10,508 research outputs found

    Developing Cost Effective Methods for Estimating Household Income and Nutrient Intake Adequacy

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    Community/Rural/Urban Development, Food Consumption/Nutrition/Food Safety, Downloads July 2008 - July 2009: 6,

    A Simplified Method for Assessing Dietary Adequacy in Mozambique

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    Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, Directorate of Economics, Republic of Mozambiquefood security, food policy, Mozambique, food consumption, Food Security and Poverty, Q18,

    Twenty-Five Years Later: Where Do We Stand on Equal Employment Opportunity Law Enforcement?

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    As we near the twenty-fifth anniversary of the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, an assessment of equal employment opportunity law is both natural and appropriate. Prior to 1964, the federal government had imposed equal employment opportunity obligations on itself as well as its contractors and subcontractors. And Title VII of the Act,which mandated such obligations, did not become effective until July 2,1965. Yet the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which was the first comprehensive legislation to address the problems of discrimination in American society, became the cornerstone of modern civil rights law, including equal employment opportunity law.The leaders in the struggle to adopt the Civil Rights Act have largely passed from the public scene, and a new generation has reached adulthood with little knowledge of the conditions that called for its adoption. The time is ripe for review

    Subjective Employment Practices: Does the Discriminatory Impact Analysis Apply

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    In this Article, Mr. Rose addresses the conflict amongst the federal courts of appeals regarding the issue of whether a system committing decisionmaking in hiring, promotion, or pay to the discretion of other subjective judgments of supervisors is unlawful under federal equal employment opportunity law when it is not valid or necessary and has a discriminatory impact against minorities or women, or whether it is lawful in the absence of purposeful discrimination. The author analyzes the this issue in light of section 703 of the title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and applicable U.S. Supreme Court decisions in the area. Specifically, the author focuses his attention on Watson v. Fort Worth Bank & Trust, a case in which Supreme Court granted certiorari to resolve the conflict. The Article reviews the nature of subjective or discretionary decisionmaking, the treatment of the issue in the legislative history and the regulations and guidelines of the agencies having enforcement responsibilities, the arguments before the Court in Watson, and the possible consequences of the Court\u27s decision on employer practices

    Cross-Border Freight Flows at the Two Land Borders

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    This article provides an overview of the flow of goods between the U.S. and its two NAFTA neighbors, Canada and Mexico. It is the job of border agencies to facilitate these flows, and this article seeks to explain some aspects of the scope of the job. There is much regional variation in the volume and composition of freight flows, and this variety inevitably has implications for border management policies

    US Dependence Upon Canadian Fossil Fuels

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    The energy relationship between Canada and the U.S. is a much-discussed topic within business, government, and the media, prompted in part by the controversy surrounding the proposed Keystone XL cross-border oil pipeline. Having noticed differing statistics regarding the nature of the relationship, we here attempt to provide an accurate picture of the extent to which the U.S. depends upon Canada as a supplier of fossil fuels. Much data can be found online, both at agency websites [e.g., U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), National Energy Board of Canada (NEB), Statistics Canada] and at industry association sites (e.g., Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers)

    Higher Calorie Intakes Related to Higher Incomes in Northern Mozambique

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    Resultados das investigações do Departamento de Análise de Políticas MAP-Direcção de Economíafood security, food policy, Mozambique, food consumption, Food Consumption/Nutrition/Food Safety, Q18,

    Magneto-optical spectroscopy of (Ga,Mn)N epilayers

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    We report on the magneto-optical spectroscopy and cathodoluminescence of a set of wurtzite (Ga,Mn)N epilayers with a low Mn content, grown by molecular beam epitaxy. The sharpness of the absorption lines associated to the Mn3+^{3+} internal transitions allows a precise study of its Zeeman effect in both Faraday and Voigt configurations. We obtain a good agreement if we assume a dynamical Jahn-Teller effect in the 3d4^{4} configuration of Mn, and we determine the parameters of the effective Hamiltonians describing the 5T_2^{5}T\_{2} and 5E^{5}E levels, and those of the spin Hamiltonian in the ground spin multiplet, from which the magnetization of the isolated ion can be calculated. On layers grown on transparent substrates, transmission close to the band gap, and the associated magnetic circular dichroism, reveal the presence of the giant Zeeman effect resulting from exchange interactions between the Mn3+^{3+} ions and the carriers. The spin-hole interaction is found to be ferromagnetic

    Credit Cards as Lifestyle Facilitators

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    Credit cards are an increasingly essential technology, but they carry with them the paradoxical capacity to propel consumers along lifestyle trajectories of marketplace freedom or constraint. We analyze accounts provided by consumers, credit counselors, and participants in a credit counseling seminar in order to develop a differentiated theory of lifestyle facilitation through credit card practice. The skills and tastes expressed by credit card practice help distinguish between the lifestyles of those with higher cultural capital relative to those with lower cultural capital. Differences in lifestyle regulation practice are posited to originate in cultural discourses related to entitlement and frugality

    HIV-1 Evolutionary Patterns Associated with Metastatic Kaposi's Sarcoma during AIDS.

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    Kaposi's sarcoma (KS) in HIV-infected individuals can have a wide range of clinical outcomes, from indolent skin tumors to a life-threatening visceral cancer. KS tumors contain endothelial-related cells and inflammatory cells that may be HIV-infected. In this study we tested if HIV evolutionary patterns distinguish KS tumor relatedness and progression. Multisite autopsies from participants who died from HIV-AIDS with KS prior to the availability of antiretroviral therapy were identified at the AIDS and Cancer Specimen Resource (ACSR). Two patients (KS1 and KS2) died predominantly from non-KS-associated disease and KS3 died due to aggressive and metastatic KS within one month of diagnosis. Skin and visceral tumor and nontumor autopsy tissues were obtained (n = 12). Single genome sequencing was used to amplify HIV RNA and DNA, which was present in all tumors. Independent HIV tumor clades in phylogenies differentiated KS1 and KS2 from KS3, whose sequences were interrelated by both phylogeny and selection. HIV compartmentalization was confirmed in KS1 and KS2 tumors; however, in KS3, no compartmentalization was observed among sampled tissues. While the sample size is small, the HIV evolutionary patterns observed in all patients suggest an interplay between tumor cells and HIV-infected cells which provides a selective advantage and could promote KS progression
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