1,141 research outputs found

    Gender dimensions of child labor and street children in Brazil

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    The authors review child labor and the situation of street children in Brazil from a gender perspective. Relying primarily on Brazil's national household survey for 1996, the authors examine various dimensions of child labor by gender, including participation, intensity, and type of activities; the relationship between child labor, education, and future earnings; and the risks of child labor to health and well-being. They also summarize approaches to prevent and eliminate child labor and street children in Brazil. The authors find that more boys than girls work in Brazil especially in rural areas where boys are concentrated in the agricultural sector, that many children both work and attend school, and that girls attain higher levels of education than boys on average, even when considering number of hours worked. The exception is the 11-14 category. They also find that an individual's earnings are correlated with age of entry into the labor market. The earlier a child begins to work, the lower his or her earnings. And girls are more adversely affected by early labor force entry than boys, with the gender differential increasing the earlier a child begins to work. Taking poverty as the primary contributor to child labor, government programs to combat child labor are well designed in that they compensate families for a child's foregone earnings and address family factors that lead to poverty. However, programs could be improved by explicitly considering the gender dimensions of child labor. The authors point to the need for analysis of the impact of child labor on health, and specifically to the gender and sex-differentiated impacts. They suggest the need to address gender in intervention strategies for street children, as well as research on child labor in domestic service where girls are overrepresented.Children and Youth,Health Monitoring&Evaluation,Gender and Development,Public Health Promotion,Street Children,Street Children,Youth and Governance,Children and Youth,Health Monitoring&Evaluation,Adolescent Health

    Magnetospheric signatures of ionospheric density cavities observed by cluster

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    AJBR ackowledges support from STFC under consolidated grant ST/K000993/1.We present Cluster measurements of large amplitude electric fields corre- lated with intense downward field-aligned currents, observed during a nightside crossing of the auroral zone. The data are reproduced by a simple model of magnetosphere-ionosphere coupling which, under different conditions, can also produce a divergent electric field signature in the downward current region, or correlation between the electric and perturbed magnetic fields. We conclude that strong electric field associated with intense downward field-aligned current, such as this observation, is a signature of ionospheric plasma depletion caused by the downward current. It is also shown that the electric field in the downward current region correlates with downward current density if a background field is present, e.g. due to magnetospheric convection.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe

    Health shocks, coping strategies and foregone healthcare among agricultural households in Kenya

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    Risks are a central part of life for households in low-income countries and health shocks in particular are associated with poverty. Formal mechanisms protecting households against the financial consequences of shocks are largely absent, especially among poor rural households. Our aim is to identify the relative importance of health shocks and to explore factors associated with coping behaviour and foregone care. We use a cross-sectional survey among 1226 randomly selected agricultural households in Kenya. In our sample, illness and injury shocks dominate all other shocks in prevalence. Almost 2% of households incurred catastrophic health expenditure in the last year. Using a probit model we identified the main coping strategies associated with facing a health shock: (1) use savings, (2) sell assets and (3) ask for gifts or loans. One in five households forewent necessary care in the last 12 months. We conclude that health shocks pose a significant risk to households. Implementing pre-payment or saving mechanisms might help protect households against the financial consequences of ill health. Such mechanisms, however, should take into account the competing shocks that agricultural households face, making it almost impossible to reserve a share of their limited resources for the protection against health shocks only

    A 3D view of the outflow in the Orion Molecular Cloud 1 (OMC-1)

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    The fast outflow emerging from a region associated with massive star formation in the Orion Molecular Cloud 1 (OMC-1), located behind the Orion Nebula, appears to have been set in motion by an explosive event. Here we study the structure and dynamics of outflows in OMC-1. We combine radial velocity and proper motion data for near-IR emission of molecular hydrogen to obtain the first 3-dimensional (3D) structure of the OMC-1 outflow. Our work illustrates a new diagnostic tool for studies of star formation that will be exploited in the near future with the advent of high spatial resolution spectro-imaging in particular with data from the Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA). We use published radial and proper motion velocities obtained from the shock-excited vibrational emission in the H2 v=1-0 S(1) line at 2.122 Ό\mum obtained with the GriF instrument on the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope, the Apache Point Observatory, the Anglo-Australian Observatory and the Subaru Telescope. These data give the 3D velocity of ejecta yielding a 3D reconstruction of the outflows. This allows one to view the material from different vantage points in space giving considerable insight into the geometry. Our analysis indicates that the ejection occurred <720 years ago from a distorted ring-like structure of ~15" (6000 AU) in diameter centered on the proposed point of close encounter of the stars BN, source I and maybe also source n. We propose a simple model involving curvature of shock trajectories in magnetic fields through which the origin of the explosion and the centre defined by extrapolated proper motions of BN, I and n may be brought into spatial coincidence.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics (A&A), 12 pages, 9 figure

    Impact of estrogen receptor gene polymorphisms and mRNA levels on obesity and lipolysis – a cohort study

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The estrogen receptors α and ÎČ (<it>ESR1, ESR2</it>) have been implicated in adiposity, lipid metabolism and feeding behaviour. In this report we analyse <it>ESR1 </it>and <it>ESR2 </it>gene single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) for association with obesity. We also relate adipose tissue <it>ESR1 </it>mRNA levels and <it>ESR1 </it>SNPs to adipocyte lipolysis and lipogenesis phenotypes.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>23 <it>ESR1 </it>and 11 <it>ESR2 </it>tag-SNPs, covering most of the common haplotype variation in each gene according to HAPMAP data, were analysed by Chi<sup>2 </sup>for association with obesity in a cohort comprising 705 adults with severe obesity and 402 lean individuals. Results were replicated in a cohort comprising 837 obese and 613 lean subjects. About 80% of both cohorts comprised women and 20% men. Adipose tissue <it>ESR1 </it>mRNA was quantified in 122 women and related to lipolysis and lipogenesis by multiple regression. <it>ESR1 </it>SNPs were analysed for association with adipocyte lipolysis and lipogenesis phenotypes in 204 obese women by simple regression.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>No <it>ESR1 </it>SNP was associated with obesity. Five <it>ESR2 </it>SNPs displayed nominal significant allelic association with obesity in women and one in men. The two <it>ESR2 </it>SNPs associated with obesity with nominal P value < 0.01 were genotyped in a second cohort where no association with obesity was observed. There was an inverse correlation between <it>ESR1 </it>mRNA levels in abdominal subcutaneous (sc) adipose tissue and basal lipolysis, as well as responsiveness to adrenoceptor agonists independent of age and BMI (P value 0.009–0.045). <it>ESR1 </it>rs532010 was associated with lipolytic sensitivity to noradrenaline (nominal P value 0.012), and <it>ESR1 </it>rs1884051 with responsiveness to the non-selective beta-adrenoceptor agonist isoprenaline (nominal P value 0.05). These associations became non-significant after Bonferroni correction.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p><it>ESR1 </it>gene alleles are unlikely to be a major cause of obesity in women. A minor importance of <it>ESR2 </it>on severe obesity cannot be excluded. The inverse correlation between <it>ESR1 </it>mRNA levels and lipolytic responsiveness to adrenoceptor agonists implies that low adipose tissue <it>ESR1 </it>levels attenuate catecholamine resistance in sc fat cells of obese women hereby contributing to loss of sc and gain of visceral fat. There is no evidence for a genetic impact of <it>ESR1 </it>on lipolysis or lipogenesis.</p

    Social Impact Bonds: The Role of Private Capital in Outcome-Based Commissioning

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    Social impact bonds are payment by results contracts that leverage private social investment to cover the up-front expenditure associated with welfare services. The introduction of private principles and actors through outcome-based commissioning has received a great deal of attention in social policy research. However, there has been much less attention given to the introduction of private capital and its relation to more established forms of quasi-marketisation. This paper examines what effect private social investment has on outcome-based commissioning and whether the alternative forms of performance measurement and management, that social impact bonds bring to bear on service operations, demonstrate the capacity to engender: innovation in service delivery; improved social outcomes; future cost savings; and additionality. This paper draws on an in-depth study of four social impact bonds in the UK context, as the welfare regime at the vanguard of this policy development. The findings suggest that the introduction of private capital in outcome-based commissioning has had a number of unique and unintended effects on service providers, operations and outcomes. The paper concludes by considering whether social impact bonds represent a risk or an opportunity for public service reform both in the UK and further afield
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