27 research outputs found
Bridging the Gap: International Organizations as Organizations
http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/51108/1/340.pd
Social identity and environmental concern: the importance of contextual effects
This study draws on social identity theory to explain differences in individual support for environmental protection, a conative component of environmental concern. It argues that an individualâs identification with higher social unitsâcommunity, nation, and worldâstrengthens its in-group solidarity and empathy and, in consequence, its readiness to protect the environment benefitting the in-groupâs welfare. The study hypothesizes that country-level manifestations of social identity (1) lift individualsâ support for environmental protection above the level that their own social identity suggests (elevator effect), and (2) reinforce the effect of individualsâ social identity on their support for environmental protection (amplifier effect). Using a sample of over 30,000 individuals located in 38 countries around the world, the study finds strong evidence for the two contextual effects. The findings indicate that social identity plays an important role not just as an individual attribute but also as a central component of culture in fostering environmental concern
Site-Specific Metal Chelation Facilitates the Unveiling of Hidden Coordination Sites in an Fe II/Fe III -Seamed Pyrogallol[4]arene Nanocapsule
Under suitable conditions, C-alkylpyrogallolÂ[4]Âarenes
(PgCs) arrange into spherical metalâorganic nanocapsules (MONCs)
upon coordination to appropriate metal ions. Herein we present the
synthesis and structural characterization of a novel FeII/FeIII-seamed MONC, as well as studies related to its
electrochemical and magnetic behaviors. Unlike other MONCs that are
assembled through 24 metal ions, this nanocapsule comprises 32 Fe
ions, uncovering 8 additional coordination sites situated between
the constituent PgC subunits. The FeII ions are likely
formed by the reducing ability of DMF used in the synthesis, representing
a novel synthetic route toward polynuclear mixed-valence MONCs
Beyond the square wheel: toward a more comprehensive understanding of biodiversity conservation as a social and political process. Society and Natural Resources 15
In this article we build on an accompanying critique of recent writings in international biodiversity conservation (this issu