14,097 research outputs found

    The staying power of self interest: Kenya's unshakeable elites

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    Kenyan political discourse has been dominated by elites and politics of self-interest since its independence. Kenya is notorious for its levels of corruption and questionable levels of accountability. The persistence of this status quo has defined the Kenyan democratic transition as one of 'dominant power politics' and epitomises Ghanian economist George Ayittey's description of the 'African Vampire State'. The post-election violence and controversy in 2007 – 2008 led to both a new constitution and a power-sharing agreement between the two major parties; these events have been described as the 'rebirth' of Kenya. This paper confronts the extent to which this 'rebirth' has had an impact on the contemporary political and economic climate within Kenya and assesses the extent to which elite dominance has shaped and continues to shape Kenyan political discourse

    The use of Galvanism in the treatment of hyperhidrosis in the axillary area

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    Thesis (Ed.D.)--Boston University. Page 11 is missing in numbering only

    An Information Approach to the Dynamics in Farm Income: Implications for Farmland Markets

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    The valuation of farmland is a perennial issue for agricultural policy, given its importance in the farm investment portfolio. Despite the significance of farmland values to farmer wealth, prediction remains a difficult task. This study develops a dynamic information measure to examine the informational content of income to farmland in explaining the distribution of farmland values over time.information theory; farmland markets; farm income

    Farm Income, Population, and Farmland Prices: A Relative Information Approach

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    This paper uses an entropy-based information approach to determine if farmland values are more closely associated with urban pressure or farm income. The basic question is: how much information on changes in farm real estate values is contained in changes in population versus changes in returns to production agriculture? Results suggest population is informative, but changes in farmland values are more strongly associated with changes in the distribution of returns. However, this relationship is not true for every region nor does it hold over time, as for some regions changes in population are more informative. Results have policy implications for both equity and efficiency.entropy; land values; information theory; population growth.

    HST-COS Observations of AGN. I. Ultraviolet Composite Spectra of the Ionizing Continuum and Emission Lines

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    The ionizing fluxes from quasars and other active galactic nuclei (AGN) are critical for interpreting the emission-line spectra of AGN and for photoionization and heating of the intergalactic medium. Using ultraviolet spectra from the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph (COS) on the Hubble Space Telescope (HST), we have directly measured the rest-frame ionizing continua and emission lines for 22 AGN. Over the redshift range 0.026 < z < 1.44, COS samples the Lyman continuum and many far-UV emission lines (Lya 1216, C IV 1549, Si IV/OIV] 1400, N V 1240, O VI 1035). Strong EUV emission lines with 14-22 eV excitation energies (Ne VIII 770,780, Ne V 569, O II 834, O III 833, 702, O IV 788,608,554, O V 630, N III 685) suggest the presence of hot gas in the broad emission-line region. The rest-frame continuum, F_nu ~ nu^{alpha_nu}, shows a break at wavelengths below 1000 A, with spectral index alpha_nu = -0.68 +/- 0.14 in the FUV (1200-2000 A) steepening to alpha_nu = -1.41 +/- 0.21 in the EUV (500-1000 A). The COS EUV index is similar to that of radio-quiet AGN in the 2002 HST/FOS survey (alpha_nu = -1.57 +/- 0.17). We see no Lyman edge (tau_HI < 0.03) or He I 584 emission in the AGN composite. Our 22 AGN exhibit a substantial range of FUV/EUV spectral indices and a correlation with AGN luminosity and redshift, likely due to observing below the 1000 A break.Comment: 17 pages, 10 figs, accepted to Astrophysical Journal (revised AGN luminosities and fluxes, updated figures

    Maternal weight gain and fetal growth

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    Extrinsic factors such as maternal nutrition may affect fetal growth giving rise to short and long-term consequences. The present study sets out to explore the inter-relationship between antenatal weight gain, in part dependant on maternal nutrition, and fetal growth as determined by birth weight. The study population included 21573 women who delivered their singleton child at term during 1999-2006. This population was subdivided into 16 subgroups according to BMI and antenatal weight gain. The study confirms that irrespective of maternal BMI, there is a statistically significant trend towards low birth weight with decreasing antenatal weight gain and conversely macrosomia with increasing antenatal weight gain.peer-reviewe
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