36 research outputs found

    Institutionalisation of Social Movements: Co-option And Democratic Policy-making

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    Over the past 30 years, urban policy in Brazil has undergone a major transformation, both in terms of regulatory frameworks and the involvement of citizens in the process of policy-making. As an intense process of institutional innovation and mobilisation for decent publicservices took place, academics started to consider the impact of institutionalisation on the autonomy of social movements. Using empirical evidence from a city in the northeast of Brazil, this article addresses the wider literature on citizen participation and social movements to examine specifically the problem with co-optation. I examine the risks linked to co-optation, risks that can undermine the credibility of social movements as agents of change, and explore the tensions that go beyond the ‘co-optation versus autonomy’ divide, an issue frequently found in the practices of social movements, in their dealings with those in power. In particular, this article explores the learning processes and contentious relationships between mainly institutionally oriented urban movements and local government. This study found that the learning of deliberative skills not only led to changes in the objectives and repertoires of housing movements, but also to the inclusion of new components in their objectives that provide room for creative agency and which, in some cases, might allow them to maintain their autonomy from the state

    PLASMID DNA PROFILES IN THIOBACILLUS-FERROOXIDANS

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    The effect of iron on the invasiveness of Escherichia coli carrying the inv gene of Yersinia pseudotuberculosis.

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    The effect of growth in iron-excess or iron-limitation conditions on the invasiveness for HeLa cells of Escherichia coli HB101 carrying plasmid pRI203 which bears the invasion gene of Yersinia pseudotuberculosis was examined. Iron-limitation reduced adhesion and the number of organisms internalised by HeLa cells by about 100-fold. The reduced adhesion of iron-starved bacteria correlated with reduced hydrophobicity and the reduced invasiveness appeared to depend on the plasmid copy number, which was 3.5-fold less than in bacteria grown in iron excess

    The antiinvasive effect of bovine lactoferrin requires an interaction with surface proteins of Listeria monocytogenes

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    The anti-invasive effect of bovine lactoferrin (BLf) and of bovine transferrin (BTf) towards L. monocytogenes, an intracellular facultative food-borne pathogen, was assayed in the enterocyte-like cell line Caco-2. When 0.5 mg/ml BLf were added during the infection time or preincubated with bacteria the number of internalized bacteria was noticeably decreased whereas BLf was ineffective when preincubated with the enterocytes or added post infection. BTf was deprived of any effect. Results from direct binding and Western blotting assays provided evidence that two L. monocytogenes surface proteins, of approximately 80 and 60 kDa, specifically reacted with BLf. These findings strongly support the hypothesis that the antiinvasive mechanism of BLf is due to its interaction with bacterial surfaces, but not to its binding with eukaryotic cells
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