35 research outputs found

    Corporate Security Responsibility: Towards a Conceptual Framework for a Comparative Research Agenda

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    The political debate about the role of business in armed conflicts has increasingly raised expectations as to governance contributions by private corporations in the fields of conflict prevention, peace-keeping and postconflict peace-building. This political agenda seems far ahead of the research agenda, in which the negative image of business in conflicts, seen as fuelling, prolonging and taking commercial advantage of violent conflicts,still prevails. So far the scientific community has been reluctant to extend the scope of research on ‘corporate social responsibility’ to the area of security in general and to intra-state armed conflicts in particular. As a consequence, there is no basis from which systematic knowledge can be generated about the conditions and the extent to which private corporations can fulfil the role expected of them in the political discourse. The research on positive contributions of private corporations to security amounts to unconnected in-depth case studies of specific corporations in specific conflict settings. Given this state of research, we develop a framework for a comparative research agenda to address the question: Under which circumstances and to what extent can private corporations be expected to contribute to public security

    An evolutionarily young defense metabolite influences the root growth of plants via the ancient TOR signaling pathway.

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    To optimize fitness a plant should monitor its metabolism to appropriately control growth and defense. Primary metabolism can be measured by the universally conserved TOR (Target of Rapamycin) pathway to balance growth and development with the available energy and nutrients. Recent work suggests that plants may measure defense metabolites to potentially provide a strategy ensuring fast reallocation of resources to coordinate plant growth and defense. There is little understanding of mechanisms enabling defense metabolite signaling. To identify mechanisms of defense metabolite signaling, we used glucosinolates, an important class of plant defense metabolites. We report novel signaling properties specific to one distinct glucosinolate, 3-hydroxypropylglucosinolate across plants and fungi. This defense metabolite, or derived compounds, reversibly inhibits root growth and development. 3-hydroxypropylglucosinolate signaling functions via genes in the ancient TOR pathway. If this event is not unique, this raises the possibility that other evolutionarily new plant metabolites may link to ancient signaling pathways

    Processos de democracia direta: sim ou nĂŁo? Os argumentos clĂĄssicos Ă  luz da teoria e da prĂĄtica

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    Regularmente surgem controvĂ©rsias sobre os processos de democracia direta, dos quais os mecanismos mais frequentes sĂŁo a iniciativa popular, o plebiscito e o referendo. Por um lado, hĂĄ autores que defendem a posição de que essas instituiçÔes tornam o jogo polĂ­tico mais lento, caro, confuso e ilegĂ­timo; outros defendem a posição contrĂĄria e argumentam que processos de democracia direta sĂŁo fundamentais para os cidadĂŁos e a qualidade da democracia. O presente estudo analisa esse tema em torno de sete questĂ”es, baseadas em consideraçÔes teĂłricas e pesquisas empĂ­ricas: 1. A questĂŁo entre o minimalismo e o maximalismo democrĂĄtico; 2. A concorrĂȘncia entre maioria e minoria; 3. A concorrĂȘncia entre as instituiçÔes representativas e os processos de democracia direta; 4. A questĂŁo da competĂȘncia dos cidadĂŁos; 5. A questĂŁo dos efeitos colaterais dos processos de democracia direta; 6. A questĂŁo do tamanho do eleitorado; 7. A questĂŁo dos custos dos processos de democracia direta. As sete questĂ”es sĂŁo analisadas a partir de uma revisĂŁo bibliogrĂĄfica que considera tanto fontes nacionais como internacionais. O estudo mostra que os processos de democracia direta podem ser um complemento para as instituiçÔes representativas em um sistema democrĂĄtico. O bom desempenho dos plebiscitos, referendos e iniciativas populares depende tanto da regulamentação destes como tambĂ©m do desempenho das outras instituiçÔes polĂ­ticas e da situação socioeconĂŽmica de um paĂ­s. O estudo permite ampliar e aprofundar o debate sobre processos de democracia direta no Brasil

    NeutralitÀt, SolidaritÀt, Sonderfall: die Konzeptionierung der schweizerischen Aussenpolitik der Nachkriegszeit, 1943-1947

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    ISSN:1423-389

    Accuracy of out-of-field dose calculation of tomotherapy and cyberknife treatment planning systems: A dosimetric study.

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    PURPOSE: Late toxicities such as second cancer induction become more important as treatment outcome improves. Often the dose distribution calculated with a commercial treatment planning system (TPS) is used to estimate radiation carcinogenesis for the radiotherapy patient. However, for locations beyond the treatment field borders, the accuracy is not well known. The aim of this study was to perform detailed out-of-field-measurements for a typical radiotherapy treatment plan administered with a Cyberknife and a Tomotherapy machine and to compare the measurements to the predictions of the TPS. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Individually calibrated thermoluminescent dosimeters were used to measure absorbed dose in an anthropomorphic phantom at 184 locations. The measured dose distributions from 6 MV intensity-modulated treatment beams for CyberKnife and TomoTherapy machines were compared to the dose calculations from the TPS. RESULTS: The TPS are underestimating the dose far away from the target volume. Quantitatively the Cyberknife underestimates the dose at 40cm from the PTV border by a factor of 60, the Tomotherapy TPS by a factor of two. If a 50% dose uncertainty is accepted, the Cyberknife TPS can predict doses down to approximately 10 mGy/treatment Gy, the Tomotherapy-TPS down to 0.75 mGy/treatment Gy. The Cyberknife TPS can then be used up to 10cm from the PTV border the Tomotherapy up to 35cm. CONCLUSIONS: We determined that the Cyberknife and Tomotherapy TPS underestimate substantially the doses far away from the treated volume. It is recommended not to use out-of-field doses from the Cyberknife TPS for applications like modeling of second cancer induction. The Tomotherapy TPS can be used up to 35cm from the PTV border (for a 390 cm(3) large PTV)
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