6,167 research outputs found
The Muslim Identity and the Politics of Fundamentalism in Kashmir -
This paper examines the role of religion in the formation and assertion of political identity in Kashmir. The issue has been highlighted by the rise of Islamic militancy in the 1990s. Four aspects are examined: the meaning of Islam for the people of Kashmir; the role of Islam in the formation of Kashmiri political identity; the secularization of this political identity; and the implications for the politics of fundamentalism. The paper concludes that despite the sharpening of their Muslim identity, the logic of Kashmiri politics continues to be governed by the demand for autonomy - a question which remains largely non-communal. The basic issue for the people still remains the right of the political community to determine its own political future.
SDN based Network Function Parallelism in Cloud
Network function virtualization (NFV) based service function chaining (SFC)
allows the provisioning of various security and traffic engineering
applications in a cloud network. Inefficient deployment of network functions
can lead to security violations and performance overhead. In an OpenFlow
enabled cloud, the key problem with current mechanisms is that several packet
field match and flow rule action sets associated with the network functions are
non-overlapping and can be parallelized for performance enhancement. We
introduce Network Function Parallelism (NFP) SFC-NFP for OpenFlow network. Our
solution utilizes network function parallelism over the OpenFlow rules to
improve SFC performance in the cloud network. We have utilized the DPDK
platform with an OpenFlow switch (OVS) for experimental analysis. Our solution
achieves a 1.40-1.90x reduction in latency for SFC in an OpenStack cloud
network managed by the SDN framework.Comment: 5 page
A systematic review of online interventions for mental health in low and middle income countries : a neglected field
Background. Low and middle income countries (LMICs) are facing an increase of the impact of mental health problems while confronted with limited resources and limited access to mental health care, known as the ‘mental health gap’. One strategy to reduce the mental health gap would be to utilize the internet to provide more widely-distributed and low cost mental health care. We undertook this systematic review to investigate the effectiveness and efficacy of online interventions in LMICs. Methods. We systematically searched the data-bases PubMed, PsycINFO, JMIR, and additional sources. MeSH terms, Thesaurus, and free text keywords were used. We included all randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of online interventions in LMICs. Results. We found only three articles reported results of RCTs on online interventions for mental health conditions in LMICs, but none of these interventions was compared with an active control condition. Also, the mental health conditions were diverse across the three studies. Conclusions. There is a dearth of studies examining the effect of online interventions in LMICs, so we cannot draw a firm conclusion on its effectiveness. However, given the effectiveness of online interventions in high income countries and sharp increase of internet access in LMICs, online interventions may offer a potential to help reduce the ‘mental health gap’. More studies are urgently needed in LMICs
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