2,780 research outputs found

    Challenges to providing culturally sensitive drug interventions for black and Asian minority ethnic (BAME) groups within UK youth justice systems

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    To explore how substance use practitioners intervene with ethnically and culturally diverse groups of young people in contact with the youth justice system. Telephone, face to face interviews and a focus group were conducted. Data were analysed thematically using a frame reflective theoretical approach. Practitioners tended to offer individualised interventions to young people in place of culturally specific approaches partly due to a lack of knowledge, training or understanding of diverse cultural needs, and for practical and resource reasons. Practitioners reject the official narrative of BAME youth in the justice system as dangerous and in need of control, viewing them instead as vulnerable and in need of support but report they lack experience, and sufficient resources, in delivering interventions to diverse groups. There is little information regarding how practitioners respond to diversity in their daily practice. This paper is an exploration of how diversity is framed and responded to in the context of youth substance use and criminal justice

    Framing 'drug prevention' for young people in contact with the criminal justice system in England: views from practitioners in the field

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    Drawing on the work of Rein and Schon (1993; 1996), we explore the ways in which ‘young people’, ‘vulnerability’, ‘risk’, ‘prevention’ and ‘prevention practice’ were defined and framed by practitioners engaged in the design, delivery and commissioning of drug prevention interventions for young people in contact with the criminal justice system. We argue that practitioners describe their work in terms of both a preventative frame – based on a ‘deficit’ model - and a transformative praxis frame, more in line with an increasing shift towards ‘positive youth justice’ where practitioners aspire to actively involve the young person in a process of change. The implications of those, often competing, frames are discussed in relation to the development of prevention approaches and the challenges in designing drugs prevention for this group of young people. The paper is based on interviews and focus groups with thirty-one practitioners in England and is part of the EU funded EPPIC project (Exchanging Prevention Practices on Polydrug Use among Youth in Criminal Justice Systems 2017-2020)

    Fungal Biogeochemistry: A Central Role in the Environmental Fate of Lead

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    SummaryFungi play major roles in biogeochemistry and are responsible for many metal transformations during mineral weathering. A recent finding that fungi transform lead to chloropyromorphite highlights the importance of fungi in biogeochemical processes

    Optical Non-Contact Railway Track Measurement with Static Terrestrial Laser Scanning to Better than 1.5mm RMS

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    The railway industry requires track to be monitored for a variety of reasons, particularly when any type of physical works take place within the vicinity of the asset (e.g. demolition, construction and redevelopment works). Terrestrial laser scanning (TLS) has considerable potential as a survey method for rail measurement due to its non-contact nature and independence from physical targeting at track level. The consensus from recently published work using static terrestrial laser scanning is that rail measurements to the order of 3mm RMS are routinely possible. Such measures are appropriate for extracting the gauge, cant and twist parameters required by the rail industry, however engineering specifications designed to ensure safe and comfortable running of the trains ideally require measurements of better quality. This paper utilises standard design rail profiles from the UK industry to optimise the way in which TLS point cloud data are fitted to the rail geometry. The work is based on the use of off the shelf phase-based TLS systems each capable of delivering single point measurements of the order of 5mm to cooperative surfaces. The paper describes a workflow which focuses the fitting process onto discrete planar rail elements derived from the design rail geometry. The planar fitting process is improved through understanding how data from these scanners respond to rail surfaces. Of particular importance is the removal of noisy data from the shiny running surfaces. Results from a sequence of multi-station TLS surveys of the same set of double tracks taken from platform level highlight the capability to obtain fits to the rail model of better than 1.5mm RMS. Whilst fitting can be carried out on a single side of a rail, the paper highlights the challenge of obtaining an accurate TLS registration necessary to extract both sides of each rail to the same level of accuracy. This configuration is proven over inter-TLS instrument separations of the order of 30m and demonstrates the TLS network coverage necessary to achieve such results even in the presence of an occluding electric third rail

    The risk matrix : drug-related deaths in prisons in England and Wales, 2015-2020

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    Aims: This article explores the factors contributing to drug-related deaths in English and Welsh prisons between 2015-2020. Methods: Based on content analysis of all Prison and Probation Ombudsman ‘other non-natural’ fatal incident investigation reports, descriptive statistics were generated. Qualitative analysis explored the circumstances surrounding deaths and key risk factors. Results: Most deaths were of men, whose mean age was 39 years. Drug toxicity was a main factor in causing death, exacerbated by underlying physical health conditions and risk-taking behaviours. A variety of substances were involved. New psychoactive substances became more important over time. A high proportion had recorded histories of substance use and mental illness. During this period, the prison system was under considerable stress creating dangerous environments for drug-related harm. Conclusion: This study highlights the process of complex interaction between substances used, individual characteristics, situational features and the wider environment in explaining drug-related deaths in prisons. Implications for policy and practice are discussed

    "Roll back the years": A study of grandparent special guardians' experiences and implications for social work policy and practice in England

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    Growing numbers of grandparent special guardians (GSGs) are assuming responsibility for increasing numbers of children in the care system in England. Special guardianship arrangements are increasingly used as a permanency option as they allow children to remain in their kinship networks, rather than in local authority care or be adopted; yet there is a scarcity of research on GSG carers’ experiences. This article reports a small qualitative research study where ten sets of grandparents were interviewed to explore their journey to becoming GSGs and to theorise their subsequent experiences. Two themes emerge. Firstly, experiences of the assessment process are elaborated, decisions often being made at a time of family crisis, impacting on GSGs: financial, employment, relational. Secondly, GSGs’ experiences of managing often-challenging relationships and contact arrangements between the grandchildren and the parents reveal three main relationship management approaches emerging: containing-flexible; containing-controlled and; uncontained/defeated approaches. Anthropological concepts of affinity help theorise the GSGs’ ambivalent responses to becoming carers in later life, enabling reconfigured kinship relationships in new family forms. Family policy and social work practice is critiqued as GSGs appear often left alone to ‘roll back the years’, to heal previous harms done to the grandchildren who end-up in their care

    Australia’s position on medicines policy in international forums: Intellectual property protection and public health

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    Universal access to affordable medicines, which are safe, efficacious and of high quality, and which are appropriately used, depends on national legislation that is in turn constrained by a range of international agreements. This regulatory configuration also affects the profitability of the pharmaceutical industry, domestic and international. Tensions and contradictions between industry profitability and public health objectives relate to access, innovation and regulation

    Does My Stigma Look Big in This? Considering the acceptability and desirability in the inclusive design of technology products

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    This paper examines the relationship between stigmatic effects of design of technology products for the older and disabled and contextualizes this within wider social themes such as the functional, social, medical and technology models of disability. Inclusive design approaches are identified as unbiased methods for designing for the wider population that may accommodate the needs and desires of people with impairments, therefore reducing ’aesthetic stigma’. Two case studies illustrate stigmatic and nonstigmatic designs

    Observing the emergence of phase biaxiality in a polar smectic A system via polarised Raman spectroscopy

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    We report polarised Raman spectroscopy, optical and dielectric properties of an asymmetric bent-core compound derived from 3-hydroxybenzoic acid with a long terminal chain at one end and a nitro group at the other. Earlier X-ray scattering experiments on the compound suggested a partial bilayer smectic A phase (SmA_d) and a partial bilayer biaxial antiferroelectric smectic A phase (SmA_d P_A) in the material. The dielectric behaviour, the microscopic textures and conoscopy experiments all explicitly show that the compound exhibits two different phases, with the lower temperature phase biaxial in nature. Raman spectroscopy was used to determine the temperature evolution of the uniaxial order parameters 〈P_2 〉 and 〈P_4 〉, deduced from analysis of the depolarisation ratio, informed by modelling the bent-core structure. Anomalously low values were measured (less than 0.5 and 0.15 respectively) which could suggest that the smectic A phase may be de Vries like in nature, rather than a partial bilayer structure. Raman spectroscopy was also used to investigate the biaxial nature of the SmA_d P_A phase. The effect that the biaxial order parameters 〈P_220 〉,〈P_420 〉 and 〈P_440 〉 has have on the depolarisation ratio is calculated. By making the assumption of an approximately continuous increase in the 〈P_2 〉 and 〈P_4 〉 order parameters, it was possible to deduce the behaviour of the biaxial order parameters in the biaxial SmA_d P_A phase; the emergence of biaxial order in the system is clearly demonstrated as all of the biaxial order parameters increase in magnitude as the temperature decreases in the (SmA_d P_A) phase. The dielectric studies show that the perpendicular component of the dielectric permittivity increases from 10 to 70 in the SmA_d phase and decreases from 70 to 45 in the SmA_d P_A phase. A strongly temperature dependent relaxation frequency with a large value ~400 kHz is observed in the SmA_d phase. On the other, the SmA_d P_A phase exhibits a weakly temperature dependent relaxation frequency at ~100 kH
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