12,703 research outputs found
The UN local communities and Indigenous peoples' platform: A traditional ecological knowledge-based evaluation
This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium,
provided the original work is properly cited.
© 2019 The Authors. WIREs Climate Change published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc.This review evaluates the potential of the proposed local communities and Indigenous peoples’ platform to effectively engage traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) for climate policy. Specifically, we assess the platform's potential to enable greater representation and participation of Indigenous peoples (IPs) within the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). An analytical
framework based on the extensive TEK and environmental management literature is developed, with a set of criteria identified against which to evaluate the platform. We find that although the process of designing the platform appears to be inclusive of Indigenous views, the structure itself does not recognize the roles that unequal power relations and colonialism play in marginalizing IPs. Limited attention
is paid to the institutional barriers within the UNFCCC and the drawbacks of pursuing knowledge “integration” as an end in itself. Based on this, recommendations for improving the platform structure are put forward including using a rights based framing, giving greater decision-making power to IPs, and developing mechanisms to ensure the holistic integrity of TEK and build the overall resilience of climate mitigation and adaptation systems.Ye
Brief Resume of Seiberg-Witten Theory
Talk presented by the second author at the Inaugural Coference of the Asia
Pacific Center for Theoretical Physics, Seoul, June 1996. The purpose of this
note is to give a resume of the Seiberg-Witten theory in the simplest possible
mathematical terms.Comment: 10 pages, LaTe
Climate, Water Navigability, and Economic Development
Geographic information systems (GIS) data was used on a global scale to examine the relationship between climate (ecozones), water navigability, and economic development in terms of GDP per capita. GDP per capita and the spatial density of economic activity measured as GDP per km2 are high in temperate ecozones and in regions proximate to the sea (within 100 km of the ocean or a sea-navigable waterway). Temperate ecozones proximate to the sea account for 8 percent of the world’s inhabited land area, 23 percent of the world’s population, and 53 percent of the world’s GDP. The GDP densities in temperate ecozones proximate to the sea are on average eighteen times higher than in non-proximate non-temperate areas.
Reducing the hypoxic fraction of a tumour model by growth in low glucose.
The question of whether growth under low glucose conditions leads to a reduced amount of cell hypoxia was investigated using an in vitro tumour analogue, the sandwich system. In this multicellular system, the interplay between diffusion and consumption of oxygen and nutrients results in spatial gradients of these environmental factors. Gradients in the environment lead to biological heterogeneity within the cell population. A necrotic centre, surrounded by a viable cell border, subsequently develops. Cells adjacent to the necrotic centre in sandwiches are hypoxic and are in an environment somewhat analogous to that of cells adjacent to necrotic regions in solid tumours. Using sandwiches of the 9L and V79 cell lines, the effects of growth under low glucose conditions on the degree of hypoxia in regions adjacent to the necrotic centre were investigated. Per-cell binding of 3H-misonidazole, assessed by autoradiography, was used as an indicator of oxygen deprivation. It was found that the extent of the hypoxic region and the severity of hypoxia were considerably reduced by growing sandwiches in a glucose concentration of 0.6 mM rather than 6.5 mM. This reduction was found in conjunction with a smaller viable border; it occurred despite the fact that the average per-cell oxygen consumption is higher in the low glucose sandwiches. The data are qualitatively consistent with a joint oxygen-glucose deprivation model for cell necrosis
Partition functions of chiral gauge theories on the two dimensional torus and their duality properties
Two different families of abelian chiral gauge theories on the torus are
investigated: the aim is to test the consistency of two-dimensional anomalous
gauge theories in the presence of global degrees of freedom for the gauge
field. An explicit computation of the partition functions shows that unitarity
is recovered in particular regions of parameter space and that the effective
dynamics is described in terms of fermionic interacting models. For the first
family, this connection with fermionic models uncovers an exact duality which
is conjectured to hold in the nonabelian case as well.Comment: RevTex, 13 pages, references adde
Cosmological Perturbations of Quantum-Mechanical Origin and Anisotropy of the Microwave Background
Cosmological perturbations generated quantum-mechanically (as a particular
case, during inflation) possess statistical properties of squeezed quantum
states. The power spectra of the perturbations are modulated and the angular
distribution of the produced temperature fluctuations of the CMBR is quite
specific. An exact formula is derived for the angular correlation function of
the temperature fluctuations caused by squeezed gravitational waves. The
predicted angular pattern can, in principle, be revealed by the COBE-type
observations.Comment: 9 pages, WUGRAV-92-17 Accepted for Publication in Phys. Rev. Letters
(1993
The Problem of Inertia in Friedmann Universes
In this paper we study the origin of inertia in a curved spacetime,
particularly the spatially flat, open and closed Friedmann universes. This is
done using Sciama's law of inertial induction, which is based on Mach's
principle, and expresses the analogy between the retarded far fields of
electrodynamics and those of gravitation. After obtaining covariant expressions
for electromagnetic fields due to an accelerating point charge in Friedmann
models, we adopt Sciama's law to obtain the inertial force on an accelerating
mass by integrating over the contributions from all the matter in the
universe. The resulting inertial force has the form , where
depends on the choice of the cosmological parameters such as ,
, and and is also red-shift dependent.Comment: 10 page
CP Violation and Arrows of Time Evolution of a Neutral or Meson from an Incoherent to a Coherent State
We study the evolution of a neutral meson prepared as an incoherent equal
mixture of and . Denoting the density matrix by \rho(t) =
{1/2} N(t) [\1 + \vec{\zeta}(t) \cdot \vec{\sigma} ] , the norm of the state
is found to decrease monotonically from one to zero, while the magnitude
of the Stokes vector increases monotonically from zero to
one. This property qualifies these observables as arrows of time. Requiring
monotonic behaviour of for arbitrary values of and
yields a bound on the CP-violating overlap , which is similar to, but weaker than, the known unitarity
bound. A similar requirement on yields a new bound,
which is particularly effective in limiting
the CP-violating overlap in the - system. We obtain the Stokes
parameter which shows how the average strangeness of the beam
evolves from zero to . The evolution of the Stokes vector from
to has a resemblance to an order
parameter of a system undergoing spontaneous symmetry breaking.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures. Inserted conon "." in title; minor change in
text. To appear in Physical review
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