118 research outputs found

    Disasters as Opportunity for Change: Tsunami Recovery and Energy Transition in Japan

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    Disasters may offer a window of opportunity, in which extraordinary circumstances create momentum for positive social change. While this potential is popularized through the concept of “building back better,” few studies have examined quantitatively the processes and drivers of broader social change in a post-disaster context. Using renewable energy transition (specifically, solar photovoltaic diffusion) as one measure of building back better, this study explores how pre-and post- disaster contexts, capacities, and policies affected recovery outcomes of 30 coastal communities nearly 5 years following the Great East Japan earthquake, tsunami, and nuclear disaster (Tohoku disaster). Our study shows that the disaster-affected communities adopted significantly more solar power than the rest of Japan following the introduction of the country's Feed-in-Tariff (FIT) system in 2012. The communities examined are highly diverse in their solar energy adoption as of 2015, and regression analysis was conducted to explain differences in overall solar energy diffusion as well as in adoption of very large scale mega-solar projects. The dynamic relationship between physical damage and subsequent solar adoption was found to be nonlinear, as was the relationship between degree of household relocation and solar energy adoption. Differences in communities’ mega-solar adoption were also explained by the variability in hazard zone designation and extent of physical damage. These findings suggest that a disaster may serve as an opportunity for positive community change when immediate impact (or the level of change involved in a reconstruction process) is high enough but not overwhelming. Overall, this study finds potentially complex relationships

    Initial validation of the general attitudes towards Artificial Intelligence Scale

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    Author Accepted Manuscript with Appendix A (Sources of News Stories) and Appendix B (General Attitudes Towards Artificial Intelligence Scale, with instructions and scoring). For data files, please follow the DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chbr.2020.100014 to the publisher's site. This article is available Open Access via the Publisher's site: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2451958820300142A new General Attitudes towards Artificial Intelligence Scale (GAAIS) was developed. The scale underwent initial statistical validation via Exploratory Factor Analysis, which identified positive and negative subscales. Both subscales captured emotions in line with their valence. In addition, the positive subscale reflected societal and personal utility, whereas the negative subscale reflected concerns. The scale showed good psychometric indices and convergent and discriminant validity against existing measures. To cross-validate general attitudes with attitudes towards specific instances of AI applications, summaries of tasks accomplished by specific applications of Artificial Intelligence were sourced from newspaper articles. These were rated for comfortableness and perceived capability. Comfortableness with specific applications was a strong predictor of general attitudes as measured by the GAAIS, but perceived capability was a weaker predictor. Participants viewed AI applications involving big data (e.g. astronomy, law, pharmacology) positively, but viewed applications for tasks involving human judgement, (e.g. medical treatment, psychological counselling) negatively. Applications with a strong ethical dimension led to stronger discomfort than their rated capabilities would predict. The survey data suggested that people held mixed views of AI. The initially validated two-factor GAAIS to measure General Attitudes towards Artificial Intelligence is included in the Appendix

    Ethical challenges for the design and conduct of mega-biobanking from Great East Japan Earthquake victims

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    The effects of custodial vs. non-custodial sentences on re-offending: A systematic review of the state of knowledge

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    As part of a broad initiative of systematic reviews of experimental or quasiexperimental evaluations of interventions in the field of crime prevention and the treatment of offenders, our work consisted in searching through all available databases for evidence concerning the effects of custodial and non-custodial sanctions on reoffending. For this purpose, we examined more than 3,000 abstracts, and finally 23 studies that met the minimal conditions of the Campbell Review, with only 5 studies based on a controlled or a natural experimental design. These studies allowed, all in all, 27 comparisons. Relatively few studies compare recidivism rates for offenders sentenced to jail or prison with those of offenders given some alternative to incarceration (typically probation). According to the findings, the rate of re-offending after a non-custodial sanction is lower than after a custodial sanction in 11 out of 13 significant comparisons. However, in 14 out of 27 comparisons, no significant difference on re-offending between both sanctions is noted. Two out of 27 comparisons are in favour of custodial sanctions. Finally, experimental evaluations and natural experiments yield results that are less favourable to non-custodial sanctions, than are quasi-experimental studies using softer designs. This is confirmed by the meta-analysis including four controlled and one natural experiment. According to the results, non-custodial sanctions are not beneficial in terms of lower rates of re-offending beyond random effects. Contradictory results reported in the literature are likely due to insufficient control of pre-intervention differences between prisoners and those serving “alternative” sanctions

    Placemaking for Prosperity: the Transportation Plan for Greater Binghamton

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    One of BMTS' primary responsibilities is the development and adoption of a long range regional transportation plan. The regional geography is defined as the Metropolitan Planning Area, which includes not only the current urbanized area, but also those municipalities expected to develop urban characteristics within the planning horizon

    Education, training and economic performance

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    Available from British Library Document Supply Centre- DSC:q94/24862 / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreSIGLEGBUnited Kingdo

    People, jobs and training in Wirral City Lands Volume I; main report

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    1 of 2 volsAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre- DSC:q94/17063 / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreSIGLEGBUnited Kingdo

    People, jobs and training in Wirral City Lands Volume II; technical report

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    2 of 2 volsAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre- DSC:q94/17064 / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreSIGLEGBUnited Kingdo

    Skill shortages and long term unemployment in cities Is training the answer?

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    Paper presented at the International Conference `Cities, Enterprises and Society at the Eve of the 21st Century' held Lille (FR), 16-18 Mar 1994Available from British Library Document Supply Centre- DSC:q96/04244 / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreSIGLEGBUnited Kingdo

    The healthcare sector in Leeds Report produced for Leeds Development Agency and Leeds Training and Enterprise Council

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    SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:q96/22423 / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreGBUnited Kingdo
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