250 research outputs found

    El pueblo gitano : una identidad global sin territorio

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    Los Estados-nación han reforzado la vinculación entre identidad y territorio delimitado por fronteras. En los últimos años, la comunidad gitana, con su definición como un pueblo que ni tiene ni quiere un territorio, ha iniciado un proceso que está transformando la relación entre territorio e identidad tanto en la Unión Europea como en la teoría social. El parlamento europeo recogió y aprobó por unanimidad la principal conclusión del precedente de INCLUD-ED, el proyecto RTD WORKALÓ, del V Programa Marco de Investigación: el reconocimiento del pueblo gitano. Esa investigación aportó el análisis de la identidad transterritorial gitana, uno de los mejores ejemplos reales de que disponemos como modelo de la globalización. El impacto de esa nueva concepción no sólo ha llegado a la política, sino también a las ciencias sociales, en las cuales autores como Beck, Habermas o Touraine han criticado el nacionalismo metodológico para analizar los actuales fenómenos sociales.The Nation States have reinforced the connection between identity and territory demarcated by borders. Over the last years, the Roma community, defined as a people that do not have nor want a territory, have started a process that is transforming the relationships between territory and identity both in the European Union as well as in the social theory. The European parliament gathered and approved by unanimity the main conclusion of INCLUD-ED's background project, the RTD Project WORKALÓ, from the V Framework Programme of Research: the recognition of the Roma People. This research provided the analysis of the Roma transterritorial identity, one of the best real example as a model of the globalization. The impact of this new conception not only has influenced politics but also the social sciences, in which authors such as Beck, Habermas or Touraine have criticized the methodological nationalism to analyze current social phenomena

    El pueblo gitano: una identidad global sin territorio

    Get PDF
    Los Estados-nación han reforzado la vinculación entre identidad y territorio delimitado por fronteras. En los últimos años, la comunidad gitana, con su definición como un pueblo que ni tiene ni quiere un territorio, ha iniciado un proceso que está transformando la relación entre territorio e identidad tanto en la Unión Europea como en la teoría social. El parlamento europeo recogió y aprobó por unanimidad la principal conclusión del precedente de INCLUD-ED, el proyecto RTD WORKALÓ, del V Programa Marco de Investigación: el reconocimiento del pueblo gitano. Esa investigación aportó el análisis de la identidad transterritorial gitana, uno de los mejores ejemplos reales de que disponemos como modelo de la globalización. El impacto de esa nueva concepción no sólo ha llegado a la política, sino también a las ciencias sociales, en las cuales autores como Beck, Habermas o Touraine han criticado el nacionalismo metodológico para analizar los actuales fenómenos sociales

    Socioneuroscience and its contributions to conscious versus unconscious volition and control. The case of gender violence prevention

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    Research in neuroscience is being very fruitful in providing evidence about the influence of social experience in the architecture and functioning of the brain. In so doing, neuroscience is posing new and fascinating research questions to examine in depth the social processes that produce those neural changes. To undertake the task of tackling such research questions, evidence from the social sciences are necessary to better understand how different types of social experiences produce different types of synaptic changes and even modify subcortical brain structures differently. It will be the dialogue between neuroscience, other natural sciences and the social sciences which will advance the scientific understanding of plastic changes in the brain which result from complex social experiences that have been traditionally studied by the social sciences (...

    Drugs and Mental Health Problems among the Roma: Protective Factors Promoted by the Iglesia Evangélica Filadelfia

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    High incidences of drug consumption and mental health problems are found among the Roma population in Spain, a reality that remains understudied. Past studies have indicated the positive role played by the Iglesia Evangélica Filadelfia (IEF) in promoting rehabilitation and prevention of these practices. (...

    Social impact in social media: A new method to evaluate the social impact of research

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    The social impact of research has usually been analysed through the scientific outcomes produced under the auspices of the research. The growth of scholarly content in social media and the use of altmetrics by researchers to track their work facilitate the advancement in evaluating the impact of research. However, there is a gap in the identification of evidence of the social impact in terms of what citizens are sharing on their social media platforms. This article applies a social impact in social media methodology (SISM) to identify quantitative and qualitative evidence of the potential or real social impact of research shared on social media, specifically on Twitter and Facebook. We define the social impact coverage ratio (SICOR) to identify the percentage of tweets and Facebook posts providing information about potential or actual social impact in relation to the total amount of social media data found related to specific research projects. We selected 10 projects in different fields of knowledge to calculate the SICOR, and the results indicate that 0.43% of the tweets and Facebook posts collected provide linkages with information about social impact. However, our analysis indicates that some projects have a high percentage (4.98%) and others have no evidence of social impact shared in social media. Examples of quantitative and qualitative evidence of social impact are provided to illustrate these results. A general finding is that novel evidences of social impact of research can be found in social media, becoming relevant platforms for scientists to spread quantitative and qualitative evidence of social impact in social media to capture the interest of citizens. Thus, social media users are showed to be intermediaries making visible and assessing evidence of social impact

    Carbon cycling in a Patagonian fjord: Strength of biological vs. physical pump

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    Póster presentado en la 2nd International Ocean Research Conference, celebrada en Barcelona del 17 al 21 de noviembre de 2014.Understanding the role of the pelagic “biological and physical pump” in carbon cycling is critical to climate change adaptation and mitigation efforts especially in coastal areas characterized by intense biogeochemical cycling. Fjords are among the few coastal regions that appear to be net annual sinks for atmosphericCO2. Vertical profiles of temperature and salinity were collected with a CTD revealing intense vertical structure in the water column that could be summarised as 2 layers with a transition-mixing region .Spatio-temporal sampling of physical and biogeochemical (C system, nutrients, Phyto- and Zooplankton, in situ dissolved pCO2) parameters was conducted in Comau Fjord (Puerto Montt-Chile) during Austral spring from the surface and deep layers. Spatial variation in water column structure in the fjord was minimal, however the depth of the upper layer varies probably depending on the surface-water inputs. Surface waters had significantly lower pCO2 values compared to the atmosphere and deeper water. Concentrations of suspended material and chlorophyll a were higher deeper in the water column, suggesting concentration process of material across the halocline. Overall, concentrations of particulate matter and mesozooplankton (during the study period), were low compared to many mid-latitude regions, and near absent in the vicinity of the 2 rivers entering the fjord. The low surface water pCO2 values suggest negative air-water CO2fluxes predominates within Comau Fjord during Austral spring. This preliminary study suggests that the geochemical properties of watershed and the low [DIC] of surface-water inputs, i.e., the physical pump, seems to play an important role in this region.This work was supported by the project 2013CL0013 funded by the CSIC, Fundacion Endesa and Fundación San Ignacio del Huinay. Funding was also provided by the Spanish Ministry of Sciences and Innovation (JAE DOCTORES 2010 contract for E.P.M., JAE PREDOCTORAL scholarship for S.T. and S.F.) and part-funded bythe European Union (European Social Fund, ESF2007-2013) and the Spanish Ministry for Economy and Competitiveness.Peer Reviewe

    Cooperativity in binding processes: New insights from phenomenological modeling

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    Cooperative binding is one of the most interesting and not fully understood phenomena involved in control and regulation of biological processes. Here we analyze the simplest phenomenological model that can account for cooperativity (i.e. ligand binding to a macromolecule with two binding sites) by generating equilibrium binding isotherms from deterministically simulated binding time courses. We show that the Hill coefficients determined for cooperative binding, provide a good measure of the Gibbs free energy of interaction among binding sites, and that their values are independent of the free energy of association for empty sites. We also conclude that although negative cooperativity and different classes of binding sites cannot be distinguished at equilibrium, they can be kinetically differentiated. This feature highlights the usefulness of pre-equilibrium time-resolved strategies to explore binding models as a key complement of equilibrium experiments. Furthermore, our analysis shows that under conditions of strong negative cooperativity, the existence of some binding sites can be overlooked, and experiments at very high ligand concentrations can be a valuable tool to unmask such sites.Instituto de Física de Líquidos y Sistemas BiológicosFacultad de Ciencias Exacta

    Fear to Retaliation: The Most Frequent Reason for Not Helping Victims of Gender Violence

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    When faced with situations of gender-based violence, one becomes exposed to risk in giving support to the victim (van Reemst, Fischer, & WC Zwirs, 2015, Hamby, Weber, Grych, & Banyard, 2016; Liebst, Heinskou & Ejbye-Ernst, 2018). This form of violence, second order of sexual harassment (SOSH), occurs when people who support victims of gender-based violence experience violence themselves because of this positioning (Vidu et al., 2017; Flecha, 2021). There is little research on the subject. Through a quantitative study carried out with 1541 Spaniards over 18 years of age, we provide, for the first time, quantitative evidence of the incidence of SOSH in the responses of people who have been aware of a situation of gender-based violence. Our results show that SOSH is an important obstacle; 40% of people who did not offer help in the case of gender-based violence did not do so for reasons that correspond to SOSH. We concluded that the fear of suffering SOSH can condition people's reactions in the environment, thereby limiting the possibility of female victims of violence receiving help

    Socioneuroscience and its contributions to conscious versus unconscious volition and control. The case of gender violence prevention

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    Research in neuroscience is being very fruitful in providing evidence about the influence of social experience in the architecture and functioning of the brain. In so doing, neuroscience is posing new and fascinating research questions to examine in depth the social processes that produce those neural changes. To undertake the task of tackling such research questions, evidence from the social sciences are necessary to better understand how different types of social experiences produce different types of synaptic changes and even modify subcortical brain structures differently. It will be the dialogue between neuroscience, other natural sciences and the social sciences which will advance the scientific understanding of plastic changes in the brain which result from complex social experiences that have been traditionally studied by the social sciences. Socioneuroscience constitutes the arena for such interdisciplinary dialogue and research that can both advance the scientific understanding of the human brain and provide evidence-based solutions to most urgent social problems. Socioneuroscience studies the relations between the human brain and social interactions taking into account knowledge from all social sciences and the natural sciences. Processes of conscious versus unconscious social volition and control is one central area of inquiry in socioneuroscience. In this article, we discuss the dominant coercive discourse in society -which presents males with aggressive attitudes and behaviors as more attractive- as an example of social control of human volition which imprisons many individuals' sexual freedom. However, due to brain plasticity, certain experiences that question such dominant discourse and empty violence from attractiveness open up the possibility for the individual and the society to break free from the neural wiring imposed by the dominant coercive discourse and, in the words of Santiago Ramón y Cajal, be ourselves "the architects of our brain", contributing to overcome violence against women

    Identifying the Relevance of Research Goals through Collecting Citizens' Voices on Social Media

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    Recent debates on the meaning and use of science are focused on addressing citizens' needs or concerns of society in different fields. Researchers have developed different methodologies for capturing the relevance of topics to be addressed by research in order to map them. This article proposes a new methodology for identifying the relevance of research goals through collecting citizen's voices on Twitter and Facebook combing two approaches: top down, starting with already defined research goals priorities, and bottom up, departing from the social media. The article presents the results of the application of this methodology through the research goals of Sustainable Development Goals to identify their relevance and if there are some topics not covered by them. Thus, researchers could integrate this methodology in their daily work and be more in line with the needs expressed by citizens in social media
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