721 research outputs found
The dense web: local governance and popular participation in Revolutionary Cuba
Drawing on a range of primary and secondary sources, including Cuban scholarship which has been overlooked by other non-Cuban scholars, this thesis traces the evolution of local government and popular participation from the overthrow of the Batista regime in 1959 to the present day, and in so doing, it exposes multiple sites for participation in the business of local governance which are available to the average Cuban citizen.
By examining the municipal election process, mechanisms for close contact between citizens and their elected delegates, and the relationship between the mass organisations and the Communist Party, this study illuminates the interface between state and populace, and demonstrates that popular participation at the level of the community is linked to domestic national policy-making. Furthermore, evidence is presented which demonstrates that the evolution of local Cuban polity is affected though continuous review of local government practice and is itself a participatory process.
Decades of popular participation in local affairs have developed and strengthened the capacity for collective action, and this thesis assesses its contribution to the remarkable survival of Cubaâs socialist project after the collapse of the Soviet bloc.
As the revolutionary leadership expanded opportunities for popular participation whilst continuing to maintain control over decisions it considered were necessary for economic development, for the maintenance of national unity, and for the development of Che Guevaraâs New Man (and Woman), tensions were generated between localism and centralism, and between pragmatism and ideology. Responses to these tensions can be seen in the contemporary Cuban scholarship presented in the final chapter of the thesis.
This thesis makes a sustained case for the importance of local government to the revolutionary leadership and argues that no assessment of the Cuban polity can claim to be comprehensive without taking local government into account
Implementing the Five-A Model of technical refinement: Key roles of the sport psychologist
There is increasing evidence for the significant contribution provided by sport psychologists within applied coaching environments. However, this rarely considers their skills/knowledge being applied when refining athletesâ already learned and well-established motor skills. Therefore, this paper focuses on how a sport psychologist might assist a coach and athlete to implement long-term permanent and pressure proof refinements. It highlights key contributions at each stage of the Five-A Modelâdesigned to deliver these important outcomesâproviding both psychomotor and psychosocial input to the support delivery. By employing these recommendations, sport psychologists can make multiple positive contributions to completion of this challenging task
Penicillin allergy SHACK : Survey of hospital and community knowledge
Aim
Penicillin allergy accounts for the majority of all reported adverse drug reactions in adults and children. Foregoing first-line antibiotic therapy due to penicillin allergy label is associated with an increased prevalence of infections by resistant organisms and longer hospitalisation. Clinician awareness of allergy assessment, referral indications, management of allergy and anaphylaxis is therefore vital but globally lacking. We aim to assess the knowledge of penicillin allergy, assessment and management in Western Australian health professionals.
Methods
An anonymous survey was distributed to pharmacists, nurses and physicians within Western Australian paediatric and adult Hospitals, Community and General Practice.
Results
In total, 487/611 were completed and included in the statistical analysis. Only 62% (301/487) of respondents routinely assessed for patient medication allergies. Of those who assessed allergy, 9% (28/301) of respondents met the Australian standards for allergy assessment. Only 22% (106/487) of participants correctly cited all indications for management with adrenaline in anaphylaxis to antibiotics and 67% (197/292) of physicians rarely or never referred to an allergy service. Paediatric clinicians had an increased understanding of allergy assessment and anaphylaxis management. Recent penicillin allergy education within a 5-year period led to significant improvements in allergy knowledge.
Conclusion
Overall, knowledge, assessment and management of penicillin allergies among practitioners in Western Australia are currently inadequate in adults and paediatric clinicians to provide safe and effective clinical care. The implementation of a targeted education program for WA health professionals is urgently required and is expected to improve clinician knowledge and aid standardised penicillin assessment (de-labelling) practices
Massless Minimally Coupled Fields in De Sitter Space: O(4)-Symmetric States Versus De Sitter Invariant Vacuum
The issue of de Sitter invariance for a massless minimally coupled scalar
field is revisited. Formally, it is possible to construct a de Sitter invariant
state for this case provided that the zero mode of the field is quantized
properly. Here we take the point of view that this state is physically
acceptable, in the sense that physical observables can be computed and have a
reasonable interpretation. In particular, we use this vacuum to derive a new
result: that the squared difference between the field at two points along a
geodesic observer's space-time path grows linearly with the observer's proper
time for a quantum state that does not break de Sitter invariance. Also, we use
the Hadamard formalism to compute the renormalized expectation value of the
energy momentum tensor, both in the O(4) invariant states introduced by Allen
and Follaci, and in the de Sitter invariant vacuum. We find that the vacuum
energy density in the O(4) invariant case is larger than in the de Sitter
invariant case.Comment: TUTP-92-1, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Low-noise AlGaAsSb avalanche photodiodes for 1550 nm light detection
Avalanche photodiodes (APD) can improve the signal to noise ratio in applications such as LIDAR, range finding and optical time domain reflectometry. However, APDs operating at eye-safe wavelengths around 1550 nm currently limit the sensitivity because the APDsâ impact ionization coefficients in the avalanche layers are too similar, leading to poor excess noise performance. The material AlGaAsSb has highly dissimilar impact ionization coefficients (with electrons dominating the avalanche gain) so is an excellent avalanche material for 1550 nm wavelength APDs. We previously reported a 1550 nm wavelength AlGaAsSb SAM APD with extremely low excess noise factors, 1.93 at a gain of 10 and 2.94 at a gain of 20. Using a more optimized design, we have now realized an AlGaAsSb SAM APD with a lower dark current (7 nA at a gain of 10 from a 230 ÎŒm diameter APD), a higher responsivity (0.97 A/W) and a lower excess noise (1.9 at a gain of 40), compared to our previous SAM APD. Noise-equivalent-power (NEP) measurements of our APD with a simple transimpedance amplifier circuit produced an NEP 12 times lower than a state-of-the-art APD under identical test conditions, confirming the advantage of low-noise AlGaAsSb SAM APDs
Monogamy of Correlations vs. Monogamy of Entanglement
A fruitful way of studying physical theories is via the question whether the
possible physical states and different kinds of correlations in each theory can
be shared to different parties. Over the past few years it has become clear
that both quantum entanglement and non-locality (i.e., correlations that
violate Bell-type inequalities) have limited shareability properties and can
sometimes even be monogamous. We give a self-contained review of these results
as well as present new results on the shareability of different kinds of
correlations, including local, quantum and no-signalling correlations. This
includes an alternative simpler proof of the Toner-Verstraete monogamy
inequality for quantum correlations, as well as a strengthening thereof.
Further, the relationship between sharing non-local quantum correlations and
sharing mixed entangled states is investigated, and already for the simplest
case of bi-partite correlations and qubits this is shown to be non-trivial.
Also, a recently proposed new interpretation of Bell's theorem by Schumacher in
terms of shareability of correlations is critically assessed. Finally, the
relevance of monogamy of non-local correlations for secure quantum key
distribution is pointed out, although, and importantly, it is stressed that not
all non-local correlations are monogamous.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures. Invited submission to a special issue of Quantum
Information Processing. v2: Published version. Open acces
A frustrated quantum spin-{\boldmath s} model on the Union Jack lattice with spins {\boldmath s>1/2}
The zero-temperature phase diagrams of a two-dimensional frustrated quantum
antiferromagnetic system, namely the Union Jack model, are studied using the
coupled cluster method (CCM) for the two cases when the lattice spins have spin
quantum number and . The system is defined on a square lattice and
the spins interact via isotropic Heisenberg interactions such that all
nearest-neighbour (NN) exchange bonds are present with identical strength
, and only half of the next-nearest-neighbour (NNN) exchange bonds are
present with identical strength . The bonds are
arranged such that on the unit cell they form the pattern of the
Union Jack flag. Clearly, the NN bonds by themselves (viz., with )
produce an antiferromagnetic N\'{e}el-ordered phase, but as the relative
strength of the frustrating NNN bonds is increased a phase transition
occurs in the classical case () at to a canted ferrimagnetic phase. In the quantum cases considered
here we also find strong evidence for a corresponding phase transition between
a N\'{e}el-ordered phase and a quantum canted ferrimagnetic phase at a critical
coupling for and for . In both cases the ground-state energy and its first
derivative seem continuous, thus providing a typical scenario of a
second-order phase transition at , although the order
parameter for the transition (viz., the average ground-state on-site
magnetization) does not go to zero there on either side of the transition.Comment: 1
Studies of Knock-Out Reactions
Supported by the National Science Foundation and Indiana Universit
Super-Hubble de Sitter Fluctuations and the Dynamical RG
Perturbative corrections to correlation functions for interacting theories in
de Sitter spacetime often grow secularly with time, due to the properties of
fluctuations on super-Hubble scales. This growth can lead to a breakdown of
perturbation theory at late times. We argue that Dynamical Renormalization
Group (DRG) techniques provide a convenient framework for interpreting and
resumming these secularly growing terms. In the case of a massless scalar field
in de Sitter with quartic self-interaction, the resummed result is also less
singular in the infrared, in precisely the manner expected if a dynamical mass
is generated. We compare this improved infrared behavior with large-N
expansions when applicable.Comment: 33 pages, 4 figure
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