6 research outputs found

    Evidence on the extent of harms experienced by children as a result of online risks: Implications for policy and research

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    This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Information, Communication and Society on 8/7/2014, available online: http://wwww.tandfonline.com/10.1080/1369118X.2014.934387Intense media and policy focus on issues of online child protection have prompted a resurgence of moral panics about children and adolescents' Internet use, with frequent confounding of different types of risk and harm and little reference to empirical evidence of actual harm. Meanwhile, within the academic literature, the quantity and quality of studies detailing the risks and opportunities of online activity for children and young people has risen substantially in the past 10 years, but this is also largely focused on risk rather than evidence of harm. Whilst this is understandable given the methodological and ethical challenges of studying Internet-related harms to minors, the very concept of risk is dependent on some prior understanding of harm, meaning that without efforts to study what harms are connected with children's online experiences, discussions of risk lack a strong foundation. This article makes a key contribution to the field by reviewing available evidence about the scale and scope of online harms from across a range of disciplines and identifying key obstacles in this research area as well as the major policy implications. The findings are based on a review of 148 empirical studies. Results were found in relation to main types of harms: health-related harms as a result of using pro-eating disorder, self-harm or pro-suicide websites; sex-related harms such as Internet-initiated sexual abuse of minors and cyber-bullying

    Fighting Putin and the Kremlin’s grip in neo-authoritarian Russia: the experience of liberal journalists

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    Slavtcheva-Petkova, V. (2017). Fighting Putin and the Kremlin’s grip in neo-authoritarian Russia: the experience of liberal journalists. Journalism. Copyright © [2017]. Reprinted by permission of SAGE Publications.Russia is one of the most dangerous countries for journalists and the conflict with Ukraine and Russia’s involvement in Syria present even further challenges for the future of Russian journalism. In addition to the financial pressures, physical attacks, abductions and harassment, liberal journalists now face an increasing threat to the democratising role they see themselves as playing. President Vladimir Putin’s soaring popularity and the elaborate range of tactics used to suppress press freedom are forcing liberal media to rethink their mission(s) and identity(ies). This paper presents empirical evidence on the range of tactics used by Russian authorities as well as the coping strategies adopted by journalists. The study shows that some Russian media and journalists demonstrate a great degree of resilience in their efforts to expose wrongdoings and hold the powerful to account. The article questions the applicability of Western-centric normative media system theories because it shows that the breadth, depth, and mechanisms of control in modern-day Russia are very different from the ones used during Soviet times, and yet, Russian media and society do not appear to be on a linear journey from authoritarianism to democracy. The article presents the findings of a semi-ethnographic study of some of Russia’s most influential liberal news outlets – Novaya Gazeta, Radio Echo of Moscow and Radio Free Europe/Liberty. The study was conducted in May 2014 in the midst of the conflict with Ukraine. It involved observations of editorial meetings, documentary analysis and interviews with editors, deputy editors and journalists

    A model of online protection to reduce children's online risk exposure: empirical evidence from Asia

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    Children are surrounded by a variety of digital media and are exposed to potential risks that come with such easy accessibility. Learning how to be safe online is an important consideration for both children and their caregivers. The present study proposes an integrated model of online safety based on constructs from protection motivation theory and the health belief model, namely perceived severity of (and susceptibility to) risk, online self-efficacy, online privacy concern, and digital literacy. The study comprised a survey conducted among 420 schoolchildren aged 9–16 years. Using partial least squares-structural equation modelling, the results illustrated the presence of a negative effect of ‘perceived severity of online risk’ toward online risks, whereas the effect of ‘digital literacy’ was found to be positive. Children whose perception of online risks was more severe were less exposed to online risks if they had higher ‘online privacy concerns’ than the children with higher ‘digital literacy’ who are more exposed to online risk. Results of the study show that engaging in safe online behaviour requires children to have a high perception regarding severity of online risks as well as knowledge of online privacy concerns. Online risks and opportunities occur in parallel. Consequently, the factors that increase or decrease risk may also increase or decrease the benefits

    La photosynthèse nette chez la vigne (<em>V. vinifera</em> L.) et les facteurs écologiques

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    Les auteurs étudient l'influence des facteurs écologiques les plus importants sur l'intensité de la photosynthèse, et la marche journalière et saisonnière de ce phénomène chez la vigne (Vitis vinifera L.). Les valeurs optimales des différents facteurs sont déterminées; elles ne sont pas absolues mais elles reflètent les capacités d'adaptation de la vigne. L'influence de chacun des facteurs est modifiée par les autres conditions de l'expérimentation. +++ ln this work, the influence of the most important ecological factors concerning the intensity and the development of photosynthesis along the day and the season for the vine (Vitis vinefera L.) is studied. The optimal values of different factor are determined: they are not absolute but they are in connection with the adaptive capacities of the vine. The influence of each factor is modified by the other conditions of the experiment

    In Vitro Culture and Propagation of Grapevine

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