3,673 research outputs found
Global Justice and the Shift in Property Rights for Plant Genetic Resources
Although new technologies in plant breeding have the potential to reduce poverty and improve global food security, a shift in property regime for plant genetic resources (PGRs) prevents this potential from being realised. As the emergence of biotechnology has increased the value of PGRs, rents-seeking behaviour by the plant breeding industry spurred the emergence of intellectual property rights (IPRs) for improved plant varieties. Whereas this system is globally implemented through the TRIPS agreement, biodiversity-rich developing countries increasingly use the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) to protect their PGRs through state sovereignty. By using an economic perspective, this article aims to explain the appropriation of PGRs and the efficiency rationale that is used for its justification. However, as this perspective disregards the alarming consequences for smallholder farmers in developing countries, a global justice perspective is used to explore these effects. Focusing on distributional justice and the provision of the right to food, this article will demonstrate that the property regime shift for PGRs leads to decreased availability of, and access to, crops that are used by resource-poor farmers. Instead of promoting organic agricultural practices, based on the diversity of traditional seed systems and minimal external inputs, this regime merely stimulates the growth of an unsustainable and highly concentrated seed industry. The International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture (ITPGRFA) and Consultative Group on International Agriculture Research (CGIAR) seem to be most promising in challenging the shift in property regime for PGRs and the global justice concerns this shift entails
Linoleic acid intake, plasma cholesterol and 10-year incidence of CHD in 20.000 middle-aged men and women in the Netherlands
We studied the associations of a difference in linoleic acid or carbohydrate intake with plasma cholesterol levels and risk of CHD in a prospective cohort study in the Netherlands. Data on diet (FFQ) and plasma total and HDL-cholesterol were available at baseline (1993–7) of 20 069 men and women, aged 20–65 years, who were initially free of CVD. Incidence of CHD was assessed through linkage with mortality and morbidity registers. During an average of 10 years of follow-up, 280 CHD events occurred. The intake of linoleic acid ranged from 3·6 to 8·0 % of energy (en%), whereas carbohydrate intake ranged from 47·6 to 42·5 en% across quintiles of linoleic acid intake. Linoleic acid intake was inversely associated with total cholesterol and HDL-cholesterol in women but not in men. Linoleic acid intake was not associated with the ratio of total to HDL-cholesterol. No association was observed between linoleic acid intake and CHD incidence, with hazard ratios varying between 0·83 and 1·00 (all P>0·05) compared to the bottom quintile. We conclude that a 4–5 en% difference in linoleic acid or carbohydrate intake did not translate into either a different ratio of total to HDL-cholesterol or a different CHD incidenc
Resocialising and repoliticising financial markets: Contours of social studies of finance
Soil biological quality of grassland fertilized with adjusted cattle manure slurries in comparison with organic and inorganic fertilizers
We studied the effect of five fertilizers (including two adjusted manure slurries) and an untreated control on soil biota and explored the effect on the ecosystem services they provided. Our results suggest that the available N (NO3- and NH4+) in the soil plays a central role in the effect of fertilizers on nematodes and microorganisms. Microorganisms are affected directly through nutrient availability and indirectly through grass root mass. Nematodes are affected indirectly through microbial biomass and grass root mass. A lower amount of available N in the treatment with inorganic fertilizer was linked to a higher root mass and a higher abundance and proportion of herbivorous nematodes. A higher amount of available N in the organic fertilizer treatments resulted in a twofold higher bacterial activity (measured as bacterial growth rate, viz. thymidine incorporation), a higher proportion of bacterivorous nematodes, a 30% higher potential N mineralization (aerobic incubation), and 25–50% more potentially mineralizable N (anaerobic incubation). Compared to inorganic fertilizer, organic fertilization increased the C total, the N total, the activity of decomposers, and the supply of nutrients via the soil food web. Within the group of organic fertilizers, there was no significant difference in C total, abundances of soil biota, and the potential N mineralization rate. There were no indications that farmyard manure or the adjusted manure slurries provided the ecosystem service “supply of nutrients” better than normal manure slurry. Normal manure slurry provided the highest bacterial activity and the highest amount of mineralizable N and it was the only fertilizer resulting in a positive trend in grass yield over the years 2000–2005. The number of earthworm burrows was higher in the treatments with organic fertilizers compared to the one with the inorganic fertilizer, which suggests that organic fertilizers stimulate the ecosystem service of water regulation more than inorganic fertilizer. The trend towards higher epigeic earthworm numbers with application of farmyard manure and one of the adjusted manure slurries, combined with the negative relation between epigeic earthworms and bulk density and a significantly lower penetration resistance in the same fertilizer types, is preliminary evidence that these two organic fertilizer types contribute more to the service of soil structure maintenance than inorganic fertilize
Sprays from droplets impacting a mesh
In liquid spray applications, the sprays are often created by the formation
and destabilization of a liquid sheet or jet. The disadvantage of such
atomization processes is that the breakup is often highly irregular, causing a
broad distribution of droplet sizes. As these sizes are controlled by the
ligament corrugation and size, a monodisperse spray should consist of ligaments
that are both smooth and of equal size. A straightforward way of creating
smooth and equally sized ligaments is by droplet impact on a mesh. In this work
we show that this approach does however not produce monodisperse droplets, but
instead the droplet size distribution is very broad, with a large number of
small satellite drops. We demonstrate that the fragmentation is controlled by a
jet instability, where initial perturbations caused by the injection process
result in long-wavelength disturbances that determine the final ligament
breakup. During destabilization the crests of these disturbances are connected
by thin ligaments which are the leading cause of the large number of small
droplets. A secondary coalescence process, due to small relative velocities
between droplets, partly masks this effect by reducing the amount of small
droplets. Of the many parameters in this system, we describe the effect of
varying the mesh size, mesh rigidity, impact velocity, wetting properties,
keeping the liquid properties the same by focusing on water droplets only. We
further perform Lattice Boltzmann modeling of the impact process that
reproduces key features seen in the experimental data.Comment: 11 pages, 12 figures, 6 supplemental movies (not included
Acute febrile neutrophilic dermatosis (Sweet's syndrome). A report of 2 cases
CITATION: Jordaan, H.F., De Goede, F.H. & Sandler, M. 1989. Acute febrile neutrophilic dermatosis (Sweet's syndrome). A report of 2 cases . S Afr Med J, 75(4):336-338.The original publication is available at http://www.samj.org.zaENGLISH ABSTRACT: Two cases of Sweet's syndrome are described. The diagnostic criteria, clinical spectrum, complications, pertinent differential diagnoses and treatment modalities of this relatively rare clinical condition are described. The association of Sweet's syndrome with underlying haematological malignant disease is stressed.Publisher’s versio
Changes in nematode community structure in a primary succession of blown-out areas in a drift sand landscape
Change Impact Analysis for SysML Requirements Models based on Semantics of Trace Relations
Change impact analysis is one of the applications of requirements traceability in software engineering community. In this paper, we focus on requirements and requirements relations from traceability perspective. We provide formal definitions of the requirements relations in SysML for change impact analysis. Our approach aims at keeping the model synchronized with what stakeholders want to be modeled, and possibly implemented as well, which we called as the domain. The differences between the domain and model are defined as external inconsistencies. The inconsistencies are propagated for the whole model by using the formalization of relations, and mapped to proposed model changes. We provide tool support which is a plug-in of the commercial visual software modeler BluePrint
EATLP Report for the Netherlands on the Mutual Assistance in Tax Affairs
I. Introduction
It has been a great pleasure for the authors to be able to prepare a report on the Netherlands regarding “The mutual assistance in tax affairs”, which topic will be discussed at the EATLP annual meeting in June 2009 in Santiago de Compostella. The report has been limited by us to such mutual assistance between the Member States of the European Union. The report is based on the general guidelines as prepared by our German colleague Prof. Dr Roman Seer of Bochum University. The questions and answers are focussed onthe five main topics “Implementation”,
“Use”, “Efficiency”, “Burden of proof” and “Legal protection”. Since the focus is on the actual use of mutual assistance in the different Member States, the report is rather factually
and practically oriented. We did however, occasionally point at more in depth discussions and unclarities in this area.
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