258 research outputs found

    ''Sex Changes'? Paradigm Shifts in 'Sex' and 'Gender' Following the Gender Recognition Act?'

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    Gender transformations are normatively understood as somatic, based on surgical reassignment, where the sexed body is aligned with the gender identity of the individual through genital surgery – hence the common lexicon \'sex change surgery\'. We suggest that the UK Gender Recognition Act 2004 challenges what constitutes a \'sex change\' through the Act\'s definitions and also the conditions within which legal \'recognition\' is permitted. The sex/gender distinction, (where sex normatively refers to the sexed body, and gender, to social identity) is demobilised both literally and legally. This paper discusses the history of medico-socio-legal definitions of sex have been developed through decision making processes when courts have been faced with people with gender variance and , in particular, the implications of the Gender Recognition Act for our contemporary legal understanding of sex. We ask, and attempt to answer, has \'sex\' changed?Transgender; Transsexual; Sex; Gender; Sex Change; Gender Identity; Legal Identities

    1,3,4,6-Tetramethyl-1,4-dihydro-1,2,4,5-tetrazine, C_6H_(12)N_4

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    M_r =140∙19, monoclinic, P2_1/n, a = 10∙612(3), b=6∙820(1), c= 10∙975 (2) Å, β=95∙31(2)°, V=790.9(5) Å^3, Z=4, D_m=1.13(5) (flotation), D_x = 1∙177 g cm^(-3), Mo Kα, λ = 0.71073 Å, μ= 0.848 cm^(-1), F(000) = 304, T= 295 K, R = 0∙077 for 704 observed reflections. This potentially antiaromatic or homoaromatic ring system has a flattened boat conformation with both N-methyls in equatorial positions. Bond angles and distances (excluding H's) predicted to be symmetry equivalent exhibit variations of 0.002-0.014 Å and 0.0-2.0°. Substantial delocalization of the electron lone pairs of N(1) and N(4) is found

    Respect and Equality: Transsexual and Transgender Rights

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    The problem of who I legally am in the world I live in has been vexatious throughout my adult life. Like other transsexual people worldwide, I face an inadequate legal framework in which to exist. Some of us live within states and nations that recognise the difficulties and attempt to provide a route way through the morass of problems that arise; others barely, if not at all, even acknowledge our being. We are simply \u27not\u27 within a world that only permits two sexes, only allows two forms of gender role, identity or expression. Always falling outside of the \u27norm,\u27 our lives become less, our humanity is questioned, and our oppression is legitimised

    Bridging NewcastleGateshead Private Landlord Survey

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    Preparing SME Suppliers for Sustainable Local Authority eProcurement

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    Public sector organisations are increasingly introducing eProcurement systems in order to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of their procurement processes. This clearly has implications for their suppliers, who are being asked to adopt eProcurement. For many SMEs, particularly small and micro businesses, this is proving a difficult challenge given their lack of eProcurement knowledge, as well as their resource shortages. It is at the Local Authority (LA) level that this situation is most problematic, as SMEs tend to supply more to local than central government. This paper presents the results of research undertaken with LAs and SMEs as part of the EPROC project. In particular, it provides insights into the level of eProcurement use and development in LAs in North West Europe, and illustrates how the introduction of eProcurement could have a negative impact on local economies and communities if LAs don’t help their SMEs to adopt eProcurement. The paper also reports on the findings of research conducted with SMEs in relation to the problems they’ve experienced in undertaking eProcurement with LAs, and details how some LAs are engaging with their local SMEs to help them become ‘eProcurement ready’. The research has demonstrated there is a need to bridge the knowledge gap between SME understanding and awareness of LA eProcurement developments on the one hand, and on the other, LA understanding of the typical eProcurement capabilities of their SME supplier base. To meet these needs, the EPROC project has developed separate eProcurement guides for SMEs and LAs

    AULRE 2022: Religious education and social justice in a time of climate crisis Guest editors’ introduction

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    AULRE 2021: researching RE: changing times for Religious Education

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    The nuclear pore complex has entered the atomic age

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    Nuclear pore complexes (NPCs) perforate the nuclear envelope and represent the exclusive passageway into and out of the nucleus of the eukaryotic cell. Apart from their essential transport function, components of the NPC have important, direct roles in nuclear organization and in gene regulation. Because of its central role in cell biology, it is of considerable interest to determine the NPC structure at atomic resolution. The complexity of these large, 40–60 MDa protein assemblies has for decades limited such structural studies. More recently, exploiting the intrinsic modularity of the NPC, structural biologists are making progress toward understanding this nanomachine in molecular detail. Structures of building blocks of the stable, architectural scaffold of the NPC have been solved, and distinct models for their assembly proposed. Here we review the status of the field and lay out the challenges and the next steps toward a full understanding of the NPC at atomic resolution.Pew Charitable Trusts (Scholars Program)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant GM077537

    The role of design thinking and physical prototyping in social software engineering

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    Social Software Engineering (Social SE), that is SE aiming to promote positive social change, is a rapidly emerging area. Here, software and digital artefacts are seen as tools for social change, rather than end products or ‘solutions’. Moreover, Social SE requires a sustained buy-in from a range of stakeholders and end-users working in partnership with multidisciplinary software development teams often at a distance. This context poses new challenges to software engineering: it requires both an agile approach for handling uncertainties in the software development process, and the application of participatory, creative design processes to bridge the knowledge asymmetries and the geographical distances in the partnership. This paper argues for the role of design thinking in Social SE and highlights its implications for software engineering in general. It does so by reporting on the contributions that design thinking— and in particular physical design—has brought to (1) the problem space definition, (2) user requirements capture and (3) system feature design of a renewable energy forecasting system developed in partnership with a remote Scottish Island community
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