9,262 research outputs found
Rural young people's opportunities for employment and entrepreneurship in globalised southern Africa: The limitations of targeting policies
This paper is based on a study with rural young people in Malawi and Lesotho, focusing on their possibilities for accessing (self)employment in the face of the various constraints imposed by their poor rural situations. Participatory group exercises, combined with individual interviews in two rural villages, provided personal stories about jobs and businesses that the young people were engaged in, as well as previous experiences and future plans. Constraints, as well as enabling factors, working at both individual and structural levels were analysed. Policies intended to address the needs of young people tend to seek to target the most vulnerable, often on the basis of individual-and household-level characteristics (e.g. women, orphans and AIDS-affected households). We argue that this: (1) neglects the structural factors operating at national and global levels; and (2) fails to recognise that factors interact to produce vulnerability, rather than this being rooted in separate characteristics. We demonstrate that an intersectional approach, drawn from feminist studies, is a useful theoretical lens, which, in combination with a livelihoods perspective, helps illuminate the needs of rural young people. In situations characterised by high levels of poverty and multiple vulnerabilities, we argue that it can be costly and ineffective to try to decide 'who is most vulnerable'; rather, resources can be more effectively spent in trying to improve conditions that will benefit all rural young people
The spatial construction of young people's livelihoods in rural southern Africa
Young people in southern Africa, in common with young people around the world, are social agents, constructing their own lives, albeit within significant structural constraints. Unlike young people in some regions, for most the need to generate a livelihood is a key consideration. Livelihood construction is a profoundly spatial activity, yet while there have been a number of studies of the spatial construction of young people's livelihoods in African cities, the spatiality of rural livelihoods has received less attention. Rural environments pose particular challenges for livelihood construction, and require particular spatial strategies. Four are discussed here: accessing education and training; migration for work; developing extensive social networks; and producing for markets. There are, however, aspects of the spatial structuring of rural southern African societies that seriously constrain the pursuit of productive livelihoods by young people. Two are considered: migration (for reasons unconnected with young people's livelihoods) and marriage practices
Socio-economic causes of food insecurity in Malawi
The food crisis that Malawi experienced in 2002 led to hundreds – maybe thousands – of hunger-related deaths, which is more than any famine in living memory. During this famine, maize production fell by over 30% and maize prices rose by over 300% (Devereux, 2002). At the peak of the crisis, nearly a third of the population were dependent on food aid (USAID/Malawi, 2004)
Income-generating activities for young people in southern Africa: Exploring AIDS and other constraints
Copyright @ 2010 The Authors. The Geographical Journal © 2010 Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers). The published version of the article can be accessed via the link below.This paper reports on a study with rural young people (aged 10–24 years) in Malawi and Lesotho, focusing on their opportunities to learn skills and access capital and assets to engage in incomegenerating activities (IGAs). Participatory group exercises and individual interviews provide many examples of how young people learn skills and start small businesses, as well as an insight into their strategic thinking about engaging in these livelihood options. Various factors, including the effects of AIDS, are shown to affect young people’s prospects of succeeding in their ventures.Young people are very keen on starting IGAs, and are supported by adult members of their communities in asking for interventions to help them. We argue that expanded vocational and business training, focusing on locally appropriate types and scale of businesses, coupled with help to raise start-up capital has the potential to improve the chances of young people who are poor and/or AIDS-affected securing sustainable rural livelihoods in their futures. Since AIDS is intertwined with many other issues affecting young people’s livelihoods, it is problematic to single out and target only AIDS-affected young people with interventions on skills building and IGAs. Policymakers’ attitudes to vocational skills training and support for IGAs in Malawi and Lesotho are also explored, and policy recommendations made to support vulnerable rural young people in their attempts to build sustainable livelihoods.ESRC/DFI
What is the difference? Blazhko and non-Blazhko RRab stars and the special case of V123 in M3
In an extended photometric campaign of RR Lyrae variables of the globular
cluster M3, an aberrant light-curve, non-Blazhko RRab star, V123, was detected.
Based on its brightness, colors and radial velocity curve, V123 is a bona fide
member of M3. The light curve of V123 exhibits neither a bump preceding light
minimum, nor a hump on the rising branch, and has a longer than normal rise
time, with a convex shape. Similar shape characterizes the mean light curves of
some large-modulation-amplitude Blazhko stars, but none of the regular RRab
variables with similar pulsation periods. This peculiar object thus mimics
Blazhko variables without showing any evidence of periodic amplitude and/or
phase modulation. We cannot find any fully convincing answer to the peculiar
behavior of V123, however, the phenomenon raises again the possibility that
rotation and aspect angle might play a role in the explanation of the Blazhko
phenomenon, and some source of inhomogeneity acts (magnetic field, chemical
inhomogeneity) that deforms the radial pulsation of Blazhko stars during the
modulation.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures; accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
Effects of Magnetic Field on Josephson Current in SNS System
The effect of a magnetic field on Josephson current has been studied for a
superconductor/normal-metal/superconductor (SNS) system, where N is a
two-dimensional electron gas in a confining potential. It is found that the
dependence of Josephson currents on the magnetic field are sensitive to the
width of the normal metal. If the normal metal is wide and contains many
channels (subbands), the current on a weak magnetic field shows a dependence
similar to a Fraunhofer-pattern in SIS system and, as the field gets strong, it
shows another type of oscillatory dependence on the field resulting from the
Aharonov-Bohm interference between the edge states. As the number of channels
decreases (i.e. normal metal gets narrower), however, the dependence in the
region of the weak field deviates from a clear Fraunhofer pattern and the
amplitude of the oscillatory dependence in the region of the strong field is
reduced.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figure
An extensive photometric study of the Blazhko RR Lyrae star RZ Lyr
The analysis of recent, extended multicolour CCD and archive photoelectric,
photographic and visual observations has revealed several important properties
of RZ Lyr, an RRab-type variable exhibiting large-amplitude Blazhko modulation.
On the time-base of \sim110 yr, a strict anticorrelation between the pulsation
and modulation period changes is established. The light curve of RZ Lyr shows a
remarkable bump on the descending branch in the small-amplitude phase of the
modulation, similarly to the light curves of bump Cepheids. We speculate that
the stellar structure temporally suits a 4:1 resonance between the periods of
the fundamental and one of the higher-order radial modes in this modulation
phase. The light-curve variation of RZ Lyr can be correctly fitted with a
two-modulation-component solution; the 121 d period of the main modulation is
nearly but not exactly four times longer than the period of the secondary
modulation component. Using the inverse photometric method, the variations in
the pulsation-averaged values of the physical parameters in different phases of
both modulation components are determined.Comment: 15 pages, 14 figures, 8 tables. Published in MNRAS, 2012. [v3]: Only
change: title correcte
The genus <i>Batzella</i>: a chemosystematic problem
Biogenetically unrelated cyclic guanidine alkaloids and pyrroloquinoline alkaloids have been reported from sponges assigned to the genus Batzella. These sponges have been assigned to this genus because of their possession of a simple complement of thin strongyles in irregular plumoreticulate arrangement. Cyclic guanidine alkaloids were first reported from an alleged axinellid species from the Caribbean, Ptilocaulis aff. P. spiculifer, and subsequently from a second Carribean specimen identified as Ptilocaulis spiculifer and at the same time from a Red Sea poecilosclerid, Hemimycale sp. Closely related compounds were described from a Caribbean specimen identified as Batzella sp. and also from the poecilosclerids Crambe crambe (Mediterranean) and Monanchora arbuscula (Brazil). Isobatzellins (pyrroloquinoline alkaloids) were reported from a black deep-water species from the Bahamas identified as Batzella sp. Chemically related pyrroloquinoline alkaloids were found in Pacific representatives of the fistular poecilosclerid genus Zyzzya, the hadromerid genus Latrunculia and the ?haplosclerid genus Prianos. Most of the voucher specimens involved in this puzzle were re-examined and several conclusions can be drawn: when inspected closely it appears, that the cyclic guanidine alkaloids are produced by sponges containing anisostrongyles, often in two categories, a thicker and a thinner one. Monanchora arbuscula, which has been recently discovered to produce these compounds, has monactinal spicules differentiated into a thinner subtylostyle and a thicker (tylo-) style, but many specimens have anisostrongylote modifications. Microscleres in Monanchora can be absent or very rare. By association, all the sponges from which cyclic guanidine alkaloids are known may be united in one family, possibly in a single wider defined genus Monanchora. However, further relationships with Crambe need to be studied. Both have cyclic guanidine alkaloids, both have megascleres of very variable shapes and thickness, differentiated mostly into two overlapping categories, microscleres and other additional spicules are often rare or absent. Relationships with the type of Hemimycale, viz. H. columella remain obscure, but in view of the much larger spicules of that species and the intricate ectosomal specialization (lacking in the above mentioned specimens) it is possible that similarities between the Red Sea Hemimycale and the European species are the product of parallel evolution. The strongyles of sponges producing pyrroloquinoline alkaloids are perfect isostrongyles and in the ectosome these are arranged in a definite ectosomal tangential crust. A good proportion of these strongyles have a faint spination on the apices. Assignment of these sponges to Batzella rest on the properties of its type species Batzella inops. Examination of a type spicule slide of that species did not solve that question, but until further notice Batzella may be used for the deep-water material. A further unsolved problem that remains is the phylogenetic relationships of Batzella with Zyzzya and Latrunculia. The likelyhoods of possible causes for this distribution of compounds are discussed
New skeletal tuberculosis cases in past populations from Western Hungary (Transdanubia)
The distribution, antiquity and epidemiology of tuberculosis (TB) have previously been studied in osteoarchaeological material in the eastern part of Hungary, mainly on the Great Plain. The purpose of this study is to map the occurrence of skeletal TB in different centuries in the western part of Hungary, Transdanubia, and to present new cases we have found. Palaeopathological analysis was carried out using macroscopic observation supported by radiographic and molecular methods. A large human osteoarchaeological sample (n = 5684) from Transdanubian archaeological sites ranging from the 2nd to the 18th centuries served as a source of material. Spinal TB was observed in seven individuals (in three specimens with Pott's disease two of which also had cold abscess) and hip TB was assumed in one case. The results of DNA for Mycobacterium tuberculosis were positive in seven of the eight cases identified by paleopathology, and negative in the assumed case of hip TB. However, the molecular results are consistent with highly fragmented DNA, which limited further analysis. Based on the present study and previously published cases, osteotuberculosis was found in Transdanubia mainly during the 9th–13th centuries. However, there are no signs of TB in many other 9th–13th century sites, even in those that lie geographically close to those where osteotuberculous cases were found. This may be due to a true absence of TB caused by the different living conditions, way of life, or origin of these populations. An alternative explanation is that TB was present in some individuals with no typical paleopathology, but that death occurred before skeletal morphological features could develop
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