5,016 research outputs found
Societal Rather than Governmental Change: Religious Discrimination in Muslim-Majority Countries after the Arab Uprisings
This study examines shifts in governmental religion policy and societal discrimination against religious minorities in Muslim-Majority states after the Arab Uprisings by using the Religion and State round 3 (RAS3) dataset for the years 2009-2014 and by focusing on 49 Muslim-majority countries and territories. We build on threads of literature on religious pluralism in transitional societies to explain the changes in governmental religion policy and societal discrimination against religious minorities after the Arab Uprisings. This literature predicts a rise in all forms of discrimination in Arab Uprising states as compared to other Muslim-majority states, and an even more significant rise in societal religious discrimination since societal behavior can change more quickly than government policy, especially at times of transition. The results partially conform to these predictions. There was no significant difference in the shifts in governmental religion policy between Arab Uprising and other Muslim-Majority states, but societal religious discrimination increased substantially in Arab Uprising states as compared to non-Arab Uprising states. Understanding the nature of religion policies and religious discrimination provides further opportunities to unveil the dynamics of regional politics as well as conflict prevention in the region
Detecting execution failures using learned action models
Planners reason with abstracted models of the behaviours they use to construct plans. When plans are turned into the instructions that drive an executive, the real behaviours interacting with the unpredictable uncertainties of the environment can lead to failure. One of the challenges for intelligent autonomy is to recognise when the actual execution of a behaviour has diverged so far from the expected behaviour that it can be considered to be a failure. In this paper we present an approach by which a trace of the execution of a behaviour is monitored by tracking its most likely explanation through a learned model of how the behaviour is normally executed. In this way, possible failures are identified as deviations from common patterns of the execution of the behaviour. We perform an experiment in which we inject errors into the behaviour of a robot performing a particular task, and explore how well a learned model of the task can detect where these errors occur
A Rural Health Supplement to the Hookworm Intervention in the American South
This project re-investigates the hookworm eradication efforts of the
Rockefeller Foundation’s Sanitary Commission (RSC) in the American South
during the Progressive Era. The RSC worked to eradicate hookworm across 11
southern states between 1911 and 1915, efforts that have been linked to
dramatic short- and long-term increases in human capital and labor
productivity. Although useful from an identification standpoint, these single-
shot interventions, in the absence of cooperative efforts to improve
underlying conditions, have a mixed record of long-term effectiveness across
public health research. The efficacy of deworming campaigns in particular has
come under extensive scrutiny. The experience of the American South had stood
as example of how a single-shot hookworm eradication program has improved
outcomes; however, the robustness of this result has also recently come into
question. A replication of the Bleakley (2007) seminal work investigating
hookworm eradication finds faults with the robustness and interpretations of
the results (Roodman 2017), and an investigation into the activities of the
RSC has determined them unevenly distributed across hookworm-affected areas
(Elman et. al 2013). Perhaps not coincidentally, the RSC’s hookworm
eradication program was not the only public health intervention that occurred
in the rural South during the Progressive Era. Rural public health centers
spread throughout the American South during this period, partially backed by
the Rockefeller Foundation. Given the use of difference-in-difference methods
using decennial census data, and the participation of the Rockefeller
Foundation in the funding of these rural health centers, this is a potentially
critical omission in the evaluation of the RSC efforts. In this project, we
investigate the connection between these rural health centers and the
Rockefeller Foundation’s hookworm eradication efforts, consider whether their
presence explains effects attributed thereto, and examine their importance as
a follow-up program to the initial hookworm intervention
Cultivating Sustainable Coffee: Persistent Paradoxes
This chapter discusses the relationship and interconnections among changing the livelihoods of farmers, initiatives for sustainable coffee, and the production of shade-grown coffee. It examines the advantages and opportunities for farmers and producers engaged in coffee certification and diversification programs. The role of Fair Trade and organic networks in creating awareness of biodiversity conservation, the social and environment costs of coffee systems, and the need for supporting small farmers are also discussed. The methods to increase accountability and improve the efficiency of coffee cooperatives are presented in this chapter, as are the importance of understanding the sustainability initiatives and their implications for the regulators, along with the use of land patterns for coffee cultivation
Economic Costs and Benefits of a Community-Based Lymphedema Management Program for Lymphatic Filariasis in Odisha State, India
Lymphatic filariasis afflicts 68 million people in 73 countries, including 17 million persons living with chronic lymphedema. The Global Program to Eliminate Lymphatic Filariasis aims to stop new infections and to provide care for persons already affected, but morbidity management programs have been initiated in only 24 endemic countries. We examine the economic costs and benefits of alleviating chronic lymphedema and its effects through a simple limb-care program. For Khurda District, Odisha State, India, we estimated lifetime medical costs and earnings losses due to chronic lymphedema and acute dermatolymphangioadenitis (ADLA) with and without a community-based limb-care program. The program would reduce economic costs of lymphedema and ADLA over 60 years by 55%. Savings of US$1,648 for each affected person in the workforce are equivalent to 1,258 days of labor. Per-person savings are more than 130 times the per-person cost of the program. Chronic lymphedema and ADLA impose a substantial physical and economic burden on the population in filariasis-endemic areas. Low-cost programs for lymphedema management based on limb washing and topical medication for infection are effective in reducing the number of ADLA episodes and stopping progression of disabling and disfiguring lymphedema. With reduced disability, people are able to work longer hours, more days per year, and in more strenuous, higher-paying jobs, resulting in an important economic benefit to themselves, their families, and their communities. Mitigating the severity of lymphedema and ADLA also reduces out-of-pocket medical expense. Disclaimer: The findings and conclusions in this report are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views of CDC
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