4,478 research outputs found
The agony of truth: martyrdom, violence, and Christian ways of knowing
Paper presented at the conf Faith, freedom and the academy: the idea of the university in the 21st century, Univ of Prince Edward Island, O 1-3 2004
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Cultures within a culture: the role of nationality and religion for environmentally significant behaviour in students living in university accommodation
Reducing global warming cannot be achieved through technological interventions alone; it requires a change in human behaviour. Households are a major contributor to carbon emissions, and thus play an integral part in strategies aiming at a more sustainable living. Behaviour changes in the household can make a significant contribution towards reducing CO2 emissions. However, people vary strongly in their household practices; differences in behaviour account for a substantial amount of variance in heat, electricity, and water consumption (Gill et al., 2010). What causes these differences? In addition to age and education, nationality and religion play a role: They impact on physical aspects of well-being and on environmental attitudes (e.g., Isaacs et al., 2010; Guth et al., 1995). The physical aspect such as perception of warmth is of importance insofar as that comfort practices could influence on environmentally significant behaviour. The Eurobarometer 295 (2008), a study on the attitudes of European citizens towards the environment, also revealed differences in attitudes and behaviour of Europeans towards the environment.
Therefore, steps to promote more sustainable living have to be adapted to different cultures. Rising globalization brings about more heterogeneous populations, meaning that there will be increasingly "cultures within a culture." An important question is what happens to cultural differences in environmentally significant behaviour in such a setting. It could be that differences are diluted by a largely shared environment, or that they continue to persist, thanks to being deeply rooted in one’s origin and to the non-shared part of the environment.
Our study:
The aim of this study was to examine the variation in pro-environmental attitudes, behaviour, and values in members of a community now living in a very similar setting but coming from diverse backgrounds. If personal background accounts for differences in the variables at stake, then this has important implications, e.g. for all national interventions launched to change behaviour.
Data was collected through a web-based survey. The survey was sent out to first-year students living in university accommodation at the University of Greenwich. Religion, strength of religion, nationality, years living in the UK, program studied, gender and age were recorded and the impact of these variables on a variety of measures such as pro- environmental attitudes, values, and actual behaviour was assessed.
Results are currently being analysed but preliminary data suggest that sub-culture does play a role and thus needs to be considered when developing carbon reduction interventions. The implications of these findings for the University and national policies are discussed
Correlation functions of the energy-momentum tensor in SU(2) gauge theory at finite temperature
We calculate correlation functions of the energy-momentum tensor in the
vicinity of the deconfinement phase transition of (3+1)-dimensional SU(2) gauge
theory and discuss their critical behavior in the vicinity of the second order
deconfinement transition. We show that correlation functions of the trace of
the energy momentum tensor diverge uniformly at the critical point in
proportion to the specific heat singularity. Correlation functions of the
pressure, on the other hand, stay finite at the critical point. We discuss the
consequences of these findings for the analysis of transport coefficients, in
particular the bulk viscosity, in the vicinity of a second order phase
transition point.Comment: 24 pages, 6 figure
Free energies of static three quark systems
We study the behaviour of free energies of baryonic systems composed of three
heavy quarks on the lattice in SU(3) pure gauge theory at finite temperature.
For all temperatures above we find that the connected part of the singlet
(decuplet) free energy of the three quark system is given by the sum of the
connected parts of the free energies of -triplets (-sextets). Using
renormalized free energies we can compare free energies in different colour
channels as well as those of - and -systems on an unique energy scale.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures, Contribution to Strong and Electroweak Matter
2004 (SEWM04), Helsinki, Finland 16-19 June 200
Automation - Development of the Material-Technological Basis - Changed Conditions of Efficiency
This paper was presented at a joint seminar on flexible automation held in Berlin (East) from June 8-11, 1982. The seminar was a collaborative project between IIASA and the Academy of Sciences of the German Democratic Republic.
The report and the working material presented to the conference deal, among other things, with the influence of the flexible automation on the further development of the material-technological basis and on the whole system of the productive forces. Hence the following questions arise: Does the qualitatively new level of automation mean in connection with the development and application of micro-electronics and what is flexible automation? What are the constituent elements of the new level of automation and which are the consequences for the development of the material-technological basis? and Which changes within the conditions of efficiency take place due to the new level of automation on the basis of micro-electronics? The presented paper offers some aspects regarding these questions
Results of ultra-low level 71ge counting for application in the Gallex-solar neutrino experiment at the Gran Sasso Underground Physics Laboratory
It has been experimentally verified that the Ultra-Low-Level Counting System for the Gallex solar neutrino experiment is capable of measuring the expected solar up silon-flux to plus or minus 12% during two years of operation
Heavy ion induced Single Event Phenomena (SEP) data for semiconductor devices from engineering testing
The accumulation of JPL data on Single Event Phenomena (SEP), from 1979 to August 1986, is presented in full report format. It is expected that every two years a supplement report will be issued for the follow-on period. This data for 135 devices expands on the abbreviated test data presented as part of Refs. (1) and (3) by including figures of Single Event Upset (SEU) cross sections as a function of beam Linear Energy Transfer (LET) when available. It also includes some of the data complied in the JPL computer in RADATA and the SPACERAD data bank. This volume encompasses bipolar and MOS (CMOS and MHNOS) device data as two broad categories for both upsets (bit-flips) and latchup. It also includes comments on less well known phenomena, such as transient upsets and permanent damage modes
Bodyspace at the pub: sexual orientations and organizational space
In this article we argue that sexuality is not only an undercurrent of service environments, but is integral to the way that these workspaces are experienced and negotiated. Through drawing on Sara Ahmed’s (2006a) ‘orientation’ thesis, we develop a concept of ‘bodyspace’ to suggest that individuals understand, shape and make meaning of work spaces through complex sexually-orientated negotiations. Presenting analysis from a study of UK pubs, we explore bodyspace in the lived experience of workplace sexuality through three elements of orientation: background; bodily dwelling; and lines of directionality. Our findings show how organizational spaces afford or mitigate possibilities for particular bodies, which simultaneously shape expectations and experiences of sexuality at work. Bodyspace therefore provides one way of exposing the connection between sexual ‘orientation’ and the lived experience of service sector work
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