47 research outputs found

    What lies beneath: exploring links between asylum policy and hate crime in the UK

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    This paper explores the link between increasing incidents of hate crime and the asylum policy of successive British governments with its central emphasis on deterrence. The constant problematisation of asylum seekers in the media and political discourse ensures that 'anti-immigrant' prejudice becomes mainstr earned as a common-sense response. The victims are not only the asylum seekers hoping for a better life but democratic society itself with its inherent values of pluralism and tolerance debased and destabilised

    When It Strikes, Are We Ready? Lessons Identified at the 7th Planetary Defense Conference in Preparing for a Near-Earth Object Impact Scenario

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    Abstract Near-Earth object (NEO) impact is one of the examples of high impact and low probability (HILP) event, same as the Covid-19 pandemic the world faces since the beginning of 2020. The 7th Planetary Defense Conference held by the International Academy of Astronautics (IAA) in April 2021 included an exercise on a hypothetical NEO impact event, allowing the planetary defense community to discuss potential responses. Over the span of the 4-day conference this exercise connected disaster response and management professionals to participate in a series of panels, providing feedback and perspective on the unfolding crisis scenario. The hypothetical but realistic asteroid threat scenario illustrated how such a short-warning threat might evolve. The scenario utilized during the conference indicates a need to prepare now for what might come in the future, because even with advance notice, preparation time might be minimal. This scenario chose Europe for the impact, which may likely cope with such a disaster, through the Union Civil Protection Mechanism (UCPM) and other solidarity and support mechanisms within the European Union (EU), as well as with potential support from international partners. This short article raises concern about other areas in the world on how they may access NEO impact information and cope with such disasters. It also provides an idea on vast scale of such disaster vis-Ă -vis the current capacity of response systems to cope with a larger event in Europe or elsewhere. This scenario showed that planetary defense is a global endeavor. Constant engagement of the planetary defense and disaster response communities is essential in order to keep the world safe from potential disasters caused by NEO impacts.</jats:p

    Arctic Sea Ice Reduction — Implications for the Northern Sea Route

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    20th-century sea-ice variations from observational data

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    The UNOSAT-GRID Project: Access to Satellite Imagery through the Grid Environment

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    UNOSAT is a United Nations activity to provide access to satellite images and geographic system services for humanitarian operations for rescue or aid activities. UNOSAT is implemented by the UN Institute for Training and Research (UNITAR) and managed by the UN Office for Project Services (UNOPS). In addition, partners from different organizations constitute the UNOSAT consortium. Among these partners, CERN participates actively providing the required computational and storage resources. The critical part of the UNOSAT activity is the storage and processing of large quantities of satellite images. The fast and secure access to these images from any part of the world is mandatory during these activities. Based on two successful CERN-GRID/UNOSAT pilot projects (data storage/compression/download and image access through mobile phone), the GRIDUNOSAT project has consolidated the considerable work undertaken so far in the present activity. The main use case already demonstrated is the delivery of satellite images from the Grid to a portal (web and portable devices). This use case, applied for the moment to UNOSAT, can also be used by many communities requiring a fast and reliable access to geographical images from any portable device. During the project development we have enabled the selection and download of satellite images starting on a portable device (using the GPS coordinates provided by the devide itself). The system provides seamless access to valuable satellite images while preserving the security requirements of the data provider and of the EGEE infrastructure (using X509 certificates). The system uses EGEE services already used by other applications and in this presentation we show how we have orchestrated them. The satellite images are catalogued by the AMGA (metadata) and LFC (location) services. The image processing is provided by the computational GRID resources via the EGEE workload management system. This work is being performed in close collaboration with the NICE Company, providing their EnginFrame technology (used also by Genius EGEE portal, for a development and deployment environment for portal applications) The fast access and processing of the images is the key point for the UNOSAT project. It requires building the support for a reliable storage and workload management system in the EGEE production is system to be ready in case of peak activity
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