62 research outputs found

    The impact of parenthood on environmental attitudes and behaviour: a longitudinal investigation of the legacy hypothesis

    Get PDF
    Willingness to engage in sustainable actions may be limited by the psychological distance of climate change. In this study, we test the legacy hypothesis, which holds that having children leads parents to consider the legacy left to offspring in respect of environmental quality. Using the Understanding Society dataset, a longitudinal survey representative of the UK population (n = 18,176), we assess how having children may change people’s individual environmental attitudes and behaviour. Results indicate that having a new child is associated with a small decrease in the frequency of a few environmental behaviours. Only parents with already high environmental concern show a small increase in the desire to act more sustainably after the birth of their first child. Overall, the results do not provide evidence in support of the legacy hypothesis in terms of individual-level environmental attitudes and behaviours. We argue that the transition to parenthood is a time where concern is prioritised on the immediate wellbeing of the child and not on the future environmental threats

    Lex Maritima in a changing world: development and prospect of rules governing carriage of goods by sea

    Get PDF
    This chapter examines the attempts to unifying law governing carriage of goods by sea and the background to these attempts over the past hundred years or so. It finds that a repetition of the current mode of negotiating static conventions will not unify these rules. Moreover, from historic and legal perspectives, the attempts to unify the international carriage of goods by sea regimes in the past century have remained transitional. The active players have shifted from private entrepreneurs to government delegates. This research probes into the new trade practice for the shipping industry in the twenty-first century and argues that new ‘landscape’ calls for innovative modifications of the conventional approach to unifying carriage of goods by sea rules. This research also forecasts the prospects of the Rotterdam Rules and discusses several countries’ current attitudes, including the UK, the Netherlands, Scandinavian countries and, particularly, the USA

    Influence of foods with different nutritive ratios on young growing calves

    No full text
    TypescriptThesis (B.S.)--Purdue University, 1895B.S

    Is Tolerant Good Enough? : Eau Claire and the Practice of Welcomingness

    No full text
    Color poster with text, charts, and graphs.Immigrants are a vital part of community success, and many groups, such as Welcoming America, are advocates of inclusive communities. While the concept of sanctuary cities for immigrants was introduced in the 1980s and 1990s, the 2016 presidential campaign reignited the question of how communities receive immigrants. Our research team of seven honors students at the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire examined the question of whether Eau Claire, WI is a welcoming city, and what would take it to become one if it is not. In the fall of 2016, we interviewed fourteen community city leaders (school board members, city council members, and various other community officials) about their experiences and perspectives. Their responses were compiled and analyzed for insights into how Eau Claire may or may not be a welcoming city, and what may be needed to be one.University of Wisconsin--Eau Claire Office of Research and Sponsored Program

    A thermophototropic model for spacecraft thermal control.

    No full text

    Second generation inactivated eastern equine encephalitis virus vaccine candidates protect mice against a lethal aerosol challenge.

    No full text
    Currently, there are no FDA-licensed vaccines or therapeutics for eastern equine encephalitis virus (EEEV) for human use. We recently developed several methods to inactivate CVEV1219, a chimeric live-attenuated eastern equine encephalitis virus (EEEV). Dosage and schedule studies were conducted to evaluate the immunogenicity and protective efficacy of three potential second-generation inactivated EEEV (iEEEV) vaccine candidates in mice: formalin-inactivated CVEV1219 (fCVEV1219), INA-inactivated CVEV1219 (iCVEV1219) and gamma-irradiated CVEV1219 (gCVEV1219). Both fCVEV1219 and gCVEV1219 provided partial to complete protection against an aerosol challenge when administered by different routes and schedules at various doses, while iCVEV1219 was unable to provide substantial protection against an aerosol challenge by any route, dose, or schedule tested. When evaluating antibody responses, neutralizing antibody, not virus specific IgG or IgA, was the best correlate of protection. The results of these studies suggest that both fCVEV1219 and gCVEV1219 should be evaluated further and considered for advancement as potential second-generation inactivated vaccine candidates for EEEV
    • …
    corecore