2,582 research outputs found
British citizenship, gender and migration: the containment of cultural differences and the stratification of belonging
Debates about integration, British values and identity, who can belong and who can become a citizen, have been fuelled by concerns about growing cultural diversity in the United Kingdom. To promote a shared sense of national identity and claim a universal and normative citizen subject, the UK government, along with many other western nations, has introduced compulsory citizenship and language testing. This article traces and critiques the evolution of the British citizenship test since its introduction in 2005
and argues that the regime fails to recognise the gendered and segmented nature of migration, and functions as a silent and largely invisible mechanism of civic stratification and control. Drawing on Home Office data, it is argued that citizenship testing enables the government to cherry pick migrants who conform to an idealised citizen subject, while containing cultural difference by excluding others, particularly women, who are tolerated but remain
symbolic non-citizens
Coherent Diabatic Ion Transport and Separation in a Multi-Zone Trap Array
We investigate the motional dynamics of single and multiple ions during
transport between and separation into spatially distinct locations in a
multi-zone linear Paul trap. A single 9Be+ ion in a 2 MHz harmonic well located
in one zone was laser-cooled to near its ground state of motion and transported
370 micrometers by moving the well to another zone. This was accomplished in 8
microseconds, corresponding to 16 periods of oscillation. Starting from a state
with n=0.1 quanta, during transport the ion was excited to a displaced coherent
state with n=1.6 quanta but on completion was returned close to its motional
ground state with n=0.2. Similar results were achieved for the transport of two
ions. We also separated chains of up to 9 ions from one potential well to two
distinct potential wells. With two ions this was accomplished in 55
microseconds, with final excitations of about 2 quanta for each ion. Fast
coherent transport and separation can significantly reduce the time overhead in
certain architectures for scalable quantum information processing with trapped
ions.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Information transfer using a single particle path-spin hybrid entangled state
The path-spin entangled state of a single spin-1/2 particle is considered
which is generated by using a beam-spitter and a spin-flipper. Using this
hybrid entanglement at the level of a single particle as a resource, we
formulate a protocol for transferring of the state of an unknown qubit to a
distant location. Our scheme is implemented by a sequence of unitary operations
along with suitable spin-measurements, as well as by using classical
communication between the two spatially separated parties. This protocol, thus,
demonstrates the possibility of using intraparticle entanglement as a physical
resource for performing information theoretic tasks
Denying humanness to victims: How gang members justify violent behavior
The high prevalence of violent offending amongst gang-involved youth has been established in the literature. Yet the underlying psychological mechanisms that enable youth to engage in such acts of violence remain unclear. 189 young people were recruited from areas in London, UK, known for their gang activity. We found that gang members, in comparison to non-gang youth, described the groups they belong to as having recognized leaders, specific rules and codes, initiation rituals, and special clothing. Gang members were also more likely than non-gang youth to engage in violent behavior and endorse moral disengagement strategies (i.e., moral justification, euphemistic language, advantageous comparison, displacement of responsibility, attribution of blame, and dehumanization). Finally, we found that dehumanizing victims partially mediated the relationship between gang membership and violent behavior. These findings highlight the effects of groups at the individual level and an underlying psychological mechanism that explains, in part, how gang members engage in violence
Democratic localism and the implementation of the Community Remedy in England and Wales
This article assesses the development and implementation of the Community Remedy anti-social behaviour policy by Police and Crime Commissioners (PCCs) in England and Wales. The Community Remedy, introduced by the Anti-Social Behaviour, Crime and Policing Act (2014), allows victims of ‘low-level’ anti-social behaviour to select an informal action for their offender from a list designed by their local PCC via consultation with the public. This article reports the results of a benchmarking exercise that investigates how PCCs have translated this policy into practice by examining: public consultation procedures; the contents of the Community Remedy documents; and police usage. The findings indicate an uneven implementation across regions with variable levels of engagement from PCCs, police forces and members of the public. We assess the enactment and adoption of this new power alongside its potential to stimulate democratic localism
Transport of charged particles by adjusting rf voltage amplitudes
We propose a planar architecture for scalable quantum information processing
(QIP) that includes X-junctions through which particles can move without
micromotion. This is achieved by adjusting radio frequency (rf) amplitudes to
move an rf null along the legs of the junction. We provide a proof-of-principle
by transporting dust particles in three dimensions via adjustable rf potentials
in a 3D trap. For the proposed planar architecture, we use regularization
techniques to obtain amplitude settings that guarantee smooth transport through
the X-junction.Comment: 16 pages, 10 figure
Seeking safety beyond refuge : the impact of immigration and citizenship policy upon refugees in the UK
Western states are concerned about maintaining and securing national borders. Across Europe, one response has been to implement restrictive asylum regimes that prevent ‘bogus’ applicants and grant refuge only to the ‘deserving’. Alongside these concerns, states are eager to encourage socially cohesive communities. One recent tool adopted by the UK government has been citizenship policy, including English language/life in the UK tests and citizenship ceremonies. By drawing upon in-depth interviews with refugees in Scotland (UK), this paper explores the impact of the current asylum regime and citizenship policies from the perspective of individual voices that are often absent from wider debates. It explores how temporary refugee status impacts upon individuals’ everyday lives including employment and education, and impacts upon children. The data also question the reasons for refugees deciding to become British citizens (or not) and highlight instrumental reasons alongside less tangible factors such as gaining a sense of security. Taking the discussion forward, the study explores some unintended consequences of immigration and citizenship policies in the UK. The research suggests that not only do restrictive asylum policies negatively impact upon refugees and their integration but also serve to elevate fear and uncertainty, which can unintentionally spur individuals to seek naturalisation
Black Hole Solutions in Heterotic String Theory on a Torus
We construct the general electrically charged, rotating black hole solution
in the heterotic string theory compactified on a six dimensional torus and
study its classical properties. This black hole is characterized by its mass,
angular momentum, and a 28 dimensional electric charge vector. We recover the
axion-dilaton black holes and Kaluza-Klein black holes for special values of
the charge vector. For a generic black hole of this kind, the 28 dimensional
magnetic dipole moment vector is not proportional to the electric charge
vector, and we need two different gyromagnetic ratios for specifying the
relation between these two vectors. We also give an algorithm for constructing
a 58 parameter rotating dyonic black hole solution in this theory,
characterized by its mass, angular momentum, a 28 dimensional electric charge
vector and a 28 dimensional magnetic charge vector. This is the most general
asymptotically flat black hole solution in this theory consistent with the
no-hair theorem.Comment: LaTeX, 20 pages, A paragraph added discussing the relatioship between
area of the stretched horizon and density of string states in the extremal
limi
Interrogating violence against women and state violence policy: Gendered intersectionalities and the quality of policy in The Netherlands, Sweden and the Uk
This article builds on feminist scholarship on intersectionality to address violence against
women, and state policy thereon. It takes up the challenge of analysing the complex, situated and spatial relationship between theorizing on violence against women and state policy on such violence. Drawing on extensive comparative European data, it explores the relations of gender and intersectionality, conceptualized as gendered intersectionalities, by examining how multiple inequalities are made visible and invisible in state policy and debates in the Netherlands, Sweden and the UK. Attention is paid to different forms of gendered intersectionalities in policy, for example, tendencies to degender violence against women. A key aim of the article is to investigate how comparative analysis can be a starting point for assessing if, how and to what extent the inclusion of multiple inequalities could increase the quality of policy, for both reducing and stopping violence, and assisting those subject to violence
- …
