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Addressing food and nutrition security in South Africa: A review of policy responses since 2002
Since 2002, a range of South African policies have attempted to address the disproportionate burden of food and nutrition insecurity on the population. Yet malnutrition among the poor has worsened. This study reviewed policies to examine their implications for food security and the treatment of malnutrition. Policies enacted between 2002 and 2017 were retrieved from government departments and the data were thematically analysed. A preliminary analysis shows that policy has aided production through input provision and capacity building. Taxation, school nutrition programmes and social grants are some of the food access initiatives, whilst micronutrient supplementation, breastfeeding campaigns and food fortification are policies specifically focused on nutrition. However, despite these interventions, food insecurity has remained due to gaps in and contradictions among policies and the lack of coordination in policy development and implementation, especially across sectors. To improve food and nutrition security, government must better engage with ideas about how to address food and nutrition security systemically, and develop the appropriate coordination mechanisms for a more holistic approach to this challenge
A nonlinear elliptic problem with terms concentrating in the boundary
In this paper we investigate the behavior of a family of steady state
solutions of a nonlinear reaction diffusion equation when some reaction and
potential terms are concentrated in a -neighborhood of a portion
of the boundary. We assume that this -neighborhood shrinks
to as the small parameter goes to zero. Also, we suppose
the upper boundary of this -strip presents a highly oscillatory
behavior. Our main goal here is to show that this family of solutions converges
to the solutions of a limit problem, a nonlinear elliptic equation that
captures the oscillatory behavior. Indeed, the reaction term and concentrating
potential are transformed into a flux condition and a potential on ,
which depends on the oscillating neighborhood
Importance of DTM accuracy, precision and acquisition technique for estimating contributing areas of post-fire erosion at the slope and catchment scale
Wildfires are a frequent phenomenon in Portugal, affecting over 300.000 ha in dry years like 2003 and 2005. Directly and/or indirectly, wildfires can strongly enhance the hydrological response and associated sediment losses and, thereby, negatively affect land-use sustainability as well as ecosystem functioning of downstream aquatic habitats. Therefore, the EROSFIRE projects aim at developing a GIS-tool for predicting soil erosion hazard following wildfire and post-fire land management practices. Assessment and modeling of runoff and soil erosion rates critically depends on accurate estimates of the contributing areas. In the case of catchments as well as unbounded erosion plots (arguably, the only practical solution for slope-scale measurements), delineation of contributing area requires a Digital Terrain Model (DTM) with an adequate resolution and accuracy. The DTM that was available for the Colmeal study area (Goís municipality, central Portugal) was that of the 1:25.000 topographic map produced by the Military Geographic Institute. Since this study area involves a rather small experimental catchment of roughly 10 ha and relatively short study slopes of less than 100 m long, two different data acquisition techniques were used to produce high-resolution and high-accuracy DTM. One is aerial photogrammetry, whilst the other is terrestrial laser scanning. To produce a DTM by photogrammetric means, a dedicated digital aerial photography mission was carried out. The images had a pixel size of 10 cm. Manual measurements permitted to measure breaklines and were complemented by automatic measurements. In this way, a DTM in a TIN format was produced. This was further converted to grid format using the ArcGIS software system. Signalized control points allowed obtaining the DTM in the same global reference system as that employed for terrestrial laser scanning. The terrestrial laser scanning was done using a Riegl LMS Z360I, stationed in 8 points within the area to provide a complete coverage. The resulting dense cloud of points was filtered – by the company carrying out the scanning mission - to remove the non-terrain points (in particular vegetation). Several grids of different sizes were produced (0.10 x 0.10, 0.20 x 0.20, 0.50 x 0.50, 1 x 1 and 2 x 2 m2). The proposed work will compare and analyze estimates of contribution areas that were obtained with the two above-mentioned data acquisition techniques and for different spatial resolutions. This will be done for selected slope-scale sediment fences as well as for the outlet of the experimental catchment. In addition, different algorithms available in ArcGIS for TIN-to-grid conversion will be compared, since preliminary results have suggested that these procedures produce markedly different results
Testing gaussianity, homogeneity and isotropy with the cosmic microwave background
We review the basic hypotheses which motivate the statistical framework used
to analyze the cosmic microwave background, and how that framework can be
enlarged as we relax those hypotheses. In particular, we try to separate as
much as possible the questions of gaussianity, homogeneity and isotropy from
each other. We focus both on isotropic estimators of non-gaussianity as well as
statistically anisotropic estimators of gaussianity, giving particular emphasis
on their signatures and the enhanced "cosmic variances" that become
increasingly important as our putative Universe becomes less symmetric. After
reviewing the formalism behind some simple model-independent tests, we discuss
how these tests can be applied to CMB data when searching for large scale
"anomalies"Comment: 52 pages, 22 pdf figures. Revised version of the invited review for
the special issue "Testing the Gaussianity and Statistical Isotropy of the
Universe" for Advances in Astronomy
Particle creation in a f(R) theory with cosmological constraints
In this paper we study the creation of super-massive real scalar particles in
the framework of a modified gravity theory, with parameters
constrained by observational data. The analysis is restrict to a homogeneous
and isotropic flat and radiation dominated universe. We compare the results to
the standard Einstein gravity with cosmological constant ( model),
and we show that the total number density of created particles in the
model is very close to the standard case. Another interesting result is that
the spectrum of created particles is independent at early times.Comment: To appear in the General Relativity and Gravitation. arXiv admin
note: text overlap with arXiv:1108.334
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