614 research outputs found

    The Political Potency of Tibetan Identity in Pop Music and Dunglen

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    Since their beginnings in the 1980s, Tibetan pop music and dunglen (lute songs of northeastern Tibet) have shown strong expressions of Tibetan identity. They also represent a flourishing area of Tibetan language cultural production. This is significant after the repetitive propaganda songs of the Cultural Revolution and given the pressures and restrictions in Tibet on language and religion in particular. However, in this article, I critique straightforward interpretations of the Tibetanness of Tibetan popular music as representing a zone of assertion or resistance, arguing instead that the political potency of Tibetan pop music and dunglen is far more double-edged, coopted and complex. Drawing on ethnography, I describe how state institutions and largely Tibetan cultural workers have in fact played the leading role in its genesis and production and are still a powerful force in its production and dissemination. Moreover, while it is often said that the state is against Tibetan identity and culture, in fact, the attitude is far more ambivalent and contradictory, with China a unitary multi-ethnic state where 55 minority nationalities with distinct culture and identity are recognized, including Tibetans. I argue through the analysis of song lyrics that expressions of Tibetan identity per se are not censored; rather, it is when these expressions are linked to particular political demands. As I explore, a number of reasons can be identified as to why the state does not censor Tibetan pop music and dunglen more harshly, and furthermore, there are reasons why Tibetan language assertion has had so much more success in the realm of pop music than it has had in schools

    Review of \u3ci\u3eThe Song Collector\u3c/i\u3e by Erik Koto

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    Elephants

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    Existing models of open-access resources are applicable to non-storable resources, such as fish. Many open-access resources, however, are used to produce storable goods. Elephants, rhinos, and tigers are three prominent examples. Anticipated future scarcity of these resources will increase current prices, and current poaching. This implies that, for given initial conditions, there may be rational expectations equilibria leading both to extinction and to survival. Governments may be able to eliminate extinction equilibria by promising to implement tough anti-poaching measures if the population falls below a threshold. Alternatively, they, or private agents, may be able to eliminate extinction equilibria by accumulating a sufficient stockpile of the storable good.

    Singing Across Divides: Music and Intimate Politics in Nepal. 2017. Anna Marie Stirr. New York: Oxford University Press. 304pp, 25 figures.

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    The Role of Seaweed Antimicrobials in Selection for Antibiotic Resistance

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    Antibiotic resistance is quickly becoming one of the biggest modern-day threats to human health. It has not only been observed in the clinic but in natural environments as well. Selection for antimicrobial resistant bacteria in the marine environment has been shown to be driven factors such as low concentrations of antibiotics entering the environment through discharge from wastewater treatment plants and run off from agricultural sites. However, antimicrobial resistance is likely to not be solely due to anthropogenic pollution, as it is an ancient mechanism and has been found in environments with minimal human exposure. Here we investigated whether natural antimicrobial producers, i.e. seaweeds, select for antibiotic resistant bacteria. We used both culture-based and molecular techniques to characterise the bacterial communities associated with different seaweed species, focusing on the human pathogens Vibrio, E. coli and S. aureus. Vibrio was harboured by all the seaweeds tested but E. coli and S. aureus were not. For the first time, we tested if Vibrio isolated from seaweed are locally adapted to their host macroalgae using a novel seaweed media assay. Our results showed Vibrio did not display local adaption. We tested the resistance profiles of bacteria isolated from seaweeds and found Vibrio showed cross-resistance to antibiotics and natural antimicrobial, in the form of methanolic seaweed extracts. We can conclude seaweeds harbour antibiotic resistant bacteria, but specific species of seaweeds do not select for specific antibiotic resistance. We quantified the prevalence of a biomarker for antibiotic resistance, the intI1 gene, and found seaweed select for antibiotic resistant bacteria independent of anthropogenic pollution, suggesting seaweed-associated bacterial resistance is an intrinsic mechanism. Using metagenomics, we characterised possible antimicrobial resistance genes associated with different seaweed species from which we were able identify eflamycin, aminocoumarin and fluoroquinolone resistance genes on all the seaweeds tested. Two of the antibiotic classes are produced by Streptomyces, which is present on seaweeds. Suggesting resistance on seaweeds is selected for by bacterial community or the genes characterised show cross-resistance to seaweed antimicrobials

    DETERMINING THE ROLE OF LANGUAGE AND CULTURE IN FIRST NATIONS SCHOOLS: A COMPARISON OF THE FIRST NATIONS EDUCATION ACT WITH THE POLICY OF THE ASSEMBLY OF FIRST NATIONS

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    In this article, I explore the incongruence between the federal government’s proposed First Nations Education Act and the approach of the Assembly of First Nations (AFN) regarding language and culture education. I also examine research concerning potential outcomes of their approaches to determine what would be most beneficial to learners. Language and culture inclusion in schools has been shown to impact significantly on academic and social outcomes for Aboriginal youth, and there are substantial financial and practical differences involved in creating and maintaining different types of language and culture programs. Therefore, this incongruence is of great practical importance for policy makers and education practitioners.

    Scaffolding social and emotional learning within ‘shared affective spaces’ to reduce bullying: A sociocultural perspective

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    A sociocultural perspective (Vygotsky, 1978) framed the qualitative study, to understand how to create 'shared affective spaces' as an enabling factor to scaffold within the zone of proximal development (ZPD). Social and emotional learning is conceptualised as a social concept, focusing on the collective knowledge of the peer group. The longitudinal study was conducted with thirty-one students 9-10 years of age in a composite Year 4/5 classroom. There were 17 students in the Year 5 cohort drawn from sixty students distributed across four similar classes to cope with volume of antisocial behaviour. The teacher/researcher implemented sociocultural strategies such as the weekly class meetings to scaffold students to make connections with their emotions and the impact of bullying behaviour on the perpetrators and victims. Rogoff's (1995) analytical planes frame the discussion of students' participation and the case study of Lindsay, a Year 5 student who was a bully. Lindsay's journey exemplifies the positive outcomes for teacher scaffolding of understandings about making friends and prosocial behaviour to reduce bullying, using holistic classroom practices that made explicit the affective aspects of learning. Future research is required to develop teachers' expertise in understanding the scaffolding process to enlist students' emotions as an enabling factor

    Resisting false recognition: an ERP study of lure discrimination

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    There is keen interest in what enables rememberers to differentiate true from false memories and which strategies are likely to be the most effective. This study measured electrical brain activity while healthy young adults performed a mnemonic discrimination task, deciding whether color pictures had been studied, were similar to studied pictures (lures), or were new. Between 500 – 800 ms post-stimulus, event-related potentials (ERPs) for correctly recognized studied pictures and falsely recognized lures compared to those for correctly rejected novel items had a left centroparietal scalp distribution typical of the parietal old/new effect associated with recollection. This is in line with previous evidence that similar lures may elicit false or phantom recollection as opposed to just familiarity. There was no evidence of a parietal effect for correctly rejected lures as would be expected if recall-to-reject were used. The ERP old/new effects for lures also varied with individual differences in performance. Parietal effects for falsely recognized lures were larger in better performers, who successfully rejected a greater number of lures as “similar”. The better performers also showed more pronounced right frontocentral old/new effects between 800 – 1100 ms for correctly rejected and falsely recognized similar lures. The enhancement of false recollection in better performers implies false recognition of lures occurred only when more specific information was recovered about the study episodic. Together, the findings suggest reliance on recollection to decide that items were studied, supported by post-retrieval processing

    An Examinaton of the Enhanced Primary Care Model for the Organization of Team Care in Managing Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus in the Elderly Population

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    The healthcare system is faced with overwhelming demands as a result of the growing elderly population, especially those with chronic illnesses. One disease that significantly impacts the morbidity and mortality of the elderly population, especially the minority and poor population, is type 2 diabetes. This population often lacks access to resources and quality healthcare that may be due to inadequate knowledge by the patients and their healthcare providers regarding available services. Current models of healthcare have not been effective in meeting the healthcare demands of this population. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of the Enhanced Primary Care Model as a theoretical framework for designing a program aimed at training providers to care for elderly patients with type 2 diabetes. A quasi-experimental design was used to assess the effectiveness of the Enhanced Primary Care Model. Two family practice residency clinical sites, an intervention site and a comparison site, participated in this study. An interdisciplinary diabetes team was created at the intervention site. The team developed and implemented programs to train the physicians at this site to provide team-based care for elderly patients with type 2 diabetes. The interdisciplinary diabetes team consisted of a family physician, a nurse practitioner, a nutritionist, a psychologist, a chaplain, a research nurse practitioner, and a database manager. The team developed and implemented didactic sessions on diabetes, a diabetes newsletter, a resource directory, a diabetes flow sheet, a patient education file, and patient education classes. The patients and the providers at both sites were assessed before the intervention programs began and then 12 months later after the intervention. The providers were assessed on attitudes towards the elderly, attitudes towards other disciplines. referrals, and adherence to diabetes guidelines. The patients were assessed on satisfaction with the doctor-patient interaction, quality of life, and health outcomes. The only area where there was a significant difference between or within the two sites was in the area of patient satisfaction. The results of this study do not support the use of the Enhanced Primary Care Model as a theoretical framework for improving provider or patient outcomes
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