12,797 research outputs found
Human Security: Does Normative Europe Need a New Strategic Narrative?
Alongside a sustained debate about the role of the EU in the international system and the nature of its power as an external actor, foreign and security policy making continues to reflect an awkward mixture of civilian, military and normative instruments, and ambiguous goals. The European Security Strategy of 2003 and the drive, via ESDP, to make the EU respond more effectively to crises, are the most systematic attempts yet to resolve this incoherence and to project the EU as a different kind of international actor by deploying an integrated range of civilian and military capabilities and resources. This paper examines whether the EU also needs a new conceptual framework for its international presence which can organise and improve the integration of its civilian and military characteristics , and at the same time express to both its own citizens and the outside world, the values and goals which underpin its external action. The paper takes the concept of Human Security and explores whether a Human Security doctrine could provide a shared strategic narrative for the EU which would serve to clarify and consolidate the nature of EU actorness. The paper takes the example of the EU mission to DR Congo in 2006 to show how a Human Security doctrine could provide conceptual coherence to the exercise of EU external power
Exact counting of Euler Tours for Graphs of Bounded Treewidth
In this paper we give a simple polynomial-time algorithm to exactly count the
number of Euler Tours (ETs) of any Eulerian graph of bounded treewidth. The
problems of counting ETs are known to be #P-complete for general graphs
(Brightwell and Winkler, (Brightwell and Winkler, 2005). To date, no
polynomial-time algorithm for counting Euler tours of any class of graphs is
known except for the very special case of series-parallel graphs (which have
treewidth 2).Comment: 16 pages, draf
Fuel Costs, Migration, and Community Viability
ISER researchers compiled and reviewed existing studies and data sources relating to the
economic and social viability of remote rural Alaska communities. We particularly looked for
possible linkages between high fuel costs and migration. Our review indicates the following: (1)
migration from smaller places toward larger places is an ongoing phenomenon that is more
noticeable when birth rates drop; (2) there is no systematic empirical evidence that fuel prices, by
themselves, have been a definitive cause of migration; (3) the pursuit of economic and
educational opportunities appears to be a predominant cause of migration; (4) however, currently
available survey data are not sufficient to definitively determine other reasons for migration,
which could include concerns about public safety and/or alcohol abuse; 5) most of the survey
data pre-date the latest rapid increase (2006-2008) in fuel prices. We suggest several ways that
better data could be collected on community viability and the reasons for migration.First Alaskans Institute.
Alaska Native Policy Center.Introduction / Methods / Findings / Significant data collection opportunities / Conclusions / References / Data Sources Use
Delivering effective nursing care to children and young people outside of a hospital setting
This report may be reproduced for the purposes of private research and study; in addition, excerpts may be included in professional journals or conference presentations as long as acknowledgement is given and there is no association with advertisingOver the course of the last fifty years, there has been a reduction of approximately 75 per cent in the total number of children’s hospital beds in the United Kingdom [UK]; at the same time, there has been an increase in the amount and range of care now being provided in other environments that are located within outside of hospital settings. This shift in terms of the location and provision of care has meant that there has been an impact on the preparation and training that healthcare staff require. The Health Outcomes Forum specifically recommended: “That HEE [Health Education England] address the workforce education, training and development requirements (including capacity and capability) to refocus service provision at home or closer to home” (Department of Health, 2012: 52). This scoping project was financed and commissioned by Health Education North Central and East London Local Education and Training Board [HE NCEL LETB] in January 2014 and was undertaken by the University of Hertfordshire between February 2014 - August 2014. The project was funded to facilitate the consideration of the educational needs of the nursing workforce in relation to out of hospital care for children and young people, thus enabling the future potential development of out of hospital services to meet the health needs of the children and young people living in the HE NCEL geographical are
Yup’ik Language Assistance Tribal Outreach: Report to the Alaska Division of Elections
The Division of Elections contracted with the Institute of Social and Economic Research (ISER) at the University of Alaska Anchorage to help develop a network of key tribal organization and village representatives in the Bethel census area to work with the division on their Yup’ik language assistance program. The division asked ISER to help them communicate with tribes about the division’s current programs and to document additional ways that the division can improve its language assistance program.
The Alaska Division of Elections is required under the Federal Voting Rights Act (VRA) to provide language assistance to voters in areas where more than 5% of the voting age citizens are members of a single-language minority and are limited English proficient. In July 2008, a federal court ordered the division to take the following remedial actions, many of which the division had already taken prior to the court order:
1.
Provide mandatory poll worker training.
2.
Hire a language assistance coordinator fluent in Yup'ik.
3.
Recruit bi-lingual poll workers or translators.
4.
Provide sample ballots in written Yup'ik.
5.
Provide pre-election publicity in Yup'ik.
6.
Ensure the accuracy of translations.
7.
Provide a Yup'ik glossary of election terms.
8.
Submit pre-election and post-election reports.
Although the division has a Yup’ik language assistance program and has been addressing the court order, interviews with Bethel census area residents show that some people are unaware of the elements in the division’s language assistance plan. In addition, some Bethel area residents said they feel the election workers and the division should interpret the meaning of the ballot measures and explain the positions of the various candidates—activities that are forbidden by state statute.
ISER agreed to help the division address this lack of awareness and the misconceptions about their programs by contacting tribal organizations and inviting them to attend a meeting in Bethel, Alaska, on May 27, 2009. Part I of this report, issued in July 2009, describes ISER’s contacts with tribal organizations and summarizes the comments and feedback from the participants at the election outreach meeting in Bethel. Part II describes ISER’s post-meeting contacts with tribal organizations and meeting participants and summarizes their responses to the post-meeting survey.Alaska Division of ElectionsIntroduction / Part I: Pre-Meeting Comments and Meeting Summary / Part II: Post-Meeting Feedback / Appendix A: ISER Script for Pre-Meeting Contact / Appendix B: ISER Letter of Invitation to Tribal Organizations / Appendix C: ISER Letter of Invitation to PLaintiff Tribral Organizations / Appendix D. List of Participants - Bethel Election Outreach Meeting / Appendix E: Agenda - Bethel Election Outreach Meeting / Appendix F: Pre-Meeting Interview Responses / Appendix G: Post-Meeting Letter to Tribes / Appendix H: Post Meeting Survey / Appendix I: Post-Meeting Interview Summar
SUPPLY RESPONSE OF U.S. SORGHUM ACREAGE TO GOVERNMENT PROGRAMS
Agricultural and Food Policy, Crop Production/Industries,
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