whereby seawater cations react with Ba from river
suspended clay mineral particles at low to intermediate salinity. Results presented here suggest
that reductive dissolution of Mn oxides, in conjunction with changes in salinity, may also be an
important process in maintaining high concentrations of Ba in the pore water of subterranean
estuaries.
In contrast, pore water U was significantly depleted in the subterranean estuary, a result
of SGD-driven circulation of seawater through reducing permeable sediments. This finding is
supported by surface water concentrations of U in the bay, which were significantly depleted in
U compared with adjacent coastal waters. Using a global estimate of SGD, we calculate U
removal in subterranean estuaries at 20 x 106 mol U y-1, which is the same order of magnitude as
the other major U sinks for the ocean. Our results suggest a need to revisit and reevaluate the
oceanic budgets for elements that are likely influenced by SGD-associated processes.This research was supported by the National Science Foundation (OCE-0095384) to M.A.C. and
E.R.S., and a WHOI Coastal Ocean Institute Fellowship to M.A.C
Gender difference in symptomatic radiographic knee osteoarthritis in the Knee Clinical Assessment â CAS(K): A prospective study in the general population
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>A recent study of adults aged â„50 years reporting knee pain found an excess of radiographic knee osteoarthritis (knee ROA) in symptomatic males compared to females. This was independent of age, BMI and other clinical signs and symptoms. Since this finding contradicts many previous studies, our objective was to explore four possible explanations for this gender difference: X-ray views, selection, occupation and non-articular conditions.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>A community-based prospective study. 819 adults aged â„50 years reporting knee pain in the previous 12 months were recruited by postal questionnaires to a research clinic involving plain radiography (weight-bearing posteroanterior semiflexed, supine skyline and lateral views), clinical interview and physical examination. Any knee ROA, ROA severity, tibiofemoral joint osteoarthritis (TJOA) and patellofemoral joint osteoarthritis (PJOA) were defined using all three radiographic views. Occupational class was derived from current or last job title. Proportions of each gender with symptomatic knee ROA were expressed as percentages, stratified by age; differences between genders were expressed as percentage differences with 95% confidence intervals.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>745 symptomatic participants were eligible and had complete X-ray data. Males had a higher occurrence (77%) of any knee ROA than females (61%). In 50â64 year olds, the excess in men was mild knee OA (particularly PJOA); in â„65 year olds, the excess was both mild and moderate/severe knee OA (particularly combined TJOA/PJOA). This male excess persisted when using the posteroanterior view only (64% vs. 52%). The lowest level of participation in the clinic was symptomatic females aged 65+. Within each occupational class there were more males with symptomatic knee ROA than females. In those aged 50â64 years, non-articular conditions were equally common in both genders although, in those aged 65+, they occurred more frequently in symptomatic females (41%) than males (31%).</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>The excess of knee ROA among symptomatic males in this study seems unlikely to be attributable to the use of comprehensive X-ray views. Although prior occupational exposures and the presence of non-articular conditions cannot be fully excluded, selective non-participation bias seems the most likely explanation. This has implications for future study design.</p
Fermi Large Area Telescope observations of the Vela-X Pulsar Wind Nebula
We report on gamma-ray observations in the off-pulse window of the Vela
pulsar PSR B0833-45, using 11 months of survey data from the Fermi Large Area
Telescope (LAT). This pulsar is located in the 8 degree diameter Vela supernova
remnant, which contains several regions of non-thermal emission detected in the
radio, X-ray and gamma-ray bands. The gamma-ray emission detected by the LAT
lies within one of these regions, the 2*3 degrees area south of the pulsar
known as Vela-X. The LAT flux is signicantly spatially extended with a best-fit
radius of 0.88 +/- 0.12 degrees for an assumed radially symmetric uniform disk.
The 200 MeV to 20 GeV LAT spectrum of this source is well described by a
power-law with a spectral index of 2.41 +/- 0.09 +/- 0.15 and integral flux
above 100 MeV of (4.73 +/- 0.63 +/- 1.32) * 10^{-7} cm^{-2} s^{-1}. The first
errors represent the statistical error on the fit parameters, while the second
ones are the systematic uncertainties. Detailed morphological and spectral
analyses give strong constraints on the energetics and magnetic field of the
pulsar wind nebula (PWN) system and favor a scenario with two distinct electron
populations.Comment: 21 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in Astrophysical
Journa
"If we use the strength of diversity among researchers we can only improve the quality and impact of our research": Issues of equality, diversity, inclusion, and transparency in the process of applying for research funding
This paper sets out the recommendations that have emerged from a six-month-long exploration and discussion of the processes that take place before research is submitted for funding: the âpre-awardâ environment. Our work concentrated on how this environment is experienced by researchers at all career stages and from a variety of backgrounds, demographics, and disciplines, as well as by research managers and research support professionals. In the later stages of our exploration, representatives from research funders were also involved in the discussions.
The primary component of this project was an analysis of pre-award activities and processes at UK universities, using information collated from workshops with researchers and research management and support staff. The findings of this analysis were presented as a workflow diagram, which was then used to surface issues relating to equality, diversity, inclusion, and transparency in context. The workflow diagram and the issues highlighted by it were used to structure discussions at a symposium for a range of research stakeholders, held in Bristol, UK, in January 2023. The recommendations set out in this paper are drawn from discussions that took place at that event.
This paper is not an exhaustive landscape analysis, nor a review of existing research and practice in the area of pre-award processes or of recent thinking on the topics of equality, diversity, and inclusion (EDI). Instead, it aims to summarise and encapsulate the suggestions put forward by the stakeholders during the symposium. These recommendations, from experienced professionals working in the field, are based on their encounters with the issues raised in the project. They do not solely relate to those working on pre-award processes, but may also apply to funders, policymakers, university leaders, and professional associations, since many of the challenges flagged in our research are systemic and cultural, and reach far beyond the research office
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