scholarly journals Introduction

Author(s):  
Erika Alm ◽  
Linda Berg ◽  
Mikela Lundahl Hero ◽  
Anna Johansson ◽  
Pia Laskar ◽  
...  

Abstract The focus of this book is on the many far from predictable transformative political processes on gender, sexuality and coloniality that grow out of the broad range of bodies and actors engaged in politics outside the hegemonic order and in everyday activities. These processes are not conducted by states, governments or transnational nongovernmental organisations; rather, they are examples of politics in-between states, organisations and national imagined communities. In this first chapter we will introduce some of the main themes, regarding these processes we in our joint research programme have worked on over the last couple of years.

2013 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 13-13
Author(s):  
Roberto Spinelli

I am very pleased to introduce this special issue of the Open Obesity Journal, dedicated to the Italy-Mexico Joint Research Programme on obesity, overweight and their determinants in children. Italy and Mexico have a long and successful tradition of scientific and technological cooperation, reflected in a wide range of agreements, scholarships and joint researches that take place every year. The current research is focused on understanding factors which are related to the onset of an epidemic of obesity and overweight in children, which is taking place all over the world but tends to assume sensitive dimensions in Latin- America and specifically in Mexico. The research project has been approved within the framework of the Executive Programme for 2011-2013 of the Agreement of Cultural, Scientific and Technological Cooperation between Italy and Mexico, signed in 1997 by the General Directorate for Cultural Cooperation of the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MAE) and the General Direction for the Technical and Scientific Cooperation of the Secretariat for Foreign Relationships of the National Council of Science and Technology (Dirección General de Cooperación Técnica y Científica de la Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores y del Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología (CONACYT)). The Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs is financing the project for the whole period 2011-2013, given the high scientific level of the institutions and researchers involved as well as the impact that it can have in developing common research protocols and build a shared data exchange infrastructure as basis for fostering future joint research. The goal of the project, led by a team lead by Prof. Francesco Giunta of the University of Pisa, Prof. Dario Gregori of the University of Padova and Dr.Javier Dibildox of the University of San Luis Potosí, is indeed to create a network of collaboration within the institutions of the two countries to promote the development of a common model for investigating determinants of obesity in the two countries. However, given the tight relationships existing across the entire Latin-America, models and actions foreseen in the program must be taken also as a proof-of-concept for the involvement of other countries in the Region. In this sense, the exchange of ideas and researchers across the entire Latin-America, from Chile to Argentina and Brazil, will help developing and laying the foundations for a lasting collaborative relationship and eventually lead to the implementation of an evidence-based shared vision on nutritional, educational and in general public health policies to be implemented. This goal is fully consistent with the spirit of the Agreement between Italy and Mexico as well as the efforts of Global Public Health, which recognizes the global dimension of the obesity epidemic in children, fostering transnational, shared discussions and open research on it. The Embassy of Italy has been supporting the project since it was conceived and officially kicked-off the initiative at the Monterrey Paediatric Conference in 2011. I congratulate again the Open Obesity Journal for dedicating this issue to the cooperation between Italy and Mexico in such a delicate field as children’s health and look forward to celebrating the completion of the project in 2013.


2007 ◽  
pp. 100-106
Author(s):  
L. Coudreuse ◽  
B. Cadilhac ◽  
C. Dumontier ◽  
R. Koers ◽  
G. Riccardi ◽  
...  

Polar Record ◽  
1972 ◽  
Vol 16 (101) ◽  
pp. 207-212 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Evans ◽  
D. J. Drewry ◽  
G. de Q. Robin

A third field season in the joint research programme of the Scott Polar Research Institute (SPRI) and the United States National Science Foundation (NSF) was carried out between November 1971 and January 1972. For accounts of previous work in this programme, see Polar Record (1968); Evans and Smith, (1970); and Robin and others (1970). The personnel from SPRI working in the field during the past season were S. Evans, C. H. Harrison, D. J. Drewry, G. K. A. Oswald, M. R. Gorman, and (from the University of Gent and Expéditions Antarctiques Belges) H. Decleir. A. Clayton and J. Whittington of the SPRI staff assisted in data reduction.


2019 ◽  
Vol 34 (3) ◽  
pp. 203-218
Author(s):  
Ramazan Uctu ◽  
Hassan Essop ◽  
Rachel Jafta

Policymakers in many countries have lit on tech-entrepreneurship as an essential element for economic development. To this end, South Africa’s Technology Innovation Agency, with co-sponsorship from the Swiss–South African Joint Research Programme, has run a cross-country tech-entrepreneurial training programme for local tech-entrepreneurs since 2010. This study reviews participants’ assessment of the training programme utilizing the Tech-Entrepreneurship Survey of 2016, designed and administered by the authors. From analysis of the participants’ rich feedback on their motivations for enrolment, the quality of training received and the strengths and weaknesses of the programme, clear indications emerge of what worked and what did not work. This enables the identification of focus areas for tech-entrepreneurship programme owners and policymakers in pursuit of tech-entrepreneurship expansion.


2005 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 47-51 ◽  
Author(s):  
E.A. Trietsch ◽  
J.H.G. Vreeburg

Section valves are essential for isolating incidents such as pipe bursts. In older networks where incidents occur most, valves have aged and their reliability has decreased. In addition, design rules or guidelines to locate valves in a network to ensure continuity of supply and to minimize effects on customers are generally lacking, as was concluded at an international workshop on valves in 2001. Within the framework of the joint research programme of the Dutch water companies a methodology has been developed to translate the reliability of individual valves or clusters of valves into the reliability of supply for one or more sections in a network. The reliability of a section is characterised by performance indicators such as Customer Minutes Lost (CML): the average time in a year that a connection is without water due to an incident in the network. The methodology enables water companies to set priorities within their valve maintenance strategy, based on critical performance indicators, costs and maintenance frequency. The methodology was translated into software and applied to a case study of the Dune Water Company of South Holland. The case study proved that the methodology and the software work well. Specific changes such as (re)location and enhancing the reliability of valves improve the performance and reliability of the network. As it is an emergency provision, investments can be done at ‘natural’ rehabilitation moments.


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