3,867 research outputs found
The inverse relationship between farm size and productivity in rural Rwanda
The Rwandan government has recently adopted new agricultural and land policies that strive to increase productivity in the agricultural sector though land consolidation and concentration, and through the promotion of regional crop specialisation and monocropping. This paper, however, identifies the strong inverse relationship between farm size and land productivity under the current land management system; also when taking into account farm fragmentation, crop diversification, frequency of multicropping and household size. In addition, it concludes that increased farm fragmentation, higher frequency of multicropping, and more crop diversification do not necessarily have a significant negative impact upon productivity, on the contrary. The paper reflects upon the implications of Rwanda’s agrarian and land policies
Engineering a flux-dependent mobility edge in disordered zigzag chains
There has been great interest in realizing quantum simulators of charged
particles in artificial gauge fields. Here, we perform the first quantum
simulation explorations of the combination of artificial gauge fields and
disorder. Using synthetic lattice techniques based on parametrically-coupled
atomic momentum states, we engineer zigzag chains with a tunable homogeneous
flux. The breaking of time-reversal symmetry by the applied flux leads to
analogs of spin-orbit coupling and spin-momentum locking, which we observe
directly through the chiral dynamics of atoms initialized to single lattice
sites. We additionally introduce precisely controlled disorder in the site
energy landscape, allowing us to explore the interplay of disorder and large
effective magnetic fields. The combination of correlated disorder and
controlled intra- and inter-row tunneling in this system naturally supports
energy-dependent localization, relating to a single-particle mobility edge. We
measure the localization properties of the extremal eigenstates of this system,
the ground state and the most-excited state, and demonstrate clear evidence for
a flux-dependent mobility edge. These measurements constitute the first direct
evidence for energy-dependent localization in a lower-dimensional system, as
well as the first explorations of the combined influence of artificial gauge
fields and engineered disorder. Moreover, we provide direct evidence for
interaction shifts of the localization transitions for both low- and
high-energy eigenstates in correlated disorder, relating to the presence of a
many-body mobility edge. The unique combination of strong interactions,
controlled disorder, and tunable artificial gauge fields present in this
synthetic lattice system should enable myriad explorations into intriguing
correlated transport phenomena.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, 5 pages of supplementary materials; updated
version has additional dat
Mental health of victims of sexual violence in eastern Congo: associations with daily stressors, stigma, and labeling
Background: The conflict-ridden context of eastern Congo has set the scene for grueling human rights violations, with sexual violence as one of the 'weapons of war'. Currently, sexual violence continues, with a considerable increase in civilian perpetrators. However, little is known regarding the particular impact of different experiences of sexual violence on adolescents' mental health. This study therefore investigates the impact of sexual violence on eastern Congolese adolescents' mental health and its differing associations with daily stressors, stigma, and the labeling of sexual violence (as 'rape' or 'non-consensual sexual experience').
Methods: A cross-sectional, population-based survey design was implemented in 22 secondary schools, randomly selected from a stratified sample, in Bunia, eastern Congo, a region extensively affected by war. A total of 1,305 school-going adolescent girls aged 11 to 23 participated. Self-report measures of mental health symptoms, war-related traumatic events, experiences of sexual violence, daily stressors, and stigmatization were administered. Differences in sociodemographic characteristics, traumatic experiences and daily and social stressors between types of sexual violence (rape, non-consensual sexual violence, no sexual violence) were explored through statistical analysis. ANCOVA analyses investigated associations between those risk factors and adolescents' mental health.
Results: More than one third of eastern Congolese adolescent girls reported experiences of sexual violence. Elevated levels of daily stressors, experiences of stigmatization, and stressful war-related events were found amongst girl victims of sexual violence, with the highest levels for girls who labeled the sexual violence as rape. Daily stressors, stigmatization, and war-related events showed a large impact on the girls' mental health. Last, girls who labeled the sexual violence as non-consensual sexual experiences reported more post-traumatic hyper-arousal and intrusion symptoms compared to those labeling the sexual violence as rape.
Conclusions: These findings point to the important association between how war-affected adolescent girls label sexual violence (rape or non-consensual sexual experiences) and their mental health. This study also documents the large impact of sexual violence on other stressors (daily stressors, stigmatization, and stressful war events) and the impact of these stressors on girl victims' mental health. It discusses important implications for addressing sexual violence and its consequences in war-affected contexts
Hyperglycemia: Cell death in a cave
AbstractMitochondria play a central role in mediating high glucose-induced apoptosis. A recent study has shown that increases in glucose levels induce significant alterations in caveolae components, suggesting that high glucose may affect apoptotic signaling initiated in caveolae
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