29,581 research outputs found

    Explaining post-apartheid South African human rights foreign policy: unsettled identity and conflicting interests

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    The end of apartheid in 1994 brought with it many expectations – both domestically and internationally – about the kind of state the new South Africa would be and the foreign policies it would pursue, with many expecting South Africa to pursue a human rights-based foreign policy. However, South Africa has pursued a much more paradoxical foreign policy, with significant gaps between its stated commitment to human rights principles and its action in support of those principles. This article seeks to explain these gaps. Delving into the literature on norms-based and interest-based explanations of state behavior, it argues that both approaches help to explain South Africa’s foreign policy actions. However, it is the unsettled nature of its identities and interests after 1994, as its leaders (in particular Thabo Mbeki) sought to reconcile a commitment to democracy and human rights with equally strong (if not greater) commitments to Afrocentrism and anti-imperialism, which provides the most interesting avenues for exploration

    Antenna array at focal plane of reflector with coupling network for beam switching Patent

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    Antenna array at focal plane of reflector with coupling network for beam switchin

    Tracking antenna system Patent

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    Tracking antenna system with array for synchronous satellite or ground based rada

    Restorative Dentistry: Dental composite depth of cure with halogen and blue light emitting diode technology

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    Objectives To test the hypothesis that a blue light emitting diode (LED) light curing unit (LCU) can produce an equal dental composite depth of cure to a halogen LCU adjusted to give an irradiance of 300 mWcm–2 and to characterise the LCU's light outputs. Materials and methods Depth of cure for three popular composites was determined using a penetrometer. The Student's t test was used to analyse the depth of cure results. A power meter and a spectrometer measured the light output. Results The spectral distribution of the LCUs differed strongly. The irradiance for the LED and halogen LCUs were 290 mWcm–2 and 455 mWcm–2, when calculated from the scientific power meter measurements. The LED LCU cured all three dental composites to a significantly greater (P < 0.05) depth than the halogen LCU. Conclusions An LED LCU with an irradiance 64% of a halogen LCU achieved a significantly greater depth of cure. The LCU's spectral distribution of emitted light should be considered in addition to irradiance as a performance indicator. LED LCUs may have a potential for use in dental practice because their performance does not significantly reduce with time as do conventional halogen LCUs

    Optimal Customer Account Classification

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    In silico estimates of the free energy rates in growing tumor spheroids

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    The physics of solid tumor growth can be considered at three distinct size scales: the tumor scale, the cell-extracellular matrix (ECM) scale and the sub-cellular scale. In this paper we consider the tumor scale in the interest of eventually developing a system-level understanding of the progression of cancer. At this scale, cell populations and chemical species are best treated as concentration fields that vary with time and space. The cells have chemo-mechanical interactions with each other and with the ECM, consume glucose and oxygen that are transported through the tumor, and create chemical byproducts. We present a continuum mathematical model for the biochemical dynamics and mechanics that govern tumor growth. The biochemical dynamics and mechanics also engender free energy changes that serve as universal measures for comparison of these processes. Within our mathematical framework we therefore consider the free energy inequality, which arises from the first and second laws of thermodynamics. With the model we compute preliminary estimates of the free energy rates of a growing tumor in its pre-vascular stage by using currently available data from single cells and multicellular tumor spheroids.Comment: 27 pages with 5 figures and 2 tables. Figures and tables appear at the end of the pape

    A systematic review comparing the functional changes and complications of DIEP and TRAM flaps in patients receiving breast reconstruction

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    Aim: Treatment for breast cancer may involve unilateral or bilateral mastectomy, with subsequent breast reconstruction surgery. Using autologous tissue flaps during reconstructive surgery is increasingly popular. The aim of this systematic review was to determine if the DIEP flap is more effective than the TRAM flap for breast reconstruction in females after a mastectomy in terms of donor site morbidity, recipient site morbidity, and functional outcome. Methods: Studies were identified using the databases Medline and Embase and applying predefined search criteria. The limits applied were; peer-reviewed, published between January 1980 to May 2013, human trials, English language. Study inclusion followed a review of the title, abstract, and full text by two independent researchers. Results: Two trends were identified. 1) DIEP flap surgery reduces the risk of abdominal weakness without increasing the risk of flap complications if performed by a surgeon well trained in microsurgery; 2) TRAM flap surgery remains a good alternative due to its evolution towards muscle-sparing techniques. Conclusion: This appears to be the first systematic review in this area of research. The evidence demonstrates that DIEP flap reduces postoperative abdominal morbidity, with no increased flap complication compared to the TRAM flap if performed by a surgeon well trained in microsurgery
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