2,194 research outputs found
A street corner education: stop and search, trust, and gendered norms among adolescent males
Police stop and search activity has consistently been shown to affect the opinions, attitudes and behaviours of those subject to it. For young people in particular, this can be an important moment in which they learn about and orientate themselves towards law, authority, and the exercise of power. Drawing on work into procedural justice and legal socialisation, we build on the premise that stop and search has, in practice, more to do with the imposition of authority on the streets than the accurate 20 targeting tool of crime-control activity. We consider the link between experiences of stop and search, trust in the police, exposure to or involvement in gangs and violence, and the extent to which male adolescents hold abusive and controlling gendered beliefs regarding sexuality and intimate partner relations. Using data from a survey of Londoners aged 14-16, we find support for the notion that adolescent males’ procedurally unjust stop and search experiences are associated with lower levels of trust in the police, higher levels of involvement in and exposure to gang-related activities, and believing it is acceptable to harass females in public space and control intimate partners. We conclude with the idea that unfair stop/searches can signal that it is ‘OK’ to abuse power
An exactly solved model for mutation, recombination and selection
It is well known that rather general mutation-recombination models can be
solved algorithmically (though not in closed form) by means of Haldane
linearization. The price to be paid is that one has to work with a multiple
tensor product of the state space one started from.
Here, we present a relevant subclass of such models, in continuous time, with
independent mutation events at the sites, and crossover events between them. It
admits a closed solution of the corresponding differential equation on the
basis of the original state space, and also closed expressions for the linkage
disequilibria, derived by means of M\"obius inversion. As an extra benefit, the
approach can be extended to a model with selection of additive type across
sites. We also derive a necessary and sufficient criterion for the mean fitness
to be a Lyapunov function and determine the asymptotic behaviour of the
solutions.Comment: 48 page
Faculty String Quartet
Kemp Recital Hall Thursday Evening April 16, 1998 8:00 p.m
Network formation mechanisms in conjugated microporous polymers
We discuss in detail the mechanism of formation of a highly microporous polymer, CMP-1, formed mainly via Sonogashira–Hagihara coupling. We demonstrate how the microporosity evolves with time, and discuss the importance of alkyne homo-coupling on the microporosity
Morphological and dietary responses of chipmunks to a century of climate change.
Predicting how individual taxa will respond to climatic change is challenging, in part because the impacts of environmental conditions can vary markedly, even among closely related species. Studies of chipmunks (Tamias spp.) in Yosemite National Park provide an important opportunity to explore the reasons for this variation in response. While the alpine chipmunk (T. alpinus) has undergone a significant elevational range contraction over the past century, the congeneric and partially sympatric lodgepole chipmunk (T. speciosus) has not experienced an elevational range shift during this period. As a first step toward identifying the factors underlying this difference in response, we examined evidence for dietary changes and changes in cranial morphology in these species over the past century. Stable isotope analyses of fur samples from modern and historical museum specimens of these species collected at the same localities indicated that signatures of dietary change were more pronounced in T. alpinus, although diet breadth did not differ consistently between the study species. Morphometric analyses of crania from these specimens revealed significant changes in cranial shape for T. alpinus, with less pronounced changes in shape for T. speciosus; evidence of selection on skull morphology was detected for T. alpinus, but not for T. speciosus. These results are consistent with growing evidence that T. alpinus is generally more responsive to environmental change than T. speciosus, but emphasize the complex and often geographically variable nature of such responses. Accordingly, future studies that make use of the taxonomically and spatially integrative approach employed here may prove particularly informative regarding relationships between environmental conditions, range changes, and patterns of phenotypic variation
Self-similarity in Laplacian Growth
We consider Laplacian Growth of self-similar domains in different geometries.
Self-similarity determines the analytic structure of the Schwarz function of
the moving boundary. The knowledge of this analytic structure allows us to
derive the integral equation for the conformal map. It is shown that solutions
to the integral equation obey also a second order differential equation which
is the one dimensional Schroedinger equation with the sinh inverse square
potential. The solutions, which are expressed through the Gauss hypergeometric
function, characterize the geometry of self-similar patterns in a wedge. We
also find the potential for the Coulomb gas representation of the self-similar
Laplacian growth in a wedge and calculate the corresponding free energy.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figure
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