9,246 research outputs found
Beyond recurrent costs: an institutional analysis of the unsustainability of donor-supported reforms in agricultural extension
International donors have spent billions of dollars over the past four decades in developing and/or reforming the agricultural extension service delivery arrangements in developing countries. However, many of these reforms, supported through short-term projects, became unsustainable once aid funding had ceased. The unavailability of recurrent funding has predominantly been highlighted in the literature as the key reason for this undesirable outcome, while little has been written about institutional factors. The purpose of this article is to examine the usefulness of taking an institutional perspective in explaining the unsustainability of donor-supported extension reforms and derive lessons for improvement. Using a framework drawn from the school of institutionalism in a Bangladeshi case study, we have found that a reform becomes unsustainable because of poor demands for extension information and advice; missing, weak, incongruent, and perverse institutional frameworks governing the exchange of extension goods (services); and a lack of institutional learning and change during the reform process. Accordingly, we have argued that strategies for sustainable extension reforms should move beyond financial considerations and include such measures as making extension goods (services) more tangible and monetary in nature, commissioning in-depth studies to learn about local institutions, crafting new institutions and/or reforming the weak and perverse institutions prevailing in developing countries. We emphasize the need to address three categories of institutions – regulative, normative, and cultural-cognitive – and call for an alignment among them. We further argue that, in order to be sustainable, a reform should take a systemic approach in institutional capacity building and, for this to be possible, adopt a long-term program approach, as opposed to a short-term project approach
Microwave oven fabricated hybrid memristor devices for non-volatile memory storage
© 2014 IOP Publishing Ltd. Novel hybrid non-volatile memories made using an ultra-fast microwave heating method are reported for the first time. The devices, consisting of aligned ZnO nanorods embedded in poly (methyl methacrylate), require no forming step and exhibit reliable and reproducible bipolar resistive switching at low voltages and with low power usage. We attribute these properties to a combination of the high aspect ratio of the nanorods and the polymeric hybrid structure of the device. The extremely easy, fast and low-cost solution based method of fabrication makes possible the simple and quick production of cheap memory cells
The Rapidly Fading Optical Afterglow of GRB 980519
GRB 980519 had the most rapidly fading of the well-documented GRB afterglows,
consistent with t^{-2.05 +/- 0.04} in BVRI as well as in X-rays during the two
days in which observations were made. We report VRI observations from the MDM
1.3m and WIYN 3.5m telescopes, and we synthesize an optical spectrum from all
of the available photometry. The optical spectrum alone is well fitted by a
power law of the form nu^{-1.20 +/- 0.25}, with some of the uncertainty due to
the significant Galactic reddening in this direction. The optical and X-ray
spectra together are adequately fitted by a single power law nu^{-1.05 +/-
0.10}. This combination of steep temporal decay and flat broad-band spectrum
places a severe strain on the simplest afterglow models involving spherical
blast waves in a homogeneous medium. Instead, the rapid observed temporal decay
is more consistent with models of expansion into a medium of density n(r)
proportional to r^{-2}, or with predictions of the evolution of a jet after it
slows down and spreads laterally. The jet model would relax the energy
requirements on some of the more extreme GRBs, of which GRB 980519 is likely to
be an example because of its large gamma-ray fluence and faint host galaxy.Comment: 13 pages, submitted to ApJ Letter
Capacitive effects and memristive switching in three terminal multilayered MoS<inf>2</inf>devices
We report on the electrical properties of gated two-terminal multilayered molybdenum disulfide (MoS2) memristor devices having a planar architecture. The approach based on highly dispersed MoS2 flakes drop cast onto a bottom gated Si/SiO2 (100nm) wafer containing metal Pd contact electrodes yields devices that exhibit a number of complex properties including memristive and capacitive effects as well as multiple non-zero-crossing current-voltage hysteresis effects. The devices also show a reaction to a varying gate bias. An increasingly positive gate led to the devices displaying a linear ohmic I-V response while an increasingly negative gate bias drove the system to behave more memristive with a widening hysteresis loop
The use and effectiveness of the eLib subject gateways: a preliminary investigation
Internet subject gateways were set up under the Electronic Libraries Programme (eLib) in order to address some of the problems of searching the Internet which have been identified by information professionals, i.e. locating relevant, good quality information. This preliminary study examines the extent to which academics in two universities use three eLib subject gateways (EEVL, OMNI and SOSIG). The results are generally encouraging for the eLib programme, but it is necessary for the gateways to be more effectively promoted. The study also found that academics do not have the same misgivings about the general search engines as the information professionals and seem to use them more readily than the gateways
The Bayesian Origins of Growth Rates in Stochastic Environments
Stochastic multiplicative dynamics characterize many complex natural
phenomena such as selection and mutation in evolving populations, and the
generation and distribution of wealth within social systems. Population
heterogeneity in stochastic growth rates has been shown to be the critical
driver of diversity dynamics and of the emergence of wealth inequality over
long time scales. However, we still lack a general statistical framework that
systematically explains the origins of these heterogeneities from the
adaptation of agents to their environment. In this paper, we derive population
growth parameters resulting from the interaction between agents and their
knowable environment, conditional on subjective signals each agent receives. We
show that average growth rates converge, under specific conditions, to their
maximal value as the mutual information between the agent's signal and the
environment, and that sequential Bayesian learning is the optimal strategy for
reaching this maximum. It follows that when all agents access the same
environment using the same inference model, the learning process dynamically
attenuates growth rate disparities, reversing the long-term effects of
heterogeneity on inequality. Our approach lays the foundation for a unified
general quantitative modeling of social and biological phenomena such as the
dynamical effects of cooperation, and the effects of education on life history
choices.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figure
Quantum Symmetries and Strong Haagerup Inequalities
In this paper, we consider families of operators in
a tracial C-probability space , whose joint
-distribution is invariant under free complexification and the action of
the hyperoctahedral quantum groups . We prove a strong
form of Haagerup's inequality for the non-self-adjoint operator algebra
generated by , which generalizes the
strong Haagerup inequalities for -free R-diagonal families obtained by
Kemp-Speicher \cite{KeSp}. As an application of our result, we show that
always has the metric approximation property (MAP). We also apply
our techniques to study the reduced C-algebra of the free unitary
quantum group . We show that the non-self-adjoint subalgebra generated by the matrix elements of the fundamental corepresentation of
has the MAP. Additionally, we prove a strong Haagerup inequality for
, which improves on the estimates given by Vergnioux's property
RD \cite{Ve}
Digging over that old ground: an Australian perspective of women's experience of psychosocial assessment and depression screening in pregnancy and following birth
BACKGROUND: There is increasing recognition of the need to identify risk factors for poor mental health in pregnancy and following birth. In New South Wales, Australia, health policy mandates psychosocial assessment and depression screening for all women at the antenatal booking visit and at six to eight weeks after birth. Few studies have explored in-depth women’s experience of assessment and how disclosures of sensitive information are managed by midwives and nurses. This paper describes women’s experience of psychosocial assessment and depression screening examining the meaning they attribute to assessment and how this influences their response. METHODS: This qualitative ethnographic study included 34 women who were observed antenatally in the clinic with 18 midwives and 20 of the same women who were observed during their interaction with 13 child and family health nurses after birth in the home or the clinic environment. An observational tool, 4D&4R, together with field notes was used to record observations and were analysed descriptively using frequencies. Women also participated in face to face interviews. Field note and interview data was analysed thematically and similarities and differences across different time points were identified. RESULTS: Most participants reported that it was acceptable to them to be asked the psychosocial questions however they felt unprepared for the sensitive nature of the questions asked. Women with a history of trauma or loss were distressed by retelling their experiences. Five key themes emerged. Three themes; ’Unexpected: a bit out of the blue’, ‘Intrusive: very personal questions’ and ‘Uncomfortable: digging over that old ground’, describe the impact that assessment had on women. Women also emphasised that the approach taken by the midwife or nurse during assessment influenced their experience and in some cases what they reported. This is reflected in the themes titled: Approach: ’sensitivity and care’ and ’being watched’. CONCLUSIONS: The findings emphasise the need for health services to better prepare women for this assessment prior to and after birth. It is crucial that health professionals are educationally prepared for this work and receive ongoing training and support in order to always deliver care that is empathetic and sensitive to women who are disclosing personal information
Non-ideal artificial phase discontinuity in long Josephson 0-kappa-junctions
We investigate the creation of an arbitrary -discontinuity of the
Josephson phase in a long Nb-AlO_x-Nb Josephson junction (LJJ) using a pair of
tiny current injectors, and study the formation of fractional vortices formed
at this discontinuity. The current I_inj, flowing from one injector to the
other, creates a phase discontinuity kappa ~ I_inj. The calibration of
injectors is discussed in detail. The small but finite size of injectors leads
to some deviations of the properties of such a 0-kappa-LJJ from the properties
of a LJJ with an ideal kappa-discontinuity. These experimentally observed
deviations in the dependence of the critical current on I_inj$ and magnetic
field can be well reproduced by numerical simulation assuming a finite injector
size. The physical origin of these deviations is discussed.Comment: Submitted to Phys. Rev. B (12 figures). v 2: refs updated, long eqs
fixed v 3: major changes, fractional vortex dynamics exclude
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