1,567 research outputs found
India and the Patent Wars: Pharmaceuticals in the New Intellectual Property Regime
[Excerpt] India and the Patent Wars contributes to an international debate over the costs of medicine and restrictions on access under stringent patent laws showing how activists and drug companies in low-income countries seize agency and exert influence over these processes. Murphy Halliburton contributes to analyses of globalization within the fields of anthropology, sociology, law, and public health by drawing on interviews and ethnographic work with pharmaceutical producers in India and the United States.
India has been at the center of emerging controversies around patent rights related to pharmaceutical production and local medical knowledge. Halliburton shows that Big Pharma is not all-powerful, and that local activists and practitioners of ayurveda, India’s largest indigenous medical system, have been able to undermine the aspirations of multinational companies and the WTO. Halliburton traces how key drug prices have gone down, not up, in low-income countries under the new patent regime through partnerships between US- and India-based companies, but warns us to be aware of access to essential medicines in low- and middle-income countries going forward
How children develop during the preschool years (2005)
"Information from Human Environmental Sciences Extension.""Preschool basics."Reprinted 12/05/5M
Manhattan transfer: the "clandestine" influence on Lorca's Poeta en Nueva York
O presente artigo incide sobre a avaliação dos valores, dimensão psicológica central no desenvolvimentoda carreira, nomeadamente com a apresentação do Life Values Inventory (LVI), um novo instrumento cuja versão original foi desenvolvida nos USA por Crace e Brown (1996). A adaptação portuguesa do Life Values Inventory (LVI) foi aplicada a um grupo de 209 mulheres de grupos sócio-profissionais diferentes. Após uma síntese da revisão de literatura sobre os valores no desenvolvimento da carreira das mulheres é analisada a adequação do instrumento a este grupo específico pela análise da consistência interna, através do método alpha de Cronbach, e análise factorial. É ainda feita a análise da distribuição de resultados e análise de diferenças entre grupos definidos pelo estatuto sócio-profissional
Development during the school-age years of 6 through 11 (2003)
"Information from Human Environmental Sciences Extension.""School-age basics."New 9/03/5M
Development during the first three years (2004)
"Information from Human Environmental Sciences Extension.""Infant and toddler basics."Reprinted 8/04/5M
Early Childhood Brain Development
Includes bibliographical references.We know that children need proper nutrition, safe homes, access to health care, and good parenting in order to thrive. With recent technological advances, we are also beginning to understand more about how a child's brain develops and what we can do to promote optimal brain development
Ab-initio study of oxygen vacancies in alpha-quartz
Extrinsic levels, formation energies, and relaxation geometries are
calculated ab initio for oxygen vacancies in alpha-quartz SiO2. The vacancy is
found to be thermodynamically stable in the charge states Q=+3, Q=0, Q=--2, and
Q=-3. The charged states are stabilized by large and asymmetric distortions
near the vacancy site. Concurrently, Franck-Condon shifts for absorption and
recombination related to these states are found to be strongly asymmetric. In
undoped quartz, the ground state of the vacancy is the neutral charge state,
while for moderate p-type and n-type doping, the +3 and -3 states are favored,
respectively, over a wide Fermi level window. Optical transitions related to
the vacancy are predicted at around 3 eV and 6.5 eV (absorption) and 2.5 to 3.0
eV (emission), depending on the charge state of the ground state.Comment: 6 figures included, but only Fig.1 actually change
EPR identification of defects responsible for thermoluminescence in Cu-doped lithium tetraborate (Li2B4O7) crystals
Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) is used to identify the electron and hole traps responsible for thermoluminescence (TL) peaks occurring near 100 and 200 ◦C in copper-doped lithium tetraborate (Li2B4O7) crystals. As-grown crystals have Cu+ and Cu2+ ions substituting for lithium and have Cu+ ions at interstitial sites. All of the substitutional Cu2+ ions in the as-grown crystals have an adjacent lithium vacancy and give rise to a distinct EPR spectrum. Exposure to ionizing radiation at room temperature produces a second and different Cu2+ EPR spectrum when a hole is trapped by substitutional Cu+ ions that have no nearby defects. These two Cu2+ trapped-hole centers are referred to as Cu2+-VLi and Cu2+active, respectively. Also during the irradiation, two trapped-electron centers in the form of interstitial Cu0 atoms are produced when interstitial Cu+ ions trap electrons. They are observed with EPR and are labeled Cu0A and Cu0B. When an irradiated crystal is warmed from 25 to 150 ◦C, the Cu2+active centers have a partial decay step that correlates with the TL peak near 100 ◦C. The concentrations of Cu0A and Cu0B centers, however, increase as the crystal is heated through this range. As the crystal is futher warmed between 150 and 250 ◦C, the EPR signals from the Cu2+active hole centers and Cu0A and Cu0B electron centers decay simultaneously. This decay step correlates with the intense TL peak near 200 ◦C
Religious Language as Poetry: Heidegger's Challenge.
This paper examines how Heidegger’s view that language is poetry provides a way of conceptualising religious language. Poetry, according to Heidegger, is language in its purest form, in that it reveals Being, whilst also showing the difference between word and thing. In poetry, Heidegger suggests, we come closest to the essence of language itself and encounter its strangeness and impermeability. What would be the implications of viewing religious language in this way? Through examining Heidegger’s view that poetry is the purest form of language, I suggest that it would also be possible to view religious language as ‘poetry’ in this way, in that it also shows the transcendence of what cannot be brought to presence in language, except as concealed. Such a view of religious language leads to the view that it is not a special, unique or distinctive category of language, but rather a mode of language that, like poetry, can draw our attention to the inarticulable relationship between word and world that Heidegger argues pervades all forms of language
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