39 research outputs found
Financial control, blame avoidance and Radio Caroline: Talkin’ ‘bout my generation
This research examines the use of financial mechanisms that simultaneously impose controls and facilitate blame avoidance by public office-holders. A qualitative historical examination is used to examine legislation designed to prevent Radio Caroline, a pirate radio station, from broadcasting into Britain in the 1960s. Radio Caroline made a mockery of the British Government’s power to manage radio through a monopolist, the British Broadcasting Corporation. In addition, Radio Caroline played the type of rock music the British Government sought to suppress as representing the undesirable side of youth culture. This research examines the suppression of Radio Caroline through the Marine & Broadcasting (Offences) Act (UK) 1967 and the legislative scapegoating of Radio Caroline by targeting its revenue-earning potential. Inter-generational conflict underpinned the legislative scapegoating of Radio Caroline. This research demonstrates how financial controls can mask scapegoating and blame avoidance strategies by governments
Messing about on the river. Trenton Oldfield and the Possibilities of Sports Protest
In April 2012 Trenton Oldfield, an Australian man in his mid-30s, disrupted the annual Boat Race between Cambridge and Oxford Universities by going for a swim in the River Thames. For some, Oldfield’s timely swim in a public space was an imaginative and well-executed act of peaceful, civil disobedience which achieved maximum exposure and caused minimal damage. Live television coverage of the event and his use of social media allowed him to promote his manifesto ‘Elitism leads to Tyranny’ with Oldfield’s actions an example of individual, autonomous political activity. This chapter considers the opportunities that a large sport event, here the Boat Race, offers to such individual autonomist protesters and how new forms of digital web-based media are changing the dynamic between sport, media and protest. The discussion focuses on response to Oldfield’s protest by sections of the English media and the UK government who, upset to see their sporting pleasures disrupted, sought to deport him from the UK
The host of GRB 030323 at z=3.372: a very high column density DLA system with a low metallicity
We present photometry and spectroscopy of the afterglow of GRB 030323. VLT
spectra of the afterglow show damped Lya (DLA) absorption and low- and
high-ionization lines at a redshift z=3.3718+-0.0005. The inferred neutral
hydrogen column density, log N(HI)=21.90+-0.07, is larger than any (GRB- or
QSO-) DLA HI column density inferred directly from Lya in absorption. From the
afterglow photometry, we derive a conservative upper limit to the host-galaxy
extinction: A(V)<0.5 mag. The iron abundance is [Fe/H]=-1.47+-0.11, while the
metallicity of the gas as measured from sulphur is [S/H]=-1.26+-0.20. We derive
an upper limit on the H2 molecular fraction of 2N(H2)/(2N(H2)+N(HI))<~10^-6. In
the Lya trough, a Lya emission line is detected, which corresponds to a
star-formation rate (not corrected for dust extinction) of roughly 1 Msun per
year. All these results are consistent with the host galaxy of GRB 030323
consisting of a low metallicity gas with a low dust content. We detect
fine-structure lines of silicon, SiII*, which have never been clearly detected
in QSO-DLAs; this suggests that these lines are produced in the vicinity of the
GRB explosion site. Under the assumption that these fine-structure levels are
populated by particle collisions, we estimate the HI volume density to be
n_HI=100-10000 cm^-3. HST/ACS imaging 4 months after the burst shows an
extended AB(F606W)=28.0+-0.3 mag object at a distance of 0.14" (1kpc) from the
early afterglow location, which presumably is the host galaxy of GRB 030323.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Baseline characteristics of patients in the reduction of events with darbepoetin alfa in heart failure trial (RED-HF)
<p>Aims: This report describes the baseline characteristics of patients in the Reduction of Events with Darbepoetin alfa in Heart Failure trial (RED-HF) which is testing the hypothesis that anaemia correction with darbepoetin alfa will reduce the composite endpoint of death from any cause or hospital admission for worsening heart failure, and improve other outcomes.</p>
<p>Methods and results: Key demographic, clinical, and laboratory findings, along with baseline treatment, are reported and compared with those of patients in other recent clinical trials in heart failure. Compared with other recent trials, RED-HF enrolled more elderly [mean age 70 (SD 11.4) years], female (41%), and black (9%) patients. RED-HF patients more often had diabetes (46%) and renal impairment (72% had an estimated glomerular filtration rate <60 mL/min/1.73 m2). Patients in RED-HF had heart failure of longer duration [5.3 (5.4) years], worse NYHA class (35% II, 63% III, and 2% IV), and more signs of congestion. Mean EF was 30% (6.8%). RED-HF patients were well treated at randomization, and pharmacological therapy at baseline was broadly similar to that of other recent trials, taking account of study-specific inclusion/exclusion criteria. Median (interquartile range) haemoglobin at baseline was 112 (106–117) g/L.</p>
<p>Conclusion: The anaemic patients enrolled in RED-HF were older, moderately to markedly symptomatic, and had extensive co-morbidity.</p>