7,297 research outputs found
'White knuckle care work' : violence, gender and new public management in the voluntary sector
Drawing on comparative data from Canada and Scotland, this article explores reasons why violence is tolerated in non-profit care settings. This article will provide insights into how workers' orientations to work, the desire to care and the intrinsic rewards from working in a non-profit context interact with the organization of work and managerially constructed workplace norms and cultures (Burawoy, 1979) to offset the tensions in an environment characterized by scarce resources and poor working conditions. This article will also outline how the same environment of scarce resources causes strains in management's efforts to establish such cultures. Working with highly excluded service users with problems that do not respond to easy interventions, workers find themselves working at the edge of their endurance, hanging on by their fingernails, and beginning to participate in various forms of resistance; suggesting that even among the most highly committed, 'white knuckle care' may be unsustainable
On the spectroastrometric separation of binary point-source fluxes
Spectroastrometry is a technique which has the potential to resolve flux
distributions on scales of milliarcseconds. In this study, we examine the
application of spectroastrometry to binary point sources which are spatially
unresolved due to the observational point spread function convolution. The
technique uses measurements with sub-pixel accuracy of the position centroid of
high signal-to-noise long-slit spectrum observations. With the objects in the
binary contributing fractionally more or less at different wavelengths
(particularly across spectral lines), the variation of the position centroid
with wavelength provides some information on the spatial distribution of the
flux. We examine the width of the flux distribution in the spatial direction,
and present its relation to the ratio of the fluxes of the two components of
the binary. Measurement of three observables (total flux, position centroid and
flux distribution width) at each wavelength allows a unique separation of the
total flux into its component parts even though the angular separation of the
binary is smaller than the observations' point-spread function. This is because
we have three relevant observables for three unknowns (the two fluxes, and the
angular separation of the binary), which therefore generates a closed problem.
This is a wholly different technique than conventional deconvolution methods,
which produce information on angular sizes of the sampling scale.
Spectroastrometry can produce information on smaller scales than conventional
deconvolution, and is successful in separating fluxes in a binary object with a
separation of less than one pixel. We present an analysis of the errors
involved in making binary object spectroastrometric measurements and the
separation method, and highlight necessary observing methodology.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
L\u27Affaire des Foulards--Discrimination, or the Price of a Secular Public Education System?
This Note examines the recent controversy over France\u27s ban against ostentatious religious symbols in public schools. The only ostentatious symbol targeted by the French government, however, has been the head scarves worn by Muslim schoolgirls. The author explores the roots of the current ban by examining France\u27s tradition of assimilation of immigrants and its constitutionally mandated secular public education system. The author also compares France\u27s interests in prohibiting head scarves with the Muslim students\u27 interests in practicing their religion. Finally, the author concludes that the French policy of banning head scarves from school is not only impractical, but likely a violation of both French and International law
Affirmation and futility: A study of Jack London\u27s vision of struggle in selected Klondike works
The period initiated by the Civil War and terminated by the turn of the century was a time of marked growth and change in the United States. Industrialism, a relatively significant factor in the national makeup prior to the war, was greatly stimulated by the event and was by 1900 a dominant force in the country, making its affect felt in all phases of the American experience. During this period of shifting national emphasis, the United States came to know the poverty of the industrial masses and the blight and overcrowding of urban centers sired by the necessity of industry. England, the âmother country,â had begun to experience and deal with these industry fostered evils earlier in the century. There existed, however, a primary difference between the two countries, a difference which would greatly alter the long-range effects on national outlook by what was primarily the same phenomenon. This difference was the American frontier and the accompanying easy accessibility to a new life, possible success, and escape from the dreary gray life of industrial poverty
Constrained by managerialism : caring as participation in the voluntary social services
The data in this study show that care is a connective process, underlying and motivating participation and as a force that compels involvement in the lives of others, care is at least a micro-participative process. Care or affinity not only persisted in the face of opposition, but it was also used by workers as a counter discourse and set of practices with which to resist the erosion of worker participation and open up less autonomized practices and ways of connecting with fellow staff, clients and the communities they served. The data suggest that while managerialism and taylorised practice models may remove or reduce opportunities for worker participation, care is a theme or storyline that gave workers other ways to understand their work and why they did it, as well as ways they were prepared to resist managerial priorities and directives, including the erosion of various kinds of direct and indirect participation. The degree of resistance possible, even in the highly technocratic worksite in Australia, shows that cracks and fissures exist within managerialism
\u3ci\u3eAcrobasis\u3c/i\u3e Shoot Moth (Lepidoptera: Pyralidae) Infestation-Tree Height Link in a Young Black Walnut Plantation
Acrobasis shoot moth infestations were evaluated in a young black walnut progeny test for 4 years, from ages 3 to 6. Infestation levels were greatest on the largest trees in the fourth and fifth year after plantation establishment, and were declining by the sixth year. Acrobasis infestation appears to be a problem primarily on young trees less than 2.5 m in height. There was no evidence for genetic resistance to Acrobasis infestation in black walnut
Hydraulic flow through a channel contraction: multiple steady states
We have investigated shallow water flows through a channel with a contraction by experimental and theoretical means. The horizontal channel consists of a sluice gate and an upstream channel of constant width ending in a linear contraction of minimum width . Experimentally, we observe upstream steady and moving bores/shocks, and oblique waves in the contraction, as single and multiple steady states, as well as a steady reservoir with a complex hydraulic jump in the contraction occurring in a small section of the and Froude number parameter plane. One-dimensional hydraulic theory provides a comprehensive leading-order approximation, in which a turbulent frictional parametrization is used to achieve quantitative agreement. An analytical and numerical analysis is given for two-dimensional supercritical shallow water flows. It shows that the one-dimensional hydraulic analysis for inviscid flows away from hydraulic jumps holds surprisingly well, even though the two-dimensional oblique hydraulic jump patterns can show large variations across the contraction channel
Sub-milliarcsecond precision spectro-astrometry of Be stars
The origin of the disks around Be stars is still not known. Further progress
requires a proper parametrization of their structure, both spatially and
kinematically. This is challenging as the disks are very small. Here we assess
whether a novel method is capable of providing these data. We obtained spectro
astrometry around the Pa beta line of two bright Be stars, alpha Col and zeta
Tau, to search for disk signatures. The data, with a pixel to pixel precision
of the centroid position of 0.3..0.4 milliarcsecond is the most accurate such
data to date. Artefacts at the 0.85 mas level are present in the data, but
these are readily identified as they were non-repeatable in our redundant
datasets. This does illustrate the need of taking multiple data to avoid
spurious detections. The data are compared with simple model simulations of the
spectro astrometric signatures due to rotating disks around Be stars. The upper
limits we find for the disk radii correspond to disk sizes of a few dozen
stellar radii if they rotate Keplerian. This is very close to observationally
measured and theoretically expected disk sizes, and this paper therefore
demonstrates that spectro-astrometry, of which we present the first such
attempt, has the potential to resolve the disks around Be stars.Comment: 6 pages, A&A accepte
'If I had a family, there is no way that I could afford to work here': juggling paid and unpaid care work in social services
Drawing on three case studies in each of Australia, New Zealand and Scotland, this article explores how care workers employed in the social services sector negotiate their unpaid care responsibilities in the context of lean work organization and low pay. For younger workers, the unrelenting demands of service provision and low pay made any long-term commitment to working in social services unrealistic, while many female workers experienced significant stress as they bent their unpaid care responsibilities to the demands of their paid work. However, male workers, less likely to have primary caring responsibilities, appeared less troubled by the prioritizing of paid over unpaid care work and less likely to self-exploit for the job. At the same time, there is a widespread acceptance across different national and organizational contexts that the work/family juggle is a personal responsibility rather than a structural problem caused by the demands of underfunded and overstretched organizations
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