1,336 research outputs found
ABORTION: A HISTORICAL RESCUE ANO OTHER DATA
Concerned with data yelded by recent Brazilian pieces of research on complications after abortion, pointing out to an increasing growth in lhe occurrence of these events, besides their high incidence among adolescente, the authors intend to offer, in this paper, subsidies for a “rethinking”of the matter in futuro public health policies in Brazil. To do so, the authors present a historical approach, emphasizing the medical, religious, political, legal, social, economic and cultural views on the matter of abortion held by different civilizations (both eastern and western ones), sinceancient times until nowadays - ali of them essentially economically oriented, obviously dependent on the faction holding the power at a given time. The Brazilian political legislation is also presented.Preocupados com os resultados recentes de pesquisas brasileiras sobre complicações apĂłs aborto, que indicam um crescente aumento no nĂşmero desses eventos, alĂ©m de registrarem uma alta incidĂŞncia dos mesmos entre adolescentes, os autores propõem-se a analisar, neste trabalho, a prática do aborto sob uma Ética histĂłrica, como um subsĂdio para se “repensar”a questĂŁo em futuras polĂticas de saĂşde no Brasil. Apresentam, para tanto, enfoques mĂ©dicos, religiosos, polĂticos, legais, sociais, econĂłmicos e culturais sobre a questĂŁo do aborto, esposados pelos povos, desde as antigas civilizações, orientais e ocidentais, atĂ© os dias de hoje - todos eminentemente ditados por fatores econĂ´micos, dependentes, obviamente, da facção que estivesse no poder em determinado contexto histĂłrico. É apresentada, tambĂ©m, a legislação brasileira sobre o assunto
Superconducting crossed correlations in ferromagnets: implications for thermodynamics and quantum transport
It is demonstrated that non local Cooper pairs can propagate in ferromagnetic
electrodes having an opposite spin orientation. In the presence of such crossed
correlations, the superconducting gap is found to depend explicitly on the
relative orientation of the ferromagnetic electrodes. Non local Cooper pairs
can in principle be probed with dc-transport. With two ferromagnetic
electrodes, we propose a ``quantum switch'' that can be used to detect
correlated pairs of electrons. With three or more ferromagnetic electrodes, the
Cooper pair-like state is a linear superposition of Cooper pairs which could be
detected in dc-transport. The effect also induces an enhancement of the
ferromagnetic proximity effect on the basis of crossed superconducting
correlations propagating along domain walls.Comment: 4 pages, RevTe
Re: Lack of association between Matrix Metalloproteinase-1 (MMP-1) promoter polymorphism and risk of renal cell carcinoma
Federal University of SĂŁo Paulo Section of NephrologyFederal University of SĂŁo Paulo Section of UrologyInstitute of Energetic and Nuclear ResearchUNIFESP, Section of NephrologyUNIFESP, Section of UrologySciEL
Good practice in mental health care for socially marginalised groups in Europe: a qualitative study of expert views in 14 countries
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited
Four agendas for research and policy on emissions mitigation and well-being
The climate crisis requires nations to achieve human well-being with low national levels of carbon emissions. Countries vary from one another dramatically in how effectively they convert resources into well-being, and some nations with low levels of emissions have relatively high objective and subjective well-being. We identify urgent research and policy agendas for four groups of countries with either low or high emissions and well-being indicators. Least studied are those with low well-being and high emissions. Understanding social and political barriers to switching from high-carbon to lower-carbon modes of production and consumption, and ways to overcome them, will be fundamental
The Cinderella moment:Exploring consumers’ motivations to engage with renting as collaborative luxury consumption mode
Past literature argued that the purchase of luxury goods is driven by people’s motivation to conform or fit into our economic and social system. In this study, the authors focus on a new aspect of consumption, i.e. renting instead of purchasing luxury goods, backed by the emerging opportunities of sharing economy platforms. Drawing upon the analysis of spontaneous consumers’ online communications (in the form of tweets), this research aims to investigate the motivations to engage with luxury garment renting within a collaborative consumption context. To this end, a series of automatic content analyses, via two studies, were conducted using the tweets posted with respect to the Run the Runway collaborative consumption platform. Results demonstrate consumers’ increased willingness to show their social status through renting rather than owning luxurious apparel based on five main motivators (need to wear new clothes for a special event, inspirations created by the products/brands, possibility to explore a new way of consuming luxury goods, need to make more sustainable choices, and to increase the life cycle of each luxury product). The implications of these findings are discussed, while they pave the way for future research in collaborative consumption of luxury retailing
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Work relations and the multiple dimensions of the work-life boundary: Hairstyling at home
This article proposes a multidimensional approach to analysis of the work-life boundary and examines the affects of particular social and organizational relations on the preservation or porous-ness of different dimensions. In line with Nippert-Eng (1996), it is suggested that different dimensions of the boundary are reinforced or weakened by different social and organizational pressures. Analysis describes a specific type of multidimensional breaching – instances when work is taken outside of the worksite (spatial breaching) and is carried out outside of work-time (temporal breaching). Empirical research was conducted among hairstylists working in salons and barbershops in a city in the North of England. Because of the nature of the tasks involved in hairstyling – that the skills involved are widely exchangeable and so may be employed in extra-work environments and temporalities – hairstylists provide a nice site for investigating the circumstances when this does (or does not) occur. Data collection involved a comprehensive self-completion survey of salons and barbershops in the city (response rate: 40%; N=132) and semi-structured interviews with 70 stylists working in 52 salons or barbershops. Findings demonstrate that work relations (hairstylists’ structural relations of production – whether a worker is an owner-proprietor, chair-renter, on-commission stylist, basic-only stylist, or trainee) are critical in determining both workers’ ability and desire to resist the seepage of work into their social lives as well as the particular dimensions of the boundary that are breached. This is because work relations affect the relative importance of four identified motivations for taking work out of the salon (income production; training; inter-personal reciprocity rooted in social relations; and inter-personal reciprocity rooted in the workplace)
Smoke gets in your eyes:what is sociological about cigarettes?
Contemporary public health approaches increasingly draw attention to the unequal social distribution of cigarette smoking. In contrast, critical accounts emphasize the importance of smokers’ situated agency, the relevance of embodiment and how public health measures against smoking potentially play upon and exacerbate social divisions and inequality. Nevertheless, if the social context of cigarettes is worthy of such attention, and sociology lays a distinct claim to understanding the social, we need to articulate a distinct, positive and systematic claim for smoking as an object of sociological enquiry. This article attempts to address this by situating smoking across three main dimensions of sociological thinking: history and social change; individual agency and experience; and social structures and power. It locates the emergence and development of cigarettes in everyday life within the project of modernity of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. It goes on to assess the habituated, temporal and experiential aspects of individual smoking practices in everyday lifeworlds. Finally, it argues that smoking, while distributed in important ways by social class, also works relationally to render and inscribe it
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