36,703 research outputs found
50/50 by 2020: poverty and redistributive politics in post-independence Fiji
The affirmative action program launched by the Fiji Government in 2002 espoused a '50/50 by 2020' vision; that is, by the year 2020, some 50 per cent of all economic activities would be owned by the indigenous population. The surprising impact of this heavy-handed redistribution of income and wealth from the non-indigenous to the indigenous population has been poverty-raising. One in eight in the population lived in poverty in 1977, the figure had risen to one in four by 1990/91 and one in three by 2002/2003; and on current trends, would reach one in two (that is 50 per cent) by 2020. Such an outcome would be a direct consequence of these redistributive policies. While the politics of redistribution may have been compelling, its economic costs, including the impact on poverty, are devastating. The 2006 military takeover was executed to rid the country of corruption and race-based politics. Achieving these goals may have a bonus in terms of reversing the rise in poverty. Only time will tell
Building peace in Bougainville: measuring recovery post-conflict
Description: This discussion paper documents the socio-economic status of the Autonomous Region of Bougainville and the extent of rebound in investment and access to services since the cessation of conflict there in 1997. Data on the level of income, the age profile of the population, the level of access to basic services, and levels of investment in residential housing were collected via a household-level survey that was administered in the four major urban centres. Analysis of these data shows that per capita income has rebounded to 40 per cent of the pre-conflict level; approximately half of the population is aged less than 20 years; and one-third of school age children are not attending school.
These observations have value in assessing the extent of economic recovery following the installation of peace and the levels of public investment required for improving access to basic services
A microscopic model of wave-function dephasing and decoherence in the double-slit experiment
The act of measurement on a quantum state is supposed to "collapse" the state
into one of several eigenstates of the operator corresponding to the observable
being measured. This measurement process is sometimes described as outside
standard quantum-mechanical evolution and not calculable from Schr\"odinger's
equation. There are two general approaches to the study of wave-function
collapse: one called the "consistent" or "decoherent" histories approach and
the other, the "environmental decoherence" approach, which studies the effect
of the environment upon the quantum system, to explain wave-function collapse.
In the "environmental decoherence" approach, one usually studies a
Markovian-approximated Master equation to study the time-evolution of reduced
density matrix and obtains the long-term dependence of the off-diagonal
elements of this matrix. We do not make a Markovian assumption and study a
particularly simple and calculable example. We find, the short-time behavior of
a collapsing system, at least the one considered in this paper, is not
exponential, which is a new result (the long-term behavior is, of course, still
exponential). This allows one to connect the Fermi-golden rule
quadratic-in-time behavior of a transition probability to the exponential
long-time behavior of a collapsing wave-function
Geomorphology of the Kaikoura area
The major physiographic units in the Kaikoura area are the Peninsula Block, Beach Ridges and Raised Beaches, Hard Rock Areas and the Alluvial Fans. Erosion of the Seaward Kaikoura Mountains and the transfer of the debris to the sea by fan streams have contributed to coastline pro gradation so that a former offshore island, now called the Kaikoura Peninsula, has been joined to the mainland. On the piedmont alluvial plain between the mountains and the sea Otiran Glacial Stage and Holocene fan deposits have covered up older fan surfaces. Stillstands during the tectonic uplift of the Peninsula Block when marine processes cut shore platforms and also higher stands of interglacial sea levels in the Late Pleistocene have contributed to the development of erosion surfaces. Along the coast beach ridges and raised beaches have developed during post-glacial times
Ca2+/calmodulin/MLCK pathway initiates, and RhoA/ROCK maintains, the internal anal sphincter smooth muscle tone.
The Postural Tachycardia Syndrome (POTS): Pathophysiology, Diagnosis & Management
Postural tachycardia syndrome (POTS), characterized by orthostatic tachycardia in the absence of orthostatic hypotension, has been the focus of increasing clinical interest over the last 15 years 1. Patients with POTS complain of symptoms of tachycardia, exercise intolerance, lightheadedness, extreme fatigue, headache and mental clouding. Patients with POTS demonstrate a heart rate increase of ≥30 bpm with prolonged standing (5-30 minutes), often have high levels of upright plasma norepinephrine (reflecting sympathetic nervous system activation), and many patients have a low blood volume. POTS can be associated with a high degree of functional disability. Therapies aimed at correcting the hypovolemia and the autonomic imbalance may help relieve the severity of the symptoms. This review outlines the present understanding of the pathophysiology, diagnosis, and management of POTS
Load Balancing and Virtual Machine Allocation in Cloud-based Data Centers
As cloud services see an exponential increase in consumers, the demand for faster processing of data and a reliable delivery of services becomes a pressing concern. This puts a lot of pressure on the cloud-based data centers, where the consumers’ data is stored, processed and serviced. The rising demand for high quality services and the constrained environment, make load balancing within the cloud data centers a vital concern. This project aims to achieve load balancing within the data centers by means of implementing a Virtual Machine allocation policy, based on consensus algorithm technique. The cloud-based data center system, consisting of Virtual Machines has been simulated on CloudSim – a Java based cloud simulator
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