67 research outputs found

    A theory of motivation and ontological enhancement: the role of disability policy in student empowerment and institutional change

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    As debate continues around the nature and values of education, it is important to ask the question of what factors motivate a student to engage with the ends of an educational institution. In this paper, a broad, holistic view of learner motivation, derived from Aristotelian ethics, is used to provide a model to drive institutional change. Focussing on the approach of one Higher Education institution to the particular accommodations required for students with disabilities, the paper identifies three factors which motivate students, a failure to engage with the aims and ends of the educational project, a failure to see that a particular learning aim is worth attaining, and a simple lack of willā€power to attain it. To each of these failures a social cause is identified, and a change in both the institutional culture and the individual learner's approach to their education is suggested

    BART Inhibits Pancreatic Cancer Cell Invasion by PKCĪ± Inactivation through Binding to ANX7

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    A novel function for the binder of Arl two (BART) molecule in pancreatic cancer cells is reported. BART inhibits invasiveness of pancreatic cancer cells through binding to a Ca2+-dependent, phosphorylated, guanosine triphosphatase (GTPase) membrane fusion protein, annexin7 (ANX7). A tumor suppressor function for ANX7 was previously reported based on its prognostic role in human cancers and the cancer-prone mouse phenotype ANX7(+/āˆ’). Further investigation demonstrated that the BARTā€“ANX7 complex is transported toward cell protrusions in migrating cells when BART supports the binding of ANX7 to the protein kinase C (PKC) isoform PKCĪ±. Recent evidence has suggested that phosphorylation of ANX7 by PKC significantly potentiates ANX7-induced fusion of phospholipid vesicles; however, the current data suggest that the BARTā€“ANX7 complex reduces PKCĪ± activity. Knocking down endogenous BART and ANX7 increases activity of PKCĪ±, and specific inhibitors of PKCĪ± significantly abrogate invasiveness induced by BART and ANX7 knockdown. These results imply that BART contributes to regulating PKCĪ± activity through binding to ANX7, thereby affecting the invasiveness of pancreatic cancer cells. Thus, it is possible that BART and ANX7 can distinctly regulate the downstream signaling of PKCĪ± that is potentially relevant to cell invasion by acting as anti-invasive molecules

    Practicing Asian Criminology: Setsuo Miyazawaā€™s work as food for thought

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    This article addresses implications of Setsuo Miyazawaā€™s work for debates on Asian and Southern criminology, that have drawn attention to mainstream criminologyā€™s regional bias, and the importance of criminological studies on Asian/ Southern contexts for criminologyā€™s further development. Miyazawaā€™s work shows how in depth analyses of and familiarity with the research topic at hand allow for an internationally engaging employment of general theoretical concepts, leading to new insights into specific Japanese contexts as well as cross-national, general theoretical understandings of crime and criminal justice related phenomena. Bringing into focus Asian criminologyā€™s inherent comparative dimension, the article argues that a commitment to a shared conceptual language is indispensable, as is a wide circulation of studies on Asian contexts in international academic fora.</p
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