132 research outputs found
Conceptualising and measuring prosperity
This paper has been produced as an Issue-Based Contribution to the sixth
Global Report on Local Democracy and Decentralization (GOLD VI): the
flagship publication of the organized constituency of local and regional
governments represented in United Cities and Local Governments. The GOLD
VI report has been produced in partnership with the Development Planning
Unit (University College London), through the programme Knowledge in
Action for Urban Equality (KNOW). GOLD VI focuses on how local and regional
governments can address the local manifestations of growing inequalities
and contribute to create âPathways toward urban and territorial equalityâ.
The GOLD VI report has been produced through a large-scale international
co-production process, bringing together over a hundred representatives of
local and regional governments, academics and civil society organizations.
This paper is an outcome of this process and is part of the GOLD VI Working
Paper series, which collects the 22 Issue-Based Contributions produced as
part of the GOLD VI process.
In particular, the present paper has contributed to Chapter 8 on 'Prosperingâ,
which focuses on prosperity as a culturally specific and multi-dimensional
concept: one that includes, but is not limited to, the concept of income. The
chapter explores key drivers of urban inequality reflected in the scarcity
of decent work and in social-spatial disparities in the location of different
productive activities within cities. Through the lens of âprosperingâ, the
chapter analyses how local and regional governments can increase decent
work opportunities, and, drawing on the impacts of COVID-19, how they can
mitigate the effects of future pandemics and of climate change on decent
work, urban prosperity, and inequality
East London Citizen Prosperity Index Methodology
The Citizen Prosperity Index (CPI), developed by the Institute for Global Prosperity at University College London, offers a novel approach to measuring prosperity beyond traditional economic indicators. This methodology paper outlines the CPI's application in east London, focusing on 15 Lower Layer Super Output Areas across five boroughs undergoing regeneration projects. The CPI features a communitydriven design, citizen scientist data collection, and a multidimensional framework encompassing five key domains: Foundations of Prosperity, Opportunities and Aspirations, Power, Voice and Influence, Belonging, Connections and Leisure, and Health and Healthy Environments. The paper describes the mixed-methods approach, combining quantitative surveys with qualitative research, and details the index construction process, including data treatment, post-stratification weights, and z-score normalisation techniques. This methodology enables individual, local, borough, and city-wide analysis, providing a nuanced understanding of prosperity across different scales. The CPI's potential for global application is discussed, highlighting its adaptability to diverse contexts, as demonstrated by its expansion to Lebanon and Tanzania. The paper examines the implications for policy and practice, emphasising the CPI's value in informing targeted interventions and investment strategies across various sectors. By offering stakeholders a sophisticated tool for understanding and promoting prosperity, the CPI contributes to a broader reconceptualisation of prosperity, aligning measurement practices with communitydefined priorities and well-being
Pathways to Urban Equality through the Sustainable Development Goals: Modes of Extreme Poverty, Resilience, and Prosperity
There has been a tendency for debates around the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to focus on particular Goals or Targets. What tends to get lost, however, is the bigger picture. In this paper we ask: to what extent and under what conditions do the SDGs offer a pathway to equality? Specifically, we focus on the potentials of the SDGs as a pathway to urban equality in the decade of delivery. We focus on the ways that three key interrelated development agendas, eradicating extreme poverty, promoting prosperity, and building resilience, are mobilised through the SDGs. Together these agendas reveal tensions and opportunities in the relationship between the SDGs and urban equality. In discussion, we reflect on the potentials of an urban equality lens to read the SDGs, and the conditions under which they might contribute to the realisation of fairer and more equal cities
Cationic surfactants as a non-covalent linker for oxidised cellulose nanofibrils and starch-based hydrogels
Rheological properties of hydrogels composed of TEMPO-oxidised cellulose nanofibrils (OCNF)-starch in the presence of cationic surfactants were investigated. The cationic surfactants dodecyltrimethylammonium bromide (DTAB) and cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) were used to trigger gelation of OCNF at around 5 mM surfactant. As OCNF and DTAB/CTAB are oppositely charged, an electrostatic attraction is suggested to explain the gelation mechanism. OCNF (1 wt%) and soluble starch (0.5 and 1 wt%) were blended to prepare hydrogels, where the addition of starch to the OCNF resulted in a higher storage modulus. Starch polymers were suggested to form networks with cellulose nanofibrils. The stiffness and viscosity of OCNF-Starch hydrogels were enhanced further by the addition of cationic surfactants (5 mM of DTAB/CTAB). ζ -potential and amylose-iodine complex analyses were also conducted to confirm surface charge and interaction of OCNF-starch-surfactant in order to provide an in-depth understanding of the surfactant-induced gel networks
Cationic surfactants as a non-covalent linker for oxidised cellulose nanofibrils and starch-based hydrogels
International audienceRheological properties of hydrogels composed of TEMPO-oxidised cellulose nanofibrils (OCNF)-starch in the presence of cationic surfactants were investigated. The cationic surfactants dodecyltrimethylammonium bromide (DTAB) and cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) were used to trigger gelation of OCNF at around 5mM surfactant. As OCNF and DTAB/CTAB are oppositely charged, an electrostatic attraction is suggested to explain the gelation mechanism. OCNF (1 wt%) and soluble starch (0.5 and 1 wt%) were blended to prepare hydrogels, where the addition of starch to the OCNF resulted in a higher storage modulus. Starch polymers were suggested to form networks with cellulose nanofibrils. The stiffness and viscosity of OCNF-Starch hydrogels were enhanced further by the addition of cationic surfactants (5mM of DTAB/CTAB). ζ -potential and amylose-iodine complex analyses were also conducted to confirm surface charge and interaction of OCNF-starch-surfactant in order to provide an in-depth understanding of the surfactant-induced gel networks
The benefits and harms of providing parents with weight feedback as part of the national child measurement programme: a prospective cohort study.
BACKGROUND: Small-scale evaluations suggest that the provision of feedback to parents about their child's weight status may improve recognition of overweight, but the effects on lifestyle behaviour are unclear and there are concerns that informing parents that their child is overweight may have harmful effects. The aims of this study were to describe the benefits and harms of providing weight feedback to parents as part of a national school-based weight-screening programme in England. METHODS: We conducted a pre-post survey of 1,844 parents of children aged 4-5 and 10-11 years who received weight feedback as part of the 2010-2011 National Child Measurement Programme. Questionnaires assessed general knowledge about the health risks associated with child overweight, parental recognition of overweight and the associated health risks in their child, child lifestyle behaviour, child self-esteem and weight-related teasing, parental experience of the feedback, and parental help-seeking behaviour. Differences in the pre-post proportions of parents reporting each outcome were assessed using a McNemar's test. RESULTS: General knowledge about child overweight as a health issue was high at baseline and increased further after weight feedback. After feedback, the proportion of parents that correctly recognised their child was overweight increased from 21.9% to 37.7%, and more than a third of parents of overweight children sought further information regarding their child's weight. However, parent-reported changes in lifestyle behaviours among children were minimal, and limited to increases in physical activity in the obese children only. There was some suggestion that weight feedback had a greater impact upon changing parental recognition of the health risks associated with child overweight in non-white ethnic groups. CONCLUSIONS: In this population-based sample of parents of children participating in the National Child Measurement Programme, provision of weight feedback increased recognition of child overweight and encouraged some parents to seek help, without causing obvious unfavourable effects. The impact of weight feedback on behaviour change was limited; suggesting that further work is needed to identify ways to more effectively communicate health information to parents and to identify what information and support may encourage parents in making and maintaining lifestyle changes for their child
Microstructural, thermal, crystallization, and water absorption properties of films prepared from never-dried and freeze-dried cellulose nanocrystals
In this paper, the microstructural, optical, thermal, crystallization, and water absorption properties of films prepared from never-dried (ND) and freeze-dried (FD) cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs) are reported. Morphology of the ND CNCs reveals a needle-like structure, while after freeze-drying, they show a flake-like morphology. Microstructural analysis of ND and FD CNCs are further studied via small angle X-ray scattering to probe interactions. ND CNCs yield a transparent film with a low surface roughness (14 ± 4 nm), while the FD CNC film evidence a significant reduction of their transparency due to their higher surface roughness (134 ± 20 nm). Although Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy analyses reveal no chemical change occurs during the freeze-drying process, yet a more intense thermal degradation profile is observed for FD CNC film, probably due to the higher oxygen ingress within the gaps created between the stacked flakes. This, in turn, results in a greater loss of crystallinity at a higher temperature (300 °C) compared to the ND CNC film. A rapid decrease in water contact angle of the FD CNC film proves that the morphology of flakes and their orientation within the film has a strong influence in increasing water absorption capacity
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