1,926 research outputs found

    The limits of anticolonialism: the British Labour movement and the end of the empire in Guiana

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    The Labour Party’s ambivalent attitude to anticolonial nationalism is well known but its place in the conflicts between the party’s revisionists and the left has been less fully elaborated, while the influence of British trade unions in the formation of party policy on decolonisation has been cast to the margins of the historiography. Events in British Guiana are representative of this trend because, while the activities of the American Federation of Labor-Congress of Industrial Organizations have been detailed by a number of historians, including Stephen Rabe, Robert Waters, Gary Daniels and Lily Ramcharan, the impact of the British TUC has been largely ignored. A study of the international labour politics of the 1950s and 1960s suggests both that the fate of the Guianese left was inextricably tied to conflicts in the British Labour party and that trade union leaders in the metropolis offered powerful support to revisionists in making the case for prioritising Atlanticism over colonial liberation. The Labour Party’s support for the suspension of the Guianese constitution by the Churchill government in 1953 and their willingness to implement Conservative plans for constitutional reform in 1964 demonstrate that the party’s liberationist faction were unable to overturn the Cold War agenda espoused by the right wing of the parliamentary party and anti-communists in the trade union movement

    First impressions count: Almost double! : A study of the interaction of interviewer appearance and information effects in stated preference studies

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    A simple but novel experiment is described examining the impact of interviewer appearance upon stated willingness to pay (WTP) for an environmental good. This test consists of an interviewer wearing either formal or more casual clothing. This analysis is interacted with a cross cutting treatment examining the more familiar impact of adding information on certain of the less familiar attributes of the good in question. Face to face interviews are employed to collect a sample of respondents who are randomly allocated to one of the four treatment permutations described by our interviewer appearance and information change study design. Our analysis suggests that both altering the appearance of an interviewer and changing the degree of information provided can have significant impacts upon stated WTP. Furthermore this effect is heightened when both effects are running in parallel. We argue that such findings are to be expected given the highly interactive nature of face-to-face interviewing but note that this serves to provide a cautionary note regarding the complex array of influences at work when members of the public are asked to express preferences regarding goods for which they have not previous provided monetary values

    Workers in the vanguard: the 1960 Industrial Relations Ordinance and the struggle for independence in Aden

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    The promulgation in 1960 of a new Industrial Relations Ordinance in Aden was a singular event in the history of British decolonisation because it made many forms of strike action illegal. Earlier initiatives to liberalise trade union law in the colonies were intended to channel and manage the discontent of workers; but for nationalist movements, the new order in industrial relations provided an opportunity to mobilise workers in the cause of independence. Aden, which was the location of a significant British base, a major oil refinery and a key commercial port, became the site of a bitter confrontation between the nascent trade union movement and the colonial administration. Three aspects of the conflict were of particular significance. First, Aden’s unique political status as a British colony in the Arab world and it strategic and economic value, contributed to the fractious industrial relations environment. Secondly, conflicts between workers and the colonial government demonstrate continuity with wider British efforts to suppress anti-colonial dissent and demonstrate that charges of appeasement in the last years of empire are not well founded. Lastly, the exceptional nature of the new legislation attracted the critical attention of the ILO and the major international trade union confederations, which internationalised the dispute over the IRO. An examination of the manner in which the British government sought to regulate its relations with various labour organisations, including the British TUC, the colonial ATUC and the two rival international labour confederations of the WFTU and ICFTU, demonstrates that the conduct of industrial relations in Aden was significant in the context of both the Cold War and decolonisation

    Simulation of a new hybrid Si/SiC power device for harsh environment applications

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    A new power device structure is proposed, conceived to operate in a high temperature, harsh environment, for example within a motor drive application down hole, as an inverter in the engine bay of an electric car, or as a solar inverter in space. The lateral silicon power device resembles a laterally diffused MOSFET (LDMOS), such as those implemented within silicon on insulator (SOI) substrates. However, unlike SOI, the Si thin film has been transferred directly onto a semi-insulating 6H silicon carbide (6H-SiC) substrate via a wafer bonding process. Thermal simulations of the hybrid Si/SiC substrate have shown that the high thermal conductivity of the SiC will have a junction-to-case temperature approximately 4 times less that an equivalent SOI device, reducing the effects of self-heating. Electrical simulations of a 600 V power device, implemented entirely with the silicon thin film, suggest that it will retain the ability of SOI to minimise leakage at high temperature, but does so with 50% less conduction losses

    Training for a transformed service : the experience of learners in 2016

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    This article explores the training and early practice experience of the first cohort of probation learners trained under the auspices of ‘Transforming Rehabilitation’ (TR). It draws on interviews with learners qualifying in 2016 in order to examine the adequacy of their training and their early perceptions of delivering TR as qualified practitioners. While highlighting their training as stressful and noting issues with TR and some implications of the highly risk-focused nature of NPS work in particular, participants were generally positive about their training and early post-qualification experiences. Some inferences are drawn in relation to the future approach to training

    Accurate analytical modeling for switching energy of PiN diodes reverse recovery

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    PiN diodes are known to significantly contribute to switching energy as a result of reverse-recovery charge during turn-off. At high switching rates, the overlap between the high peak reserve-recovery current and the high peak voltage overshoot contributes to significant switching energy. The peak reverse-recovery current depends on the temperature and switching rate, whereas the peak diode voltage overshoot depends additionally on the stray inductance. Furthermore, the slope of the diode turn-off current is constant at high insulated-gate bipolar transistor (IGBT) switching rates and varies for low IGBT switching rates. In this paper, an analytical model for calculating PiN diode switching energy at different switching rates and temperatures is presented and validated by ultrafast and standard recovery diodes with different current ratings. Measurements of current commutation in IGBT/PiN diode pairs have been made at different switching rates and temperatures and used to validate the model. It is shown here that there is an optimal switching rate to minimize switching energy. The model is able to correctly predict the switching rate and temperature dependence of the PiN diode switching energies for different devices

    Analysis of linear-doped Si/SiC power LDMOSFETs based on device simulation

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    This paper presents the design and optimization of a 600 V silicon-on-silicon carbide (Si/SiC) laterally diffused MOSFET with linear doping profile in the drift region for high-temperature applications. The proposed structure has an embedded silicon-on-insulator (SOI) layout through which the traditional graded doping theory for SOI can be applied in the Si/SiC architecture. An SOI counterpart is introduced as a benchmark and modeled alongside the proposed structure. Comparisons between them show that they have the near-identical OFF-state and breakdown characteristics, with a significant tunneling leakage component emerging above 450 V. In the ON state, the Si/SiC device has higher electrical resistance but much lower thermal resistance, leading to less self-heating and higher reliability
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