212 research outputs found
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Proposal for encoding the Elbasan script in the SMP of the UCS
This is a proposal to encode the Elbasan script in the international character encoding standard Unicode. This script was published in Unicode Standard version 7.0 in June 2014. The Elbasan script is attested in the Elbasan Gospel manuscript, which dates to around 1750. The script was used to write the Albanian language
Maori internal and international migration at the turn of the century: An Australasian perspective
At the beginning of the twenty-first century there were two major national clusters of Maori: New Zealand, the ancestral home for Maori, and Australia, home to a much smaller Maori population from the early years of the nineteenth century. In the 2001 censuses of New Zealand and Australia, the usually resident Maori populations were, respectively, 526,281 (ethnic group classification) and 72,956 (ancestry classification). In this paper we examine four dimensions of Maori population movement between 1996 and 2001 using the census data from New Zealand and Australia: 1) internal migration between rural and urban areas in New Zealand; 2) internal migration between rural and urban areas in Australia; 3) migration into New Zealand of Maori resident overseas in 1996; 4) migration into Australia of Maori resident overseas in 1996. There has never been a comprehensive assessment of Maori migration in an Australasian context before, but in the light of developments in population exchanges between New Zealand and Australia this sort of analysis is critical if one wishes to understand contemporary Maori population dynamics
Transforming access to clean technology: learning from Lighting Africa
UK AID has recently invested in a new ÂŁ39.8 million programme that aims to transform access to modern energy cooking services, or MECS, in Africa and Asia. In this working paper we demonstrate how reframing our understanding of how transformations happen in access to clean energy technologies, foregrounding the social and the political, together with more sophisticated, systemic understandings of how sustained technological change and innovation occurs, can increase the chances of transformative change that is environmentally sustainable and socially just. This moves beyond the largely unsuccessful track record of past interventions that tended to focus only on technology hardware and finance.
The working paper analyses the case of Lighting Africa, which successfully transformed access to solar lighting in Kenya and, as far as we are aware, conceptualises and illustrates for the first time Lighting Africaâs approach. This builds on past STEPS research that focusses on building sociotechnical innovation systems.
The paper then compares the existing and planned activities of the MECS Programme in order to facilitate learning looking forward. This analysis is assisted by consideration of the important ways in which cooking as an energy service, and its related social practices, differs from lighting. It is also assisted by analysis of some critical social justice and political dimensions that were not explicitly addressed by Lighting Africa.
As well as making substantive recommendations for the future operation of this ÂŁ39.8 million programme of research and delivery, the working paper provides a useful illustration of how the STEPS Pathways Approach can contribute to applied analyses of policy and practice
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Global 3-D Land-Ocean-Atmosphere Model for Mercury: Present-Day Versus Preindustrial Cycles and Anthropogenic Enrichment Factors for Deposition
We develop a mechanistic representation of land-atmosphere cycling in a global 3-D ocean-atmosphere model of mercury (GEOS-Chem). The resulting land-ocean-atmosphere model is used to construct preindustrial and present biogeochemical cycles of mercury, to examine the legacy of past anthropogenic emissions, to map anthropogenic enrichment factors for deposition, and to attribute mercury deposition in the United States. Land emission in the model includes prompt recycling of recently deposited mercury (600 Mg aâ1 for present day), soil volatilization (550 Mg aâ1), and evapotranspiration (550 Mg aâ1). The spatial distribution of soil concentrations is derived from local steady state between land emission and deposition in the preindustrial simulation, augmented for the present day by a 15% increase in the soil reservoir distributed following the pattern of anthropogenic deposition. Mercury deposition and hence emission are predicted to be highest in the subtropics. Our atmospheric lifetime of mercury against deposition (0.50 year) is shorter than past estimates because of our accounting of Hg(0) dry deposition, but recycling from surface reservoirs results in an effective lifetime of 1.6 years against transfer to long-lived reservoirs in the soil and deep ocean. Present-day anthropogenic enrichment of mercury deposition exceeds a factor of 5 in continental source regions. We estimate that 68% of the deposition over the United States is anthropogenic, including 20% from North American emissions (20% primary and <1% recycled through surface reservoirs), 31% from emissions outside North America (22% primary and 9% recycled), and 16% from the legacy of anthropogenic mercury accumulated in soils and the deep ocean.Earth and Planetary SciencesEngineering and Applied Science
Nurses\u27 Alumnae Association Bulletin, April 1959
Alumnae News
Anniversary Class of /34
Article from Pennsylvania Nurse
Committee Reports
Current Events at Jefferson
Greetings from the President
Jefferson Story
Lost Members
Letter - Past President
Marriages
Necrology
New Arrivals
Notices
Pictured - Student Nurses\u27 Residence
Report of the School of Nursing and Nursing Services
Staff Nurses Social Functions
Student Activities
Voluntary Service
Year of Great Activity and Expansio
Depression and resilience mediate the relationship between traumatic life events and ill physical health: results from a population study
We set out to investigate the mediating roles of depression, resilience, smoking, and alcohol use, in the relationship between potentially traumatic life events and objective and subjective, physical and mental health in a single study. A face-to-face, population-based survey was conducted in Hong Kong (N = 1147). Information on health conditions and traumatic life events was obtained, and participants completed measures of subjective physical and mental health, depression, and resilience. Smoking and drinking were not significant mediators of the relationship between life events and both objective and subjective health. Depressive symptomatology was found to mediate the relationship between life threatening illness and subjective physical health, the relationship between abuse (physical and sexual) and subjective mental health, and the relationship between the death of a parent/partner and subjective mental health. Resilience was found to mediate the relationships between multiple traumatic life events and subjective physical and mental health. Our results indicate that psychological factors rather than biological are important mediators of the relationship between life events exposure and health. Our findings provide evidence that depressive symptomatology has a mediating role only in the case of specific potentially traumatic life events and that resilience is only a critical factor in the face of exposure to multiple traumatic events, rather than single events. Our results also indicate that behavioural factors, such as smoking and drinking, are not significant mediators of the relationship between life events and health
The Ursinus Weekly, May 17, 1973
Japanese students eager to tour US and study at UC ⢠Preview of freshmen reveals a typical lot ⢠POW speaks to psychology classes ⢠Juniors elect officers for their senior year ⢠Economics majors inducted into honor society ⢠Editorial: Ellsberg and his gift of justice; In praise of PBS ⢠Faculty portrait: Mr. Juan Espadas ⢠Final exam schedule ⢠Taming of the Shrew pleases weekend audience ⢠Trackmen complete successful season ⢠British upset 11-8; Smart coaching helps ⢠Lacrosse team wins two but loses the big onehttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/weekly/1105/thumbnail.jp
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