46 research outputs found

    Strike, occupy, transform! Students, subjectivity and struggle

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    This article uses student activism to explore the way in which activists are challenging the student as consumer model through a series of experiments that blend pedagogy and protest. Specifically, I suggest that Higher Education is increasingly becoming an arena of the postpolitical, and I argue that one of the ways this student-consumer subjectivity is being (re)produced is through a series of ‘depoliticisation machines’ operating within the university. This article goes on to claim that in order to counter this, some of those resisting the neoliberalisation of higher education have been creating political-pedagogical experiments that act as ‘repoliticisation machines’, and that these experiments countered student-consumer subjectification through the creation of new radical forms of subjectivity. This paper provides an example of this activity through the work of a group called the Really Open University and its experiments at blending, protest, pedagogy and propaganda

    A cartography of the possible: reflections on militant ethnography in and against the edu-factory

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    This paper examines militant research through the lens of several challenges the author faced when experimenting with it as part of their PhD research. It engages with ongoing debates about the role and complexity of militant methodologies within-against-beyond the university. Specifically it suggests that the political economy of the academy is a challenge to militant research through the growing influence of the law of value within increasingly marketised academic contexts. This paper argues that the academic-recuperation-machine has the potential to assimilate what it terms the ‘minor knowledge’ created through militant research within its circuits of institutionalisation and commodification, becoming just another output or tool in the toolbox. Relatedly it suggests these challenges do not simply require a reflection on positionality vis-à-vis academia/activism, but a collective struggle around academic labour in-against-beyond the university and how militant researcher might remain ‘in but not of’ the neoliberal university

    The role of the Zairian Health Services in the Rwandan refugee crisis.

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    In July 1994, a stream of Rwandan refugees entered the southern part of North Kivu Region, Zaire. The public health consequences of this crisis for the host population and health services have not been analysed up to now. The lack of human and financial resources did not prevent Zairian health structures and personnel from taking care of the many refugees settled outside the camps, following their arrival. The public health consequences of the crisis for the local population should be considered an integral part of the disaster

    Les métastases de méningiomes. A propos de deux cas.

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    Two cases of meningiomas with metastasis are presented. The first case is typically a fibroblastic meningioma. After a local recurrence, dissemination occurs in the CSF with multiples localizations. The second case is a parasagittal meningioma of meningotheliomatous type. After two recurrences, a lymph node metastasis is discovered. Three modes of dissemination are known: through the blood vessels, the lymphatics or the CSF. The different spreads and mechanisms are discussed

    A patient with two upper lumbar disc herniations

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    Of all lumbar disc herniations, less than 5% occur in the upper lumbar area. Though protrusions are common at all levels, truly extruded disc herniations in the upper lumbar area from L1 to L3 are rare. Even more unusual is the multilevel occurrence of herniations in this area. The authors stress the importance of accurate diagnosis and clinically directed medical imaging work-ups

    Meningioma associated with subdural haematoma: report of two cases and review of the literature.

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    Subdural haematoma (SDH) caused by meningioma is infrequent. 18 cases are described in the literature. We report 2 new cases. Intratumoural bleeding is a frequent feature of this uncommon association

    Three-quarter prone approach to the pineal-tentorial region. Report of seven cases

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    We report our preliminary results (seven cases) with a three-quarter prone approach to the pineal-tentorial region using an opening beneath the midline. The technique we have used eliminates the risk of air embolism because the head is just over the right atrium, the table remaining in an horizontal plane. Using the natural effect of gravity, it is no more necessary to use retraction on the occipital lobe. So, hemianopsia is eliminated. We confirm the results of other teams who have used this approach which seems to us to be the best way to treat any lesion in the pineal-tentorial area

    Lésions de la région pinéale et falco-tentorielle. Abord occipito-pariétal en trois-quarts ventral avec volet infra-sagittal [Lesions of the pineal and tentorial region. Occipito-parietal approach in three-quarter prone position with infrasagittal craniotomy].

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    Surgical treatment of pineal-tentorial region lesions remains a challenge. The difficulty in approaching the pineal region can be verified with the number of operative plans that have been proposed to reach this area: transcallosal, occipital transtentorial, infratentorial supracerebellar approaches and sitting, prone or Concorde positions. This emphasizes the surgeon's dissatisfaction with the surgical techniques described. Recently, a three-quarter prone position with the bone flap placed under the midline has been described (1, 3, 8). We have decided to test this approach that we have slightly modified and we report our results on 13 cases: 2 arachnoid cysts, 3 vascular malformations and 8 tumors (3 brainstem gliomas, 2 dysgerminomas, 1 quadrigeminal plate metastasis and 1 meningioma plus 1 metastasis of the falx). Keeping the table in a horizontal plane, risks of air embolus are eliminated. Using the natural effect of gravity, traction on the occipital lobe is no more necessary and hemianopsia no more occurs. We recommand the parieto-occipital route which is the shortest way to reach epiphysis and falco-tentorial notch. We confirm the results of american colleagues (1, 3, 8, 15) and we advise to use this approach which seems to us the best way to treat pineal-tentorial lesions
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