63 research outputs found

    ‘Northernness’, gender and Manchester’s creative industries

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    This article explores northernness and gender in the context of creative industries in Manchester. I argue that a version of northernness has been mobilised by those within the creative industries and that this identity is strongly linked with masculinity. The article examines the emergence of new creative industries in Manchester from the 1980s onwards. Many of these new creative industries were connected with music and club culture and often prioritised ‘lads’ and their interests. The ‘heritage’ and influence of this seedbed stage of Manchester’s creative industries and the dominant discourses about Manchester’s pop cultural creativity has had a profound influence on the ‘gendering’ of subsequent creative industries in this city. A paradigm of northern ‘laddishness’ pervades the creative sector in Manchester, and this is amplified and sustained by a powerful, media fuelled, cultural identity of the city and its popular culture. A number of local specificities have had an impact on linking creativity to ‘northern’ masculinity in the Manchester case. This has contributed to the ascendency of closed, male-dominated networks in the creative sector. This appears to stand in the way of women’s full access to, and participation in, the city’s creative industries. I suggest that all empirical case studies of creative industries could find value in reflecting on the local context and specificities of place. Using Manchester as a case study, I argue that place-specific identities could productively be explored in debates about exclusion and underrepresentation of women in creative industries

    Leaching behaviour of cementitious nuclear wasteforms containing caesium and strontium

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    The leaching behaviour and physicochemical properties of cementitious nuclear wasteforms containing caesium and strontium waste simulants has been investigated. The cement wasteform consisted of a 9∶1 blend of blast furnace slag and ordinary Portland cement. Both non-loaded samples and samples that were waste loaded with 3 wt-% caesium and strontium added as nitrates have been studied. The cement hydration phases in the samples were identified, and the porosity and microstructure were analysed before leaching. The samples were leached for up to 6 months and the leached elements quantified. In the waste loaded cements, portlandite was not formed, and the monosulphate AFm phase appeared to be altered by the incorporation of the Sr(NO3)2. Incorporation of Cs and Sr also resulted in the increase in the leach rate of Ca2+

    A Preparative Method for the Isolation and Fractionation of Dissolved Organic Acids from Bitumen-influenced Waters

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    The surface mining of oil sands north of Fort McMurray, Alberta produces considerable tailings waste that is stored in large tailings ponds on industrial lease sites. Viable strategies for the detoxification of oil sands process affected water (OSPW) are under investigation. In order to assess the toxic potential of the suite of dissolved organics in OSPW, a method for their extraction and fractionation was developed using solid phase extraction. The method successfully isolated organic compounds from 180 L of an aged OSPW source. Using acidic- or alkaline-conditioned non-polar ENV+ resin and soxhlet extraction with ethyl acetate and methanol, three fractions (F1–F3) were generated. Chemical characterization of the generated fractions included infusion to electrospray ionization ultrahigh-resolution mass spectrometry (ESI-UHRMS), liquid chromatography quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry, gas chromatography triple quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry, and synchronous fluorescence spectroscopy (SFS). Additionally, ESI-UHRMS class distribution data and SFS identified an increased degree of oxygenation and aromaticity, associated with increased polarity. Method validation, which included method and matrix spikes with surrogate and labelled organic mono carboxylic acid standards, confirmed separation according to acidity and polarity with generally good recoveries (average 76%). Because this method is capable of extracting large sample volumes, it is amenable to thorough chemical characterization and toxicological assessments with a suite of bioassays. As such, this protocol will facilitate effects-directed analysis of toxic components within bitumen-influenced waters from a variety of sources

    Protocol for the development and validation procedure of the managing the link and strengthening transition from child to adult mental health care (MILESTONE) suite of measures

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    Background: Mental health disorders in the child and adolescent population are a pressing public health concern. Despite the high prevalence of psychopathology in this vulnerable population, the transition from Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS) to Adult Mental Health Services (AMHS) has many obstacles such as deficiencies in planning, organisational readiness and policy gaps. All these factors contribute to an inadequate and suboptimal transition process. A suite of measures is required that would allow young people to be assessed in a structured and standardised way to determine the on-going need for care and to improve communication across clinicians at CAMHS and AMHS. This will have the potential to reduce the overall health economic burden and could also improve the quality of life for patients travelling across the transition boundary. The MILESTONE (Managing the Link and Strengthening Transition from Child to Adult Mental Health Care) project aims to address the significant socioeconomic and societal challenge related to the transition process. This protocol paper describes the development of two MILESTONE transition-related measures: The Transition Readiness and Appropriateness Measure (TRAM), designed to be a decision-making aide for clinicians, and the Transition Related Outcome Measure (TROM), for examining the outcome of transition. Methods: The TRAM and TROM have been developed and were validated following the US FDA Guidance for Patient-reported Outcome Measures which follows an incremental stepwise framework. The study gathers information from service users, parents, families and mental health care professionals who have experience working with young people undergoing the transition process from eight European countries. Discussion: There is an urgent need for comprehensive measures that can assess transition across the CAMHS/AMHS boundary. This study protocol describes the process of development of two new transition measures: the TRAM and TROM. The TRAM has the potential to nurture better transitions as the findings can be summarised and provided to clinicians as a clinician-decision making support tool for identifying cases who need to transition and the TROM can be used to examine the outcomes of the transition process. Trial registration: MILESTONE study registration: ISRCTN83240263 Registered 23-July-2015 - ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03013595 Registered 6 January 2017

    Madchester

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    This book draws from a rich history of scholarship about the relations between music and cities, and the global flows between music and urban experience

    Stealth-spectacles: the discursive waves of the nuclear Asian seascape

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    When compared to the bombast of nuclear tests, nuclear submarines come with the relatively quiet fantasy of victory-to-come against neighbouring nuclear adversaries. Such political expressions are making their mark in Indian popular culture that hitherto had little commentary to offer on submarines. Outlets such as film and digital media on submarines rest on an aporia that resonates across the pleats and folds of secrecy and publicity: there is a felt need to keep covert underwater vessels under wraps, yet also an irrepressible desire to glorify the technological achievement and political posturings enabled by thesecond strike capability of a nuclear armed and powered submarine. Highlighting the tensile allure of both stealth and spectacle, the article considers the ways submarines make a mark in Indian audio-visual and digital media alongside the affective resonance of submarines more widely. By understanding their hegemonic dynamics, we can begin to raise questions about the ongoing nuclearisation of the Asian region and neighbouring arterial seas described here as the Asian seascape

    Impact of a community respiratory assessment service on evidence based prescribing in primary care

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    Introduction: The Community Respiratory Assessment Unit (CRAU) in Hammersmith and Fulham provides open-access nurse-led spirometry and evidence-based disease management support to primary care.Methods: The primary care records of 100 patients referred from March 2008 to April 2009 (51M/49F, mean age 61 years, 77 current/ex-smokers) were examined to quantify whether suggestions made in the CRAU had been translated into practice.Results: In 32 patients no treatment change was recommended as they were already on optimal management (18 mild COPD, 8 moderate COPD, 1 severe COPD and 5 with asthma). No therapeutic changes were recommended in a further 10 with a restrictive defect and in 21 with normal spirometry. Of the 37 patients in whom a change in treatment was suggested, 29 (78%) had COPD (16M/13F, mean age 71 years, 21 current smokers, 17 mild, 8 moderate, 4 severe disease), 7 had asthma (4M/3F, mean age 39.7 years, 3 current smokers) and 1 had normal spirometry. The referring GP adopted suggested changes fully in 18 patients (49%) and partially in 5 (13%). In 14 patients (38%) the recommended alterations were not made. The range of suggested alterations of pharmacotherapy and rates of implementation in primary care are shown in table 1. In 6/18 (30%) cases where inhaled corticosteroids (ICS) or a combination of a long-acting β agonist with ICS were recommended, this was not adopted. In 8/14 (57%) cases where tiotropium was recommended, this was not adopted.Conclusion: Over 50% of patients with COPD reviewed in a community assessment unit were not receiving optimal evidence-based pharmacotherapy. This could be explained by the fact that primary care physicians were awaiting the results of spirometry and assessment. However, following assessment, recommended changes to medication did not occur in a significant proportion of patients
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