1,149 research outputs found
Awareness and the Demand of Safe Drinking Water Practices
The demand for environmental goods is often low in developing countries. The major causes are awareness regarding the contamination of water and poverty, but less attention has been paid to the former reason. We use a household survey from Hyderabad city and estimate the contribution of awareness and income on households water purification behaviour. The study finds out that measures of awareness such as different level of schooling of decision-makers and household heads and their exposure to mass media have statistically significant effects on home purification methods for drinking water, while other members of households can effect this behaviour only when they get higher levels of schooling.Demand, Awareness, Safe Drinking Water, Logit Model and Probit Model
Awareness and the Demand of Safe Drinking Water Practices
The demand for environmental goods is often low in developing countries. The major causes are awareness regarding the contamination of water and poverty, but less attention has been paid to the former reason. We use a household survey from Hyderabad city and estimate the contribution of awareness and income on households’ water purification behaviour. The study finds out that measures of awareness such as different level of schooling of decision-makers and household heads and their exposure to mass media have statistically significant effects on home purification methods for drinking water, while other members of households can effect this behaviour only when they get higher levels of schooling.Demand, Awareness, Safe Drinking Water, Logit Model, Probit Model
Brokerage and Political Society in Urban Punjab: A Post -Colonial Perspective
This article seeks to explore and discuss the complex issues of post-colonial democracy and the role of political brokerage in it. The paper argues that it is highly problematic to explain post-colonial democracy through the prism of western normative theories since the post-colonial state formation and its historical trajectories are entirely different from the history of western state formation. Based on field work in one of the neighbourhoods of Sialkot, Punjab, the article explains that the political broker/mediator plays pivotal role in post-colonial democracies like Pakistan. It explains how a broker negotiates with bureaucracy and government officials on behalf of the common people who do not have an easy access to the government departments by engaging political parties/leaders. The brokers are the key players in democratic process. The arguments does not fit into the normative theoretical grid hence we cannot analytically rely on the normative theorization to explain the post-colonial democracy
The Impact Foreign Direct Investment on Economic Growth in Pakistan Since 1980
This research is about to check the impact of Foreign direct investment on economic growth of Pakistan from 1980 to 2011. FDI is of the most important factor for the economic growth in the developing countries. Economic growth is effected from FDI by many domestic investment, increase the level of human capital and giving technology to the other countries who interesting to invest in the host country. The managerial as well as marketing skills increase also in the host country. Here we find the relation between the foreign direct investment and economic growth taking some other variables like labor, domestic capital and exports taking into consideration in the model. Co-integration model is used to test the relationship between the variables. The results show a significant relationship between foreign direct investment and economic growth. The result also suggest that giving suitable environment to the foreign investors to strengthen the FDI
Track Dating Hadith Fly Wings: A Study of Harald Motzki’s Isnad cum Matn Method and Science
This study explored and analyzed fly wings from the perspectives of hadith and science. It used a qualitative, analytical descriptive approach and integrated Harald Motzki's Isnad Cum Matn analysis with pharmaceutical studies. The research question was: How do hadith and pharmacy view fly wings? The results showed that 21 hadith books mention fly wings, including Sahih Bukhari. The hadith of the fly wings is valid, with Utbah bin Muslim as the common link (disseminator of hadith). From the perspective of pharmaceutical science, most microorganisms on flies, such as germs, viruses, and microbes, can cause diseases. However, drowning flies can neutralize these microorganisms against the fluid they perceive. This shows that science is in harmony with the hadith of the Prophet
Association Rules Mining Based Clinical Observations
Healthcare institutes enrich the repository of patients' disease related
information in an increasing manner which could have been more useful by
carrying out relational analysis. Data mining algorithms are proven to be quite
useful in exploring useful correlations from larger data repositories. In this
paper we have implemented Association Rules mining based a novel idea for
finding co-occurrences of diseases carried by a patient using the healthcare
repository. We have developed a system-prototype for Clinical State Correlation
Prediction (CSCP) which extracts data from patients' healthcare database,
transforms the OLTP data into a Data Warehouse by generating association rules.
The CSCP system helps reveal relations among the diseases. The CSCP system
predicts the correlation(s) among primary disease (the disease for which the
patient visits the doctor) and secondary disease/s (which is/are other
associated disease/s carried by the same patient having the primary disease).Comment: 5 pages, MEDINFO 2010, C. Safran et al. (Eds.), IOS Pres
Urban Expansion, Land Use Land Cover Change and Human Impacts: A Case Study of Rawalpindi
Urbanization in Pakistan has increased rapidly from 25% in 1972 to 42% in 2012. Peripheral zones are being pushed by urbanization much beyond their previous extents. Moreover, dispersed developments along the highways/motorways and unplanned expansion of existing urban centres is instigating a substantial loss of vegetation and open spaces. This research is an effort to analyse the relationship between urban expansion and land use/cover change using a combination of remote sensing, census and field data. Rawalpindi has been chosen as a study area because of its rapidly changing population density and land cover over the last few decades, and availability of satellite and census data.
Landsat MSS and TM images of 1972, 1979, 1998 and 2010 which are compatible with the 1972, 1981, 1998 and 2012 Census of Pakistan dates were classified using the Maximum Likelihood classifier. The results of the assessment of classification accuracy yielded an overall accuracy of 75.16%, 72.5%, for Landsat MSS 1972, 1979 images and 84.5% and 87.1% for Landsat TM 1998 and 2010 images.
Results reveal that the built up area of the study area has been increased from 7,017 hectares to 36,220 hectares during the 1972 -2012 period. This expansion has been accompanied by the loss of agricultural and forest land. There has been a decrease of approximately 10,000 hectares in cropped area and 2,000 hectares in forest land of the study area during the 1998-2012 inter-censal period. Corroboration of official census data, remote sensing results and field based qualitative data supports the view that high population growth rate, industrialization, better educational and transportation facilities and proximity of the study area to the capital (Islamabad) are the major factors of urban expansion and resulting land cover changes
The present research is expected to have significant implications for other rapidly urbanizing areas of Pakistan in particular, and the Global South in general, in delivering baseline information about long term land use/cover changes
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