1,504 research outputs found

    The Transformative Possibilities of 'Noticing' in Community Gardening and my Life

    Get PDF
    The growing gap between rich and poor and the degradation of the planet are among the systemically generated outcomes increasingly associated with contemporary capitalism. This association is made by scholarly, professional and technical experts and spiritual leaders from across the political spectrum. Among them are Joseph Stiglitz, Vandana Shiva, Bill McKibben and Pope Francis. The negative social impact associated with the privileging of capitalist interests manifest in a globalising corporate logic during the 1990s, was critically documented by Jane Kelsey (1999). In the ongoing pursuit of the neo-liberal agenda globally, Kelsey (2013) argues that significant decisions are often made behind closed doors with little chance of democratic influence, particularly by those who may come to suffer from their ramifications. Popular uprisings, such as the Occupy Wall Street Movement, attest to the widespread concern of many. Activist scholar, Slavoj Žižek (2012) urges the embedding of the occupiersā€™ concerns beyond the visible spectacle of the movement. He urges wider commitment to the transformation of the issues of their concern in the very fabric of daily life. My work presented in this thesis is one attempt to contribute to this call. Through my investigation into the apparent impact of corporate capitalism, I have come to notice ever more acutely, as encouraged by Seo and Creed (2002), the value contradictions within the institutional logics that support capitalism and the logics of other significant institutions that I allow influence on my life. My research drew me towards concurrence with the views of critical organisational theorists such as Deetz (1992) and Dyer, Humphries, Fitzgibbons and Hurd (2014). These theorists provide the proposition that the contemporary form of globalisation is orchestrated through the normalised workings and values of global corporations that spread a competitive ordering, selectively atomise individuals and pit one against the other. I call this the ā€˜dominant order(ing) of daily livesā€™ that draws the privileged and the oppressed into a way of being that sustains privilege and oppression while espousing values of justice. My research contributes to the body of knowledge concerned with how a sense of responsibility and transformative agency may be developed amongst privileged peoples. It is in the projects of community gardening and my life that I have chosen to ā€˜noticeā€™ the prevalence of a mechanistic, functionalist world view that infuses the moral limitations of dominant order. I have been attentive to noticing how this order influences the [un]ethical decisions of daily life. I suggest that increasing the awareness of the privileged to the working of dominant order and to the interconnectedness of life is important to our ability to ā€˜noticeā€™ institutional contradictions and thus the possibilities of our transformation. My attention to ā€˜noticingā€™ has heightened my discomfort with the current institutional arrangements and prompted me to reflect, talk with others, try new things and seek a more attentive way of being. My research endorses the suggestion made by Dyer et al. (2014) that conscientising the privileged to the workings of dominant order, and the ways we are implicated in the maintenance of this ordering, is important work for educators to pursue. Through my research I have identified ideas that may mitigate against concerning assumptions amongst the privileged that ā€˜community gardeningā€™ and the projects of local food are ā€˜naturally virtuousā€™ including: listening to the stories of the oppressed, knowing who we are in the context of these stories, holding our own discomfort and questioning how we may be responsible. As an outcome of my research, I posit that the reprioritisation and valuing of interconnection and ā€˜concern for othersā€™ in the day to day lives of the privileged may be achieved through the development of relational identities, storytelling that highlights interconnection and spiritual ritual. Community gardening can draw the privileged into being with the oppressed; enabling an understanding of shared and common humanity that I suggest is motivating of reflection and the construction of new social interactions. My investigations drew me more deeply into the insights and commitments of people of an indigenous, Earth-centred, life-affirming spiritual tradition who are among those who articulate an interconnected worldview and ways of being human. My research highlights that when commitment is given to a relationship with people of these traditions, those who are largely (but never wholly) colonised to the dominant order may ā€˜noticeā€™ and rediscover the possibilities of interconnected ways of seeing and being human. Listening to the holders of life-affirming traditions can enable ā€˜noticingā€™ of, and resistance to, the dominating ideas of capitalist projections that are mechanistic and competitive in form. In the context of Aotearoa New Zealand, my research suggests that bicultural relationship may be developed by Pākehā through listening to Te Ao Māori authority and engaging in practical actions that support related Māori aspirations. This relationship may interrupt the potential dominance of Pākehā ways of being. My first person action research has involved reflection, ā€˜noticingā€™, conversation and action in dynamic interplay. I have recorded this dynamic interplay and discerned together with others, through ongoing co-inquiry relationship and dialogue, the transformative possibilities of ā€˜noticingā€™ the ways that we, as people who would like to be considered ā€˜justā€™, are human. I have woven a narrative, presented in this report that is compelling to me, to my co-inquirers and to others. I have assessed the value of my inquiry by the way it stirs thinking, reflection and transformative action in those who engage with it. ā€˜Noticingā€™ dominant order and the unconscious stream of oppressive action in the day to day life of the privileged is difficult and challenging work. This work may generate conflict and discomfort for the researcher and the people connected with and through the research. I posit that such discomfort is important to reflection and to developing a form of sensitivity that draws ethical attention to the systemic causes of such degradation that sustains the privilege of many. The potential challenging of privilege that ā€˜noticingā€™ promotes requires a relational dynamic that is open, non-competitive, non-oppositional and potentially inconclusive. Including this Socratic dynamic in research methods, and in ā€˜noticingā€™, is important for researchers whose ability to shed light on the challenging terrain of social change requires relationships of openness and dialogue. When grounded in a critique of dominant order, ā€˜noticingā€™ disturbs otherwise inoculated, rationalised and normalised privileges. Just as the disturbance of soil is necessary for the settling of a new seed, so too is the disturbance of our minds necessary for our awakening and the growth of our ā€˜noticingā€™ and an interconnected worldview. ā€˜Noticingā€™ enables the privileged to identify ways of being human that reprioritise the diminished valuing of interdependency

    Cholecystitis in Pregnancy

    Get PDF
    Biliary tract disease is a relatively uncommon, heterogenous disease in pregnancy. Specifically, acute cholecystitis can be especially difficult to recognize in pregnancy. However, once diagnosed, the initial management plan should be conservative and include antibiotic therapy. Subsequent management depends on the gestational age at diagnosis. Surgical therapy, when indicated, should not be delayed and a planned intervention during the second trimester appears to offer a better outcome than surgery performed under emergent conditions

    Unplanned Donor Legacies: How to Avoid Them, and How One Family Foundation Corrected Course with an Evaluation

    Get PDF
    As funders turn to community change, intentionally addressing the unique power differential between funder and grantee partners and structuring ways to mitigate this imbalance is essential to honest communication. Funder relationships with their grantees impact the legacy of major community initiatives. This article explores this relationship and its effects through the lens of the recent evaluation of one family foundation ā€” the Robins Foundation in Richmond, Virginia ā€” and its follow-up actions. Through a participatory evaluation process, we derived three principal approaches for this donor, and others, to consider in contemplating funder-grantee partnerships and the way these may influence the impact of the work and the likelihood of a positive legacy: build equitable partnerships, set up structures for mutual learning, and evaluate with intent. We will show how the Robins Foundation, a funder committed to continuous learning; its grantee partner, the Partnership for Families; and the evaluators modeled these approaches in the assessment process and how the foundation is recalibrating its approach to grantee partnerships and integrating the three approaches into all of its work

    The Effects of Phonotactic Probability and Neighborhood Density on Adults' Word Learning In Noisy Conditions

    Get PDF
    Purpose: Noisy conditions make auditory processing difficult. This study explores whether noisy conditions impact the effects of phonotactic probability (the likelihood of occurrence of a sound sequence) and neighborhood density (phonological similarity among words) on adultsā€™ word learning. Method: Fifty-eight adults learned nonwords varying in phonotactic probability and neighborhood density in either an unfavorable (0dB Signal-to-Noise Ratio, SNR) or a favorable (+8dB SNR) listening condition. Word learning was assessed in a picture naming task by scoring the proportion of phonemes named correctly. Results: The unfavorable 0dB SNR condition showed a significant interaction between phonotactic probability and neighborhood density in the absence of main effects. Specifically, adults learned more words when phonotactic probability and neighborhood density were both low or both high. The +8dB SNR condition did not show this interaction. These results were inconsistent with those from a prior adult word learning study under quiet listening conditions that showed main effects of word characteristics. Conclusion: As the listening condition worsens, adult word learning benefits from a convergence of phonotactic probability and neighborhood density Clinical implications are discussed for potential populations who experience difficulty with auditory perception or processing making them more vulnerable to noise

    Estimating Signaling Games in International Relations: Problems and Solutions

    Get PDF
    Signaling games are central to the study of politics but often have multiple equilibria, leading to no definitive empirical prediction. We demonstrate that these indeterminacies create substantial problems for currently used maximum likelihood techniques: they fail to uncover the parameters of the canonical crisis-signaling game, regardless of sample size, even if the equilibrium in the game generating the data is unique. To overcome this problem, we propose three estimators that outperform current best practices and are well suited to problems in international relations. We fit a signaling model to data on economic sanctions and find that standard maximum likelihood produces unintuitive estimates that are highly sensitive to modeling or software choices. Our solutions remedy the problems and uncover a novel U-shaped relationship between audience costs and the propensity for leaders to threaten sanctions

    The application of throughflow optimisation to the design of radial and mixed flow turbines

    Get PDF
    Radial and mixed flow turbines are important components of turbochargers in automotive engines. Their aerodynamic design is generally compromised by severe mechanical constraints, to deal with high temperature and unsteady operation, but also by the requirement of low inertia for rapid turbocharger response from low engine speed. Conventionally, the designer deals with these constraints in the preliminary design, using a high degree of empiricism, followed by extensive CFD analysis and geometry optimisation. This paper describes a new approach to the preliminary design using a quasi-3D throughflow method coupled to an optimiser, which allows a more rapid consideration of the design issues before moving on to 3D CFD analysis. The throughflow-based optimisation system was able to increase efficiency by over 3% at the same inertia or to reduce inertia by 20-30% at the same efficiency, compared to a baseline design

    Rest-Frame Ultraviolet to Near Infrared Observations of an Interacting Lyman Break Galaxy at z = 4.42

    Full text link
    We present the rest-frame ultraviolet through near infrared spectral energy distribution for an interacting Lyman break galaxy at a redshift z=4.42, the highest redshift merging system known with clearly resolved tidal features. The two objects in this system - HDF-G4 and its previously unidentified companion - are both B_{435} band dropouts, have similar V_{606}-i_{775} and i_{775}-z_{850} colors, and are separated by 1", which at z=4.42 corresponds to 7 kpc projected nuclear separation; all indicative of an interacting system. Fits to stellar population models indicate a stellar mass of M_\star = 2.6\times 10^{10} M_\odot, age of \tau_\star = 720 My, and exponential star formation history with an e-folding time \tau_0 = 440 My. Using these derived stellar populations as constraints, we model the HDF-G4 system using hydrodynamical simulations, and find that it will likely evolve into a quasar by z\sim3.5, and a quiescent, compact spheroid by z\sim 2.5 similar to those observed at z > 2. And, the existence of such an object supports galaxy formation models in which major mergers drive the high redshift buildup of spheroids and black holes.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in Ap

    Fully Inkjet-Printed Multilayered Graphene-Based Flexible Electrodes for Repeatable Electrochemical Response

    Get PDF
    Graphene has proven to be useful in biosensing applications. However, one of the main hurdles with printed graphene-based electrodes is achieving repeatable electrochemical performance from one printed electrode to another. We have developed a consistent fabrication process to control the sheet resistance of inkjet-printed graphene electrodes, thereby accomplishing repeatable electrochemical performance. Herein, we investigated the electrochemical properties of multilayered graphene (MLG) electrodes fully inkjet-printed (IJP) on flexible Kapton substrates. The electrodes were fabricated by inkjet printing three materials ā€“ (1) a conductive silver ink for electrical contact, (2) an insulating dielectric ink, and (3) MLG ink as the sensing material. The selected materials and fabrication methods provided great control over the ink rheology and material deposition, which enabled stable and repeatable electrochemical response: bending tests revealed the electrochemical behavior of these sensors remained consistent over 1000 bend cycles. Due to the abundance of structural defects (e.g., edge defects) present in the exfoliated graphene platelets, cyclic voltammetry (CV) of the graphene electrodes showed good electron transfer (k = 1.125 Ɨ 10āˆ’2 cm sāˆ’1) with a detection limit (0.01 mM) for the ferric/ferrocyanide redox couple, [Fe(CN)6]āˆ’3/āˆ’4, which is comparable or superior to modified graphene or graphene oxide-based sensors. Additionally, the potentiometric response of the electrodes displayed good sensitivity over the pH range of 4ā€“10. Moreover, a fully IJP three-electrode device (MLG, platinum, and Ag/AgCl) also showed quasi-reversibility compared to a single IJP MLG electrode device. These findings demonstrate significant promise for scalable fabrication of a flexible, low cost, and fully-IJP wearable sensor system needed for space, military, and commercial biosensing applications
    • ā€¦
    corecore