1,070 research outputs found
Land Use Conflict: When City and Country Clash
Urban sprawl is not a new phenomenon. Metropolitan areas have been growing and expanding for the past century, pushing development into rural areas. History has shown that rural-urban conflicts are often the result. During the second half of the twentieth century, the migration to the central city has been reversed, as people pour out of cities and into the suburbs. Today, increasingly complex rural-urban land use issues have continued to generate controversy
Recommended from our members
Large-effect flowering time mutations reveal conditionally adaptive paths through fitness landscapes in Arabidopsis thaliana.
Contrary to previous assumptions that most mutations are deleterious, there is increasing evidence for persistence of large-effect mutations in natural populations. A possible explanation for these observations is that mutant phenotypes and fitness may depend upon the specific environmental conditions to which a mutant is exposed. Here, we tested this hypothesis by growing large-effect flowering time mutants of Arabidopsis thaliana in multiple field sites and seasons to quantify their fitness effects in realistic natural conditions. By constructing environment-specific fitness landscapes based on flowering time and branching architecture, we observed that a subset of mutations increased fitness, but only in specific environments. These mutations increased fitness via different paths: through shifting flowering time, branching, or both. Branching was under stronger selection, but flowering time was more genetically variable, pointing to the importance of indirect selection on mutations through their pleiotropic effects on multiple phenotypes. Finally, mutations in hub genes with greater connectedness in their regulatory networks had greater effects on both phenotypes and fitness. Together, these findings indicate that large-effect mutations may persist in populations because they influence traits that are adaptive only under specific environmental conditions. Understanding their evolutionary dynamics therefore requires measuring their effects in multiple natural environments
Merredin townsite groundwater pumping and desalination pilot project
Townsite salinity affects more than 40 towns in the WA wheatbelt. Waterlogging and salinity are responsible for damamge to townsite infrastructure. Through groundwater pumping and desalination, the State Salinity Council (now the Natural Resource Management Council) granted Merredin the the chance to prevent further damage to the townsite by funding this project
The American Corporation in the Twenty-first Century
Opportunistic Downsizing of Senior Workers: Exploring the Fiduciary/Contract Distinction to Enforce Implicit Employment Agreements lecture given by Marleen A. O\u27Connor, Professor of Law at Stetson College.
The Motivational Implications of Debt Financing lecture given by George Triantis, Nicholas E. Chimicles Research Professor of Business Law and Regulation at the University of Virginia and the Director of the John M. Olin Program in Law and Economics.
Political Backlash and the Corporation lecture given by Mark Roe, Professor of Law at Columbia University and Director of the Columbia Law School Sloan Project on Corporate Governance.
Venture Capital and the Structure of Capital Markets: Banks versus Stock Markets lecture given by Ronald J. Gilson, Charles J. Meyers Professor of Law and Business at Stanford University and The Marc and Eva Stern Professor of Law and Business at Columbia University.
The Shaping Force of Corporate Law in the New Economic Order lecture given by Jeffrey N. Gordon, Professor of Law and Co-director Center for Law and Economic Studies at Columbia University
Recommended from our members
Decarboxylative bromination of heteroarenes: initial mechanistic insights
After an initial report from our laboratory describing metal-free decarboxylative halogenation of various azaheteroarenes, we set out to investigate the possible mechanism by which this chemistry occurs. Evidence from this mechanistic investigation suggests that this chemistry occurs via a radical pathway, with 1HNMR studies suggesting the acidic substrates activate NBS
Quasi 1D Nanobelts from the Sustainable Liquid Exfoliation of Terrestrial Minerals for Future Martian based Electronics
The sky is the limit with regards to the societal impact nanomaterials can
have on our lives. However, in this study we show that their potential is out
of this world. The planet Mars has an abundant source of calcium sulfate
minerals and in our work, we show that these deposits can be the basis of
transformative nanomaterials to potentially support future space endeavors.
Through a scalable eco-friendly liquid processing technique performed on two
common terrestrial gypsum, our simple method presented a cost-efficient
procedure to yield the commercially valuable intermediate phase of gypsum,
known as bassanite. Through the liquid exfoliation of bassanite powders,
suspensions of large aspect ratio anhydrite nanobelts with long-term stability
were characterized through scanning electron microscopy and Raman spectroscopy.
Transmission electron microscopy showed nanobelts to have a mesocrystal
structure, with distinct nanoparticle constituents making up the lattice.
Unexpectedly, anhydrite nanobelts had remarkable electronic properties, namely
a bandgap that was easily tuned between semiconducting (~2.2 eV) and insulating
(~4 eV) behaviors through dimensional control measured via atomic force
microscopy. To demonstrate the application potential of our nanobelts;
optoelectronic, electrochemical and nanocomposite measurements were made. For
the hydrogen evolution reaction and mechanical reinforcement, selenite-based
anhydrite nanobelts displayed superlative performances
Quasiâ1d Anhydrite nanobelts from the sustainable liquid exfoliation of terrestrial gypsum for future martian-based electronics
The sky is the limit with regards to the societal impact nanomaterials can have on the lives. However, in this study, it is shown that their potential is out of this world. The planet Mars has an abundant source of calcium sulfate minerals and in this work, it is shown that these deposits can be the basis of transformative nanomaterials to potentially support future space endeavors. Vitally, the methods applied are low cost and require no specialized instruments of great expertise, strengthening the potential involvement of nanotechnology in sustaining Martian inhabitation. Through a scalable ecoâfriendly liquid processing technique performed on two common terrestrial gypsum, this simple method presented a costâefficient procedure to yield suspensions of large aspect ratio anhydrite nanobelts with longâterm stability that are characterized through scanning electron microscopy and Raman spectroscopy. Transmission electron microscopy shows nanobelts to have a mesocrystal structure, with distinct nanoparticle constituents making up the lattice. Unexpectedly, anhydrite nanobelts have remarkable electronic properties, namely a bandgap that is easily tuned between semiconducting (â2.2Â eV) and insulating (â4Â eV) behaviors through dimensional control measured via atomic force microscopy. To demonstrate the application potential of the nanobelts; optoelectronic, electrochemical, and nanocomposite measurements are made
AGRICULTURAL POLICY REFORM IN THE WTO: THE ROAD AHEAD
Agricultural trade barriers and producer subsidies inflict real costs, both on the countries that use these policies and on their trade partners. Trade barriers lower demand for trade partners' products, domestic subsidies can induce an oversupply of agricultural products which depresses world prices, and export subsidies create increased competition for producers in other countries. Eliminating global agricultural policy distortions would result in an annual world welfare gain of $56 billion. High protection for agricultural commodities in the form of tariffs continues to be the major factor restricting world trade. In 2000, World Trade Organization (WTO) members continued global negotiations on agricultural policy reform. To help policymakers and others realize what is at stake in the global agricultural negotiations, this report quantifies the costs of global agricultural distortions and the potential benefits of their full elimination. It also analyzes the effects on U.S. and world agriculture if only partial reform is achieved in liberalizing tariffs, tariff-rate quotas (limits on imported goods), domestic support, and export subsidies.Agricultural and Food Policy, International Relations/Trade,
Brief of Corporate Law Professors as Amici Curie in Support of Respondents
The Supreme Court has looked to the rights of corporate shareholders in determining the rights of union members and non-members to control political spending, and vice versa. The Court sometimes assumes that if shareholders disapprove of corporate political expression, they can easily sell their shares or exercise control over corporate spending. This assumption is mistaken. Because of how capital is saved and invested, most individual shareholders cannot obtain full information about corporate political activities, even after the fact, nor can they prevent their savings from being used to speak in ways with which they disagree. Individual shareholders have no âopt outâ rights or practical ability to avoid subsidizing corporate political expression with which they disagree. Nor do individuals have the practical option to refrain from putting their savings into equity investments, as doing so would impose damaging economic penalties and ignore conventional financial guidance for individual investors
- âŠ