165 research outputs found
"I'm Not a Militant Feminist": Exploring Feminist Identities and Feminist Hesitations in the Contemporary Academy
Drawing on interviews with twenty-one university women (students, teaching assistants and faculty), I show how and to what extent university women's studies classrooms are a route to feminism. Some of the women in this study are reluctant to call themselves feminists and operate with a largely personalized version of what constitutes feminism. But rather than see this as a failure of feminism as a social movement, I argue that it is useful to attempt to see the positive effects of an individualist approach to feminism operating at the micropolitical level of agency.
Résumé
En se basant sur vingt et une entrevues de femmes universitaires (étudiantes, aide-enseignantes et le corps enseignant), je démontre comment et jusqu'à quel point les classes universitaires d'études des femmes sont la voie vers le féminisme. Certaines des femmes qui ont participé à cette sont réticentes à s'appeler féministes et opÚrent avec une version grandement personnalisée de ce qui constitue le féminisme. PlutÎt que de voir ceci comme un échec du mouvement féministe et social, je soutiens qu'il est utile d'essayer de voir les effets positifs d'une approche individualiste au féminisme qui opÚre au niveau micro-politique de l'agence
Prioritising search effort to locate previously unknown populations of endangered marine reptiles
Strategies aimed to conserve and manage rare species are often hindered by the lack of data needed for their effective design. Incomplete and inaccurate data on habitat associations and current species distributions pose a barrier to effective conservation and management for several species of endemic sea snakes in Western Australia that are thought to be in decline. Here we used a correlative modelling approach to understand habitat associations and identify suitable habitats for five of these species (Aipysurus apraefrontalis, A. foliosquama, A. fuscus, A. l. pooleorum and A. tenuis). We modelled species-specific habitat suitability across 804,244 km(2) of coastal waters along the North-west Shelf of Western Australia, to prioritise future survey regions to locate unknown populations of these rare species. Model projections were also used to quantify the effectiveness of current spatial management strategies (Marine Protected Areas) in conserving important habitats for these species. Species-specific models matched well with the records on which they were trained, and identified additional regions of suitability without records. Subsequent field validation of the model projections uncovered a previously unknown locality for A. fuscus within the mid-shelf shoal region, outside its currently recognised global range. Defining accurate geographic distributions for rare species is a vital first step in defining more robust extent of species occurrence and range overlap with threatening processes
To the fringe and back : violent extremism and the psychology of deviance
We outline a general psychological theory of extremism and apply it to the special case of violent extremism (VE). Extremism is defined as motivated deviance from general behavioral norms and is assumed to stem from a shift from a balanced satisfaction of basic human needs afforded by moderation to a motivational imbalance wherein a given need dominates the others. Because motivational imbalance is difficult to sustain, only few individuals do, rendering extreme behavior relatively rare, hence deviant. Thus, individual dynamics translate into social patterns wherein majorities of individuals practice moderation, whereas extremism is the province of the few. Both extremism and moderation require the ability to successfully carry out the activities that these demand. Ability is partially determined by the activitiesâ difficulty, controllable in part by external agents who promote or oppose extremism. Application of this general framework to VE identifies the specific need that animates it and offers broad guidelines for addressing this pernicious phenomenon
Quinolone-resistant gyrase mutants demonstrate decreased susceptibility to triclosan
Objectives: Cross-resistance between antibiotics and biocides is a potentially important driver of MDR. A relationship between susceptibility of Salmonella to quinolones and triclosan has been observed. This study aimed to: (i) investigate the mechanism underpinning this; (ii) determine whether the phenotype is conserved in Escherichia coli; and (iii) evaluate the potential for triclosan to select for quinolone resistance. Methods: WT E. coli, Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium and gyrA mutants were used. These were characterized by determining antimicrobial susceptibility, DNA gyrase activity and sensitivity to inhibition. Expression of stress response pathways (SOS, RpoS, RpoN and RpoH) was measured, as was the fitness of mutants. The potential for triclosan to select for quinolone resistance was determined. Results: All gyrase mutants showed increased triclosan MICs and altered supercoiling activity. There was no evidence for direct interaction between triclosan and gyrase. Identical substitutions in GyrA had different impacts on supercoiling in the two species. For both, there was a correlation between altered supercoiling and expression of stress responses. This was more marked in E. coli, where an Asp87Gly GyrA mutant demonstrated greatly increased fitness in the presence of triclosan. Exposure of parental strains to low concentrations of triclosan did not select for quinolone resistance. Conclusions: Our data suggest gyrA mutants are less susceptible to triclosan due to up-regulation of stress responses. The impact of gyrA mutation differs between E. coli and Salmonella. The impacts of gyrA mutation beyond quinolone resistance have implications for the fitness and selection of gyrA mutants in the presence of non-quinolone antimicrobials
Changes in African elephant (Loxodonta africana) faecal steroid concentrations post-defaecation
BACKGROUND : Faecal hormone metabolite measurement is a widely used tool for monitoring
reproductive function and response to stressors in wildlife. Despite many advantages of this
technique, the delay between defaecation, sample collection and processing may influence
steroid concentrations, as faecal bacterial enzymes can alter steroid composition post-defaecation.
OBJECTIVES : This study investigated changes in faecal glucocorticoid (fGCM), androgen (fAM)
and progestagen (fPM) metabolite concentrations in faeces of a male and female African
elephant (Loxodonta africana) post-defaecation and the influence of different faeces-drying
regimes.
METHOD : Subsamples of fresh faeces were frozen after being dried in direct sun or shade for 6,
20, 24, 48 and 72 h and 7 and 34 days. A subset of samples for each sex was immediately frozen
as controls. Faecal hormone metabolite concentrations were determined using enzyme
immunoassays established for fGCM, fAM and fPM monitoring in male and female African
elephants.
RESULTS : Hormone metabolite concentrations of all three steroid classes were stable at first, but
changed distinctively after 20 h post-defaecation, with fGCM concentrations decreasing over
time and fPM and fAM concentrations steadily increasing. In freeze-dried faeces fGCM
concentrations were significantly higher than respective concentrations in sun-dried material,
which were in turn significantly higher than fGCM concentrations in shade-dried material. In
contrast, fAM concentrations were significantly higher in sun- and shade-dried faeces compared
to freeze-dried faeces. Higher fPM concentrations were also found in air-dried samples
compared to lyophilised faeces, but the effect was only significant for sun-dried material.
CONCLUSION : The revealed time restriction for collecting faecal material for hormone
monitoring from elephants in the wild should be taken into account to assure reliable and comparable results. However, if logistics allow a timely collection, non-invasive hormone
measurement remains a powerful and reliable approach to provide information about an
elephantâs endocrine status.Elephants Alive and the Eugene Marais Chair
of Wildlife Management.http://abcjournal.org/index.php/ABCam2018Animal and Wildlife SciencesCentre for Wildlife ManagementMammal Research InstituteZoology and Entomolog
Effect of androgen treatment during foetal and/or neonatal life on ovarian function in prepubertal and adult rats
We investigated the effects of different windows of testosterone propionate (TP) treatment during foetal and neonatal life in female rats to determine whether and when excess androgen exposure would cause disruption of adult reproductive function. Animals were killed prepubertally at d25 and as adults at d90. Plasma samples were taken for hormone analysis and ovaries serial sectioned for morphometric analyses. In prepubertal animals, only foetal+postnatal and late postnatal TP resulted in increased body weights, and an increase in transitory, but reduced antral follicle numbers without affecting total follicle populations. Treatment with TP during both foetal+postnatal life resulted in the development of streak ovaries with activated follicles containing oocytes that only progressed to a small antral (smA) stage and inactive uteri. TP exposure during foetal or late postnatal life had no effect upon adult reproductive function or the total follicle population, although there was a reduction in the primordial follicle pool. In contrast, TP treatment during full postnatal life (d1-25) resulted in anovulation in adults (d90). These animals were heavier, had a greater ovarian stromal compartment, no differences in follicle thecal cell area, but reduced numbers of anti-Mullerian hormone-positive smA follicles when compared with controls. Significantly reduced uterine weights lead reduced follicle oestradiol production. These results support the concept that androgen programming of adult female reproductive function occurs only during specific time windows in foetal and neonatal life with implications for the development of polycystic ovary syndrome in women
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