5,193 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
The rise of the millennial cohort : a case study of the effects on San Francisco’s rental housing market
This report studies the rise of the millennial cohort and the effects an influx of young people may be having on San Francisco’s rental housing stock. This cohort is the largest since the Baby Boom generation. With delayed household formation in the wake of the economic recession, they are only now beginning to express their household preferences that have thus far proven to be unconventional compared to those of prior generations. Instead of buying homes in the suburbs, many are moving toward urban centers where they can live close to work and play. In the media, millennials have been stigmatized for causing gentrification as they move into once affordable working class neighborhoods. Many move to these neighborhoods for their cultural vibrancy but end up being blamed for displacing those who created it. San Francisco prior to the millennial trend had already had its own unique affordable housing challenges and has always been one of the most expensive cities in the country. However in recent years, housing costs have skyrocketed. There are many pieces to the puzzle but this report will research what possible pressures the millennial cohort may be having on San Francisco’s most recent wave of gentrification. If the case is significant, it could provide insight in finding much needed solutions to San Francisco’s affordable housing problem.Community and Regional Plannin
Recommended from our members
Building resilient communities in Belize through climate-smart agricultural practices
Indigenous communities have always coexisted with nature. Their subsistence has had a dependence on the heightened stewardship of the natural environment, requiring that their farming practices evolve and adapt to today’s rapidly changing environment. As the effects of climate change become more obvious in weather pattern alterations influencing agricultural yields, so do the resilient farming practices that are being adapted to strengthen the agricultural sector. Since forests are sources of livelihoods for Mayan communities, agricultural advances promoting forest conservation and good governance are viewed as socially and environmentally responsive approaches to rural development. Cacao-based agroforestry is a long-term solution to improve our forests’ health and livelihoods in southern Belize. This system allows for the development of entrepreneurship opportunities through small-scale business models in agrotourism that highlight the cultural and biodiversity richness in these communities. The incorporation of apiculture and Inga alley cropping ensure that traditional crops such as corn, beans, and vegetables can be continuously cultivated, decreasing the deforestation rate, hence conserving our landscape and its ecosystem. These practices involve the growing of staples for the organized communities, who are embracing ecofriendly solutions for a sustainable future. The experience and knowledge developed within the communities have resulted in the development and application of climate-smart solutions and adaptation mechanisms that ensure livelihoods continue to thrive. These local initiatives establish an easy-to-replicate forest governance model, influencing regional and even national solutions to building climate-resilient forest communities in the Maya Golden Landscape
Foreign Investments in Philippine Agriculture
This article measures the amount of foreign participation, direct and indirecin Philippine agriculture. However, due to insufficient time and inadequate data, its aim has been reduced to aid further research on the effects of foreign participation in Philippine agriculture.agriculture sector, investment
Global and regional estimates of violence against women
The report presents a global systematic review of scientific data on the prevalence of two forms of violence against women: violence by an intimate partner (intimate partner violence) and sexual violence by someone other than a partner (non-partner sexual violence).
It shows global and regional estimates of the prevalence of these two forms of violence, using data from around the world.
The report details the effects of partner and non-partner sexual violence on several aspects of women’s health. It shows that women who have experienced intimate partner violence have higher rates of depression, HIV, injury and death, and are more likely to have low birth weight babies, than those who haven’t. Though research on the health effects of non-partner sexual violence is more limited, the evidence clearly shows that sexual violence has both long- and short-term debilitating effects on women’s mental health and well-being.
Report developed by the World Health Organization (WHO), the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LSHTM) and the South African Medical Research Council (MRC)
Foreign Investments in Philippine Agriculture
This article measures the amount of foreign participation, direct and indirecin Philippine agriculture. However, due to insufficient time and inadequate data, its aim has been reduced to aid further research on the effects of foreign participation in Philippine agriculture.agriculture sector, investment
Computational screening of magnetocaloric alloys
An exciting development over the past few decades has been the use of
high-throughput computational screening as a means of identifying promising
candidate materials for a variety of structural or functional properties.
Experimentally, it is often found that the highest-performing materials contain
substantial atomic site disorder. These are frequently overlooked in
high-throughput computational searches however, due to difficulties in dealing
with materials that do not possess simple, well-defined crystallographic unit
cells. Here we demonstrate that the screening of magnetocaloric materials with
the help of the density functional theory-based magnetic deformation proxy can
be extended to systems with atomic site disorder. This is accomplished by
thermodynamic averaging of the magnetic deformation for ordered supercells
across a solid solution. We show that the highly non-monotonic magnetocaloric
properties of the disordered solid solutions Mn(CoFe)Ge and
(MnNi)CoGe are successfully captured using this method.Comment: Main text: 8 pages, 6 figures. Supplemental Material: 2 pages, 2
figure
Transformative Professional Development and the Promotion of Literacy Through Culturally Responsive Pedagogy
This article recounts a narrative of professional transformation inspired by the works of Paulo Freire and Gloria Ladson-Billings and advanced by a participatory action research (PAR) project. The PAR team for this case study, consisting of the university teacher educator as a “coach” and a high school classroom teacher along with her students, examines the use of community-based knowledge in a form of corrido (ballads) studies. In this process, the ballads become the basis for learners’ engagement with literacy activities in the context of what is known as a heritage language Spanish class. The analysis focuses on the process of designing a culturally relevant pedagogy and ensuring its effectiveness through the examination of pre and postwriting samples and students’ fluid identification with various ethnic labels
Embodied Prayer in Tommy Orange’s There There: Reaching the All-The-Way-There Place
Christina Garcia Lopez considers embodied prayer as a place for belonging in There There by Tommy Orange instead of places that are geographically rooted
Do giant barnacles contribute to deep-water biogenic reef formation in Maltese waters?
Deep-sea ROV surveys in the west Malta Graben allowed re-evaluation of previous work on the association of the giant barnacle, Pachylasma giganteum, with cold-water corals and other habitat-forming species, and this species’ contribution to formation of biogenic structures. While only a minor contributor to habitat architecture when anthozoans and other large sessile species are dominant, P. giganteum may become a habitat-former in the absence of competing species.peer-reviewe
Global and Regional Estimates of Violence Against Women: Prevalence and Health Effects of Intimate Partner Violence and Non-Partner Sexual Violence
Violence against women is a significant public health problem, as well as a fundamental violation of women's human rights.This report, developed by the World Health Organization, the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and the South African Medical Research Council presents the first global systematic review and synthesis of the body of scientific data on the prevalence of two forms of violence against women -- violence by an intimate partner (intimate partner violence) and sexual violence by someone other than a partner (nonpartner sexual violence). It shows, for the first time, aggregated global and regional prevalence estimates of these two forms of violence, generated using population data from all over the world that have been compiled in a systematic way. The report also details the effects of violence on women's physical, sexual and reproductive, and mental health.The findings are striking:* overall, 35% of women worldwide have experienced either physical and/or sexual intimate partner violence or non-partner sexual violence. While there are many other forms of violence that women may be exposed to, this already represents a large proportion of the world's women;* most of this violence is intimate partner violence. Worldwide, almost one third (30%) of all women who have been in a relationship have experienced physical and/or sexual violence by their intimate partner. In some regions, 38% of women have experienced intimate partner violence;* globally, as many as 38% of all murders of women are committed by intimate partners;* women who have been physically or sexually abused by their partners report higher rates of a number of important health problems. For example, they are 16% more likely to have a low-birth-weight baby. They are more than twice as likely to have an abortion, almost twice as likely to experience depression, and, in some regions, are 1.5 times more likely to acquire HIV, as compared to women who have not experienced partner violence;* globally, 7% of women have been sexually assaulted by someone other than a partner. There are fewer data available on the health effects of non-partner sexual violence. However, the evidence that does exist reveals that women who have experienced this form of violence are 2.3 times more likely to have alcohol use disorders and 2.6 times more likely to experience depression or anxiety.There is a clear need to scale up efforts across a range of sectors, both to prevent violence from happening in the first place and to provide necessary services for women experiencing violence
- …