286 research outputs found
Constructing a new understanding of the environment under postsocialism
This paper introduces a special grouping of papers on the theme of the environment and postsocialism. After the collapse of state socialism in Europe between 1989 and 1991, many immediate approaches to environmental reconstruction assumed that economic liberalisation and democratisation would alleviate problems. Since then, critics have argued that these proposed solutions were themselves problematic, and too closely reflected Western European and North American conceptions of environmental quality and democracy. The result has been a counterreaction focusing on detail and specificity at national levels and below. In this paper, we summarise debates about the environment and postsocialism since the period 1989 - 91. In particular, we examine whether an essentialistic link can be made between state socialism and environmental problems, and how far civil society -- or environmentalism -- may result in an improvement in perceived environmental quality. Finally, we consider the possibility for developing an approach to the environment and postsocialism that lies between crude generalisation and microscale studies
Postcommunist societies in times of transition: Perceptions of change among adolescents in Central and Eastern Europe
This article examines adolescents' perceptions of the economic changes
and the justice of the new "social contract" in Eastern/Central Europe.
Focusing on three countries, Hungary, Bulgaria, and the Czech Republic,
it explores the social, political, and economic environments in which
adolescents came of age in 1990. Surveys conducted among high school
students in each country during 1995 tapped their perceptions of the
economy, the local community, and their personal beliefs about the
efficacy of individual initiative and hard work. Responses differed
significantly based on age, gender social class, value orientation, and
country. Older adolescents and girls were more likely to observe that
economic disparities were growing in their country and to be cynical
about the value of hard work. Those with socialist values also
discounted the value of recent changes. Adolescents in the Czech
Republic were the least cynical about economic changes, whereas those
in Bulgaria,were the most cynical, with Hungarian youth the least
optimistic about the future
La conservation et le developpement de Nessebar en tant que monument culturel d'importance mondiale
Expertise and International Governance: Eastern Europe and the Adoption of European Union Environmental Legislation
Debate over Fair Value Accounting: Should we allow Politics to take an active role in setting accounting standards or should we trust that the SEC knows best?
In light of the recent economic downfall, there has been significant media coverage on the topic of fair value accounting. There are many critics of the accounting rule, who place blame on it for the destruction of billions of dollars in capital between financial institutions. Other commentators, however, see the rule as necessary and applaud its ability to bring the turmoil in the economy into the spotlight promptly so that it could be addressed effectively. This paper will begin by conducting a study of fair-value accounting from its inception in previous standards and then follow it through to Statement No. 157. I will then discuss the SEC’s most recent study of FAS157 and their decision as a result of the study
WHY DOES SOCIAL CONTEXT MATTER?Integrating Innovative Technologies with Best Practice Models for Public and Behavioral Health Promotion
Cell context dependent p53 genome-wide binding patterns and enrichment at repeats.
The p53 ability to elicit stress specific and cell type specific responses is well recognized, but how that specificity is established remains to be defined. Whether upon activation p53 binds to its genomic targets in a cell type and stress type dependent manner is still an open question. Here we show that the p53 binding to the human genome is selective and cell context-dependent. We mapped the genomic binding sites for the endogenous wild type p53 protein in the human cancer cell line HCT116 and compared them to those we previously determined in the normal cell line IMR90. We report distinct p53 genome-wide binding landscapes in two different cell lines, analyzed under the same treatment and experimental conditions, using the same ChIP-seq approach. This is evidence for cell context dependent p53 genomic binding. The observed differences affect the p53 binding sites distribution with respect to major genomic and epigenomic elements (promoter regions, CpG islands and repeats). We correlated the high-confidence p53 ChIP-seq peaks positions with the annotated human repeats (UCSC Human Genome Browser) and observed both common and cell line specific trends. In HCT116, the p53 binding was specifically enriched at LINE repeats, compared to IMR90 cells. The p53 genome-wide binding patterns in HCT116 and IMR90 likely reflect the different epigenetic landscapes in these two cell lines, resulting from cancer-associated changes (accumulated in HCT116) superimposed on tissue specific differences (HCT116 has epithelial, while IMR90 has mesenchymal origin). Our data support the model for p53 binding to the human genome in a highly selective manner, mobilizing distinct sets of genes, contributing to distinct pathways
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