369 research outputs found

    Food Cultures: Growing Cooking Eating - An exploration of improving food practices in young men and older adults in Plymouth

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    Executive summary This project explored how food projects can influence food related skills and promote behaviour change in young men and older adults in Plymouth. Young men are known to have a low intake of fruit and vegetables (NDNS 2011) and many older people are vulnerable to poor nutrition (CWT 2004); currently there are relatively few food intervention projects targeting these two groups. In 2010 eight food projects in Plymouth were funded to take part in the ‘Food Cultures Project’, an innovative partnership between agencies and civic organisations from the public health, social care, youth and social enterprise sectors. An evaluative research framework was also developed to measure outcomes. This report outlines the methods and findings of this work and concludes by considering the implications and recommendations for further development. This report also explores the productive aspects of such “new partnership” working between health and higher education institutions and the growing social enterprise sector. A mixed methods approach was used: firstly a quantitative survey was designed for assessing, at baseline and endpoint, outcomes common to each project: i) food growing confidence and skills, ii) cooking confidence and skills and iii) eating practices (fruit and vegetable, cooking ‘from scratch’). Secondly, an endpoint qualitative survey captured the feelings and experiences emerging from the project participants. This report considers the combined findings of all eight projects, and also focuses in more detail on case studies of two of the projects. In summary, the participants (n=42) reported increases in all food growing activities, and a notable 36% decrease in ‘not doing any growing at all’. There was an increase (10%) in meals cooked ‘from scratch’ alongside a 34% decrease in convenience food consumption. Confidence in growing and cooking activities increased for all participants. There was an increase in the consumption of fruit (0.31) and vegetable (0.3) portions. Skills gained from participation included chopping vegetables, cooking, healthy eating, and team-working. Change was reported for healthy eating awareness and social connections. Generally, participants boosted their self-esteem. Participants enjoyed the ‘social health’ approach, e.g. going on trips out and activities which encouraged social interaction. There was no doubt that this innovative approach worked particularly well for the younger groups - there was evidence of improved personal growth (health, confidence, motivation, skills) and community development (teamwork, social connections and engagement). The older groups demonstrated similar trends, although social engagement was less apparent in the findings, suggesting a need to develop more appropriately tailored approaches for some older population groups

    Surface-enhanced Raman scattering from surface and subsurface oxygen species at microscopically well-defined Ag surfaces

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    Ag(111) and Ag(110) surfaces exposed to oxygen at elevated temperatures (∌800 K) exhibit strongly enhanced Raman bands at 803 and 627 cm−1 which are attributed to O atoms strongly chemisorbed on the surface (OÎł) or held in subsurface sites (OÎČ), respectively. In contrast to usual experience, surface-enhanced Raman scattering is occurring here under well-defined conditions up to temperatures of 900 K which is attributed to the joint operation of delocalized electromagnetic enhancement (caused by surface roughness provided by oxygen-induced faceting) and local resonance due to the particular electronic properties of the surface sites

    Labour supply and skills demands in fashion retailing

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    If, as Adam Smith once famously suggested, Britain was a nation of shopkeepers then it is now a nation of shopworkers. Retail is now a significant part of the UK economy, accounting for ÂŁ256 billion in sales and one-third of all consumer spending (Skillsmart, 2007). It is the largest private sector employer in the UK, employing 3m workers, or 1 in 10 of the working population. For future job creation in the UK economy retail is also similarly prominent and the sector is expected to create a further 250,000 jobs to 2014 (Skillsmart, 2007). The centrality of retail to economic success and job creation is apparent in other advanced economies. For example, within the US, retail sales is the occupation with the largest projected job growth in the period 2004-2014 (Gatta et al., 2009) and in Australia retail accounts for 1 in 6 workers (Buchanan et al., 2003). Within the UK these workers are employed in approximately 290,000 businesses, encompassing large and small organizations and also a number of sub-sectors. This variance suggests that retail should not be regarded as homogenous in its labour demands. Hart et al. (2007) note how skill requirements and the types of workers employed may differ across the sector. This chapter further opens up this point, providing an analysis of the labour supply and skills demands for the sub-sectors of clothing, footwear and leather goods, which are described by Skillsmart (2007: 48) as being 'significant categories in UK retailing'

    Using the Arts for Food Research and Dialogue

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    This Briefing Paper is intended to share ideas and learning arising from the authors’ experiences of using arts-based methods in food research and engagement, as well as to give some insights into the issues that arose from a workshop for academics and Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) developed by Brighton and Sussex Universities Food Network (BSUFN) and hosted by the Food Research Collaboration (FRC) in 2016. It examines the use of participatory and community-centred approaches to explore pressing food policy questions, as well as providing guidance on how to apply these methods in practice. It is intended to be relevant to academics, particularly those interested in using participatory action research methods, and CSOs working with community groups on food issues. The authors’ main interest is the way in which arts-based methods provide a set of tools which can reveal, and give voice to, perspectives on food issues which remain otherwise absent from research and policy debates. In the authors' experience, this happens either because community members are not asked for their views or because of the way in which much traditional/positivist/biomedical academic research is based around pre-determined research questions that do not provide adequate space for community members to explore and voice their own concerns. It could be said that to date, much food research has failed to meaningfully engage with the general public, both during the research process itself and in raising awareness and achieving changes in the food system, which the research evidence indicates needs to happen. The paper firstly outlines why food research is a necessary and important area of exploration. Following this it examines the development, lineage and underlying principles of participatory and arts-based methodologies as approaches to research. Three arts-based and participatory methods are then reviewed in greater detail: i. Photography and film ii. Drama, and iii. Collage. These three methods were the focus of the BSUFN/FRC workshop in 2016. For each of these three examples, theoretical and methodological implications and ethical issues are discussed, enabling readers to fully consider how and why they might apply these approaches. In reviewing these emerging and alternative approaches for engaging communities in research processes, this paper presents a consideration of ideas, narratives, positions and actions relating to food, research and knowledge construction. The authors believe this paper to be an important addition to debates around how arts based and participatory methods might improve the processes, impact and contribution of food research. The paper presents a collaborative effort between academics, researchers and civil society organisations (CSOs) all of whom are concerned with improving research, learning and engagement in relation to food. The paper concludes with recommendations and suggestions on how academics and CSOs might use these methods as part of their research and/or practice

    The New ‘Hidden Abode’: Reflections on Value and Labour in the New Economy

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    In a pivotal section of Capital, volume 1, Marx (1976: 279) notes that, in order to understand the capitalist production of value, we must descend into the ‘hidden abode of production’: the site of the labour process conducted within an employment relationship. In this paper we argue that by remaining wedded to an analysis of labour that is confined to the employment relationship, Labour Process Theory (LPT) has missed a fundamental shift in the location of value production in contemporary capitalism. We examine this shift through the work of Autonomist Marxists like Hardt and Negri, Lazaratto and Arvidsson, who offer theoretical leverage to prize open a new ‘hidden abode’ outside employment, for example in the ‘production of organization’ and in consumption. Although they can open up this new ‘hidden abode’, without LPT's fine-grained analysis of control/resistance, indeterminacy and structured antagonism, these theorists risk succumbing to empirically naive claims about the ‘new economy’. Through developing an expanded conception of a ‘new hidden abode’ of production, the paper demarcates an analytical space in which both LPT and Autonomist Marxism can expand and develop their understanding of labour and value production in today's economy. </jats:p
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