1,254 research outputs found

    Governing youth through education and training

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    University of Technology, Sydney. Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences.Young people in post-compulsory education and training are targeted by a range of interventions designed to turn them into employable, socially responsible, active citizens. The fact that this group is viewed as problematic and transitions from school to work are seen as increasingly risky means that the interventions have become more inventive and more strategically directed. This thesis uses Foucault's concept of govemmentality (1991) to ask questions about the nature of these interventions and to explore the ways young people are governed through education and training. The concept of govemmentality provides a critical tool that allows us to see the ways neo-liberal agendas work through education and training to produce the desired autonomous, entrepreneurial adult subject. It reveals the inventiveness of neo-liberal government in its response to points of failure in the education system. It also sheds light on the complex web of expert knowledge that works to create the "problem" of youth in transition, "know" the target group and diagnose its needs. Specifically, the thesis focuses on a senior college in New South Wales. At its inception, the College represented a novel addition to the range of education and training provisions on offer. Students at the College engage in a mix of general, vocational and workplace learning within an adult learning environment. The govemmentality perspective frames the following research questions to explore this site: How can the existence and features of the College be understood in the wider context of neo-liberal education agendas? In this temporal and geographical context, what makes an education and training intervention such as the College possible? What types of practices occur at this site to shape the conduct of these young people and what sorts of conduct are aspired to? What types of identity/ies are valued and therefore open to young people at the College? Finally, how do young people at the College shape themselves and regulate their own conduct in this context? Through an analysis of the problematising literature on youth transitions, the policy context of post-compulsory education and training, classroom observations and interviews with staff and students, the networks of neo-liberal government will be observed as they shape the conduct of students at the College

    The New Zealand semi-diurnal tide

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    Data on the semi-diurnal tide around the coast of New Zealand, and on neighbouring islands are summarized, and interpreted using World, and a large scale, numerical models, and an analytical island-shelf model. The island-shelf model consists of a circular island (representing New Zealand) surrounded by a parabolic shelf, and a deep ocean of co~stant depth...

    Validation of Different Combination of Three Reversing Half-Hitches Alternating Posts (RHAPs) Effects on Arthroscopic Knot Integrity

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    Introduction. With arthroscopic techniques being used, the importanceof knot tying has been examined. Previous literaturehas examined the use of reversing half-hitches on alternatingposts (RHAPs) on knot security. Separately, there has been researchregarding different suture materials commonly used inthe operating room. The specific aim of this study was to validatethe effect of different stacked half-hitch configuration anddifferent braided suture materials on arthroscopic knot integrity. Methods. Three different suture materials tied withfive different RHAPs in arthroscopic knots were compared.A single load-to-failure test was performed andthe mean ultimate clinical failure load was obtained. Results. Significant knot holding strength improvement wasfound when one half-hitch was reversed as compared to baselineknot. When two of the half-hitches were reversed, therewas a greater improvement with all knots having a mean ultimateclinical failure load greater than 150 newtons (N). Comparisonof the suture materials demonstrated a higher meanultimate clinical failure load when Force Fiber® was used andat least one half-hitch was reversed. Knots tied with eitherForce Fiber® or Orthocord® showed 0% chance of knot slippagewhile knots tied with FiberWire® or braided fishing linehad about 10 and 30% knot slippage chances, respectively. Conclusion. A significant effect was observed in regards to bothstacked half-hitch configuration and suture materials used onknot loop and knot security. Caution should be used with tyingthree RHAPs in arthroscopic surgery, particularly witha standard knot pusher and arthroscopic cannulas. The findingsof this study indicated the importance of three RHAPsin performing arthroscopic knot tying and provided evidenceregarding discrepancies of maximum clinical failure loads observedbetween orthopaedic surgeons, thereby leading to bettersurgical outcomes in the future. KS J Med 2017;10(2):35-39

    Application of genetics in aquaculture

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    The exponentially increasing human population and the critical food supply have engaged the efforts of man in exploring the various avenues of food production and its augmentation to meet the requirement. This is being accomplished through the introduction of high yielding varieties of food and cereal crops, application of fertilisers and expansion of areas of cultivation in the agriculture front and introduction of quick-growing, quickmaturing and quality livestock along with the husbandary and managerial principles. In the fisheries sector, the production is being increased by means of modern technology of fishing, establishment of processing and other infrastructural facilities and recently through wider application of aquacultural activities

    A functional description of CymA, an electron-transfer hub supporting anaerobic respiratory flexibility in Shewanella

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    CymA (tetrahaem cytochrome c) is a member of the NapC/NirT family of quinol dehydrogenases. Essential for the anaerobic respiratory flexibility of shewanellae, CymA transfers electrons from menaquinol to various dedicated systems for the reduction of terminal electron acceptors including fumarate and insoluble minerals of Fe(III). Spectroscopic characterization of CymA from Shewanella oneidensis strain MR-1 identifies three low-spin His/His co-ordinated c-haems and a single high-spin c-haem with His/H2O co-ordination lying adjacent to the quinol-binding site. At pH 7, binding of the menaquinol analogue, 2-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide, does not alter the mid-point potentials of the high-spin (approximately −240 mV) and low-spin (approximately −110, −190 and −265 mV) haems that appear biased to transfer electrons from the high- to low-spin centres following quinol oxidation. CymA is reduced with menadiol (Em=−80 mV) in the presence of NADH (Em=−320 mV) and an NADH–menadione (2-methyl-1,4-naphthoquinone) oxidoreductase, but not by menadiol alone. In cytoplasmic membranes reduction of CymA may then require the thermodynamic driving force from NADH, formate or H2 oxidation as the redox poise of the menaquinol pool in isolation is insufficient. Spectroscopic studies suggest that CymA requires a non-haem co-factor for quinol oxidation and that the reduced enzyme forms a 1:1 complex with its redox partner Fcc3 (flavocytochrome c3 fumarate reductase). The implications for CymA supporting the respiratory flexibility of shewanellae are discussed.</jats:p

    Analysis of Mesoscopic Structured 2-Propanol/Water Mixtures Using Pressure Perturbation Calorimetry and Molecular Dynamic Simulation

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    In this paper we demonstrate the application of pressure perturbation calorimetry (PPC) to the characterization of 2-propanol/water mixtures. PPC of different 2-propanol/water mixtures provides two useful measurements: (i) the change in heat (ΔQ); and (ii) the [δC¯p/δp]T[δC¯p/δp]T value. The results demonstrate that the ΔQ values of the mixtures deviate from that expected for a random mixture, with a maximum at ~20–25 mol% 2-propanol. This coincides with the concentration at which molecular dynamics (MD) simulations show a maximum deviation from random distribution, and also the point at which alcohol–alcohol hydrogen bonds become dominant over alcohol–water hydrogen bonds. Furthermore, the [δC¯p/δp]T[δC¯p/δp]T value showed transitions at 2.5 mol% 2-propanol and at approximately 14 mol% 2-propanol. Below 2.5 mol% 2-propanol the values of [δC¯p/δp]T[δC¯p/δp]T are negative; this is indicative of the presence of isolated 2-propanol molecules surrounded by water molecules. Above 2.5 mol% 2-propanol [δC¯p/δp]T[δC¯p/δp]T rises, reaching a maximum at ~14 mol% corresponding to a point where mixed alcohol–water networks are thought to dominate. The values and trends identified by PPC show excellent agreement not only with those obtained from MD simulations but also with results in the literature derived using viscometry, THz spectroscopy, NMR and neutron diffraction

    The effect of antifibrinolytic agents on the healing of modified Widman flaps in monkeys

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/65632/1/j.1600-0765.1984.tb00810.x.pd
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