Robyn Autry. Desegregating the Past: The Public Life of Memory in the United States and South Africa.

2018 ◽  
Vol 123 (4) ◽  
pp. 1298-1299
Author(s):  
Sarah Nuttall
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-14
Author(s):  
Mathew Alexander ◽  
Lynn Unruh ◽  
Andriy Koval ◽  
William Belanger

Abstract As of November 2020, the United States leads the world in confirmed coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) cases and deaths. Over the past 10 months, the United States has experienced three peaks in new cases, with the most recent spike in November setting new records. Inaction and the lack of a scientifically informed, unified response have contributed to the sustained spread of COVID-19 in the United States. This paper describes major events and findings from the domestic response to COVID-19 from January to November 2020, including on preventing transmission, COVID-19 testing and contact tracing, ensuring sufficient physical infrastructure and healthcare workforce, paying for services, and governance. We further reflect on the public health response to-date and analyse the link between key policy decisions (e.g. closing, reopening) and COVID-19 cases in three states that are representative of the broader regions that have experienced spikes in cases. Finally, as we approach the winter months and undergo a change in national leadership, we highlight some considerations for the ongoing COVID-19 response and the broader United States healthcare system. These findings describe why the United States has failed to contain COVID-19 effectively to-date and can serve as a reference in the continued response to COVID-19 and future pandemics.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chris Kenyon ◽  
Jolein Laumen ◽  
Dorien Van Den Bossche ◽  
Christophe Van Dijck

Abstract Background Does the emergence of antimicrobial resistance in Neisseria gonorrhoeae include the erasure of highly susceptible strains or does it merely involve a stretching of the MIC distribution? If it was the former this would be important to know as it would increase the probability that the loss of susceptibility is irreversible.Methods We conducted a historical analysis based on a literature review of changes of N. gonorrhoeae MIC distribution over the past 75 years for 3 antimicrobials (benzylpenicillin, ceftriaxone and azithromycin) in five countries (Denmark, Japan, South Africa, the United Kingdom and the United States).Results Changes in MIC distribution were most marked for benzylpenicillin and showed evidence of a right shifting of MIC distribution that was associated with a reduction/elimination of susceptible strains in all countries. In the case of ceftriaxone and azithromycin, where only more recent data was available, right shifting was also found in all countries but the extent of right shifting varied and the evidence for the elimination of susceptible strains was more mixed.Conclusions The finding of right shifting of MIC distribution combined with reduction/elimination of susceptible strains is concerning since it suggests that this shifting may not be reversible. Since excess antimicrobial consumption is likely to be responsible for this right shifting, this insight provides additional impetus to promote antimicrobial stewardship.


2018 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 249-277 ◽  
Author(s):  
DAVID SEHAT

The United States is a deeply Christian country, but over the last sixty years American public culture has become increasingly detached from religious concerns. Christian activists, when not speaking within the Republican Party, have had to assert their privilege in a way that they never had to do in the past. In spite of their efforts, the role of Christianity in culture and politics has seen a more or less continuous decline. This essay examines how and why that process occurred. It puts forward a schematic narrative that relies on the concepts of public reason, the avant-garde, and an overlapping consensus to explain how different people came together in the mid-twentieth century to secularize and liberalize American public life.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Fairooz Samy

<p><b>As the leading internet-distributed television platform (IDTVP) today, with over 200 millionworldwide subscribers, Netflix is a fascinating case-study through which to unpack thestrategies, innovations, and possibilities of internet-delivered television.</b></p> <p>This thesis argues that Netflix appropriates existing broadcast and premium cable networkpractices to produce original programming while using internet-originated tools, such as bigdata and algorithms, to continuously improve its interface design. The thesis demonstrateshow Netflix utilises internet discourses relating to television media, streaming, andtechnology, to contextualise subscribers’ interactions with, and consumption of, content onits platform, discursively and practically creating the ‘Netflix experience’.</p> <p>The thesis examines the ways in which Netflix supports its commissioning strategies bycontinuously developing technology that emphasizes personalisation, choice, and temporalflexibility, all while promoting its digital capabilities through self-mythologizing narratives. AsNetflix is constantly evolving in response to changes in the television industry (and is at timesinstigating these changes) this thesis includes industry discourse in the forms of pressreleases, advertising materials, and popular media journalism. Netflix’s framing withinpopular media, both through its own promotional material and across industry press,simultaneously creates, reinforces, and normalises IDTV delivery and viewing protocols.</p> <p>The thesis analyses Netflix’s use of big data and algorithms to ‘create value’ for subscribersby enhancing the user-friendliness and personalisation capabilities of its platform, both ofwhich increase viewer engagement with the Netflix interface. Also discussed are thecompany’s strategies for value creation, such as continuous playback, the skip intro feature,the ability to download episodes automatically for offline viewing, and others, all of whichincentivise temporally-flexible viewing habits, such as binge-watching. Additionally, the thesisinvestigates Netflix’s exploitation of its big data caches to market its original programmesdirectly to subscribers, circulate biased viewing figures pertaining to content on its platform,and categorise its viewers into ‘taste communities’.</p> <p>Domestically, Netflix’s role in the increasing consolidation of content owned by mediaconglomerates is discussed, notably Disney’s 2019 acquisition of 20th Century Fox and itstelevision holdings, and the subsequent effects of the deal on the licensing of Fox and Disney’sintellectual property (IP). Netflix’s upward trajectory in the United States illustrates theopenings and opportunities available to the company in the time immediately before the IDTVmodel became widespread amongst (now) multi-platform broadcast and cable networks,thanks in part to Netflix’s innovations in popularising IDTV protocols. The company tookadvantage of the US television industry’s existing economic and industrial constraints to builda catalogue of acquired content. The resulting popularity of certain (high-end serial drama)programmes (particularly those licensed from cable networks) helped Netflix to establish adomestic subscriber base while forecasting the importance of IP ownership.</p> <p>This thesis posits that the changes in the international regulation and provision of what is nowan established form of television delivery demonstrate the influence that Netflix, as thelargest purveyor of IDTV, has had in gaining entry into 190 countries over the past decade. Assuch, Netflix is an excellent representation of the international possibilities and successes ofIDTV. The thesis also interrogates how Netflix’s entry into original content commissioning hasinstigated broader changes in the legislation, commissioning, production, and reception ofIDTVP in markets such as Brazil, The United Kingdom, India, South Africa, and its domesticmarket of the United States. Internationally, this research examines Netflix’s investments ininternet infrastructure and physical infrastructure, in terms of buying its own production hubsin places like Spain, its relationships with non-US networks, and the legislative response tothe rapid growth of internationally-operating IDTVPs.</p> <p>The thesis investigates how Netflix’s willingness to outspend competitors and accrue debtallows it to build subscriber numbers, despite continuing to rely on acquired content, andincreasingly, co-produced and directly commissioned content with (non-US) networks(Dunleavy 2020). It argues that Netflix is pursuing a commissioning and branding strategy of‘international localisation’. The strategy cultivates cultural specificity in the form of locallanguage use, a story by a local writer-producer, the involvement of a local productioncompany, and partnerships with local casts and crews. This cultural specificity is thencombined with factors that allow local content to appeal to Netflix’s international subscriberbase, including accurately translated subtitling and dubbing in a variety of languages, as wellas adopting aspects of high-end serial drama programming, such as large budgets, highproduction values, and creatively-risky or adult themes. The concept of internationallocalisation is explored through the case studies of two Netflix-originated serial dramaprogrammes, Stranger Things (US) and Queen Sono (South Africa).</p> <p>Internet-delivered television is now a permanent fixture of the entertainment landscape.</p> <p>Multi-platform networks are the predominant group of television providers, with IDTVplatforms constituting an ever-growing part of these networks’ strategies. Increasing mediacompany conglomeration is going to result in the consolidation of intellectual property rightsfor programmes among an oligopoly of parent companies, making content origination evenmore crucial for television providers. These conditions occurred alongside the rise of Netflix,a company which, little more than a decade prior, was primarily a DVD rental service, andnow, in 2020, boasts availability in 190 countries. Netflix is not the ‘global network’ its CEOReed Hastings claims it to be. However, its successes and challenges uniquely represent theseismic changes in the industrial, economic, and technological circumstances of the televisionindustry over the past ten years.</p>


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 32-62
Author(s):  
Desmond Osaretin Oriakhogba ◽  
Gloria Kanwulia Adeola-Adedipe

Conducted as a desk research, this paper examines the interface between copyright and succession laws, the notion of testamentary freedom, its limitations and justification for its restriction. The paper draws on this examination to discuss the freedom of authors to dispose their copyright under testate and intestate arrangements, and posthumously control the use of their works under the Nigerian Copyright Act. Following this discussion, the paper identifies and examines the relevant provisions of the Copyright Act that can limit the capacity of authors to posthumously control the use of their works in Nigeria. The paper contends that authors’ liberty to transfer their copyright by testamentary disposition or operation of law, and control the use of their works posthumously, without public interest friendly limitations, can create an imbalance within the copyright system. This paper addresses the issues of whether public interest objectives may be achieved through the limitation in the extant Copyright Act, especially given the propensity for copyright misuse by authors in death, as well as during their lifetime, and what policy options may align the public interest with authors’ posthumous control of copyright. In resolving these questions, the paper draws on instances of copyright misuse in the United States of America (USA) and South Africa and situates them within the Nigerian context to shed light on the issues discussed.


2007 ◽  
Vol 1 (3) ◽  
pp. 247-271 ◽  
Author(s):  
Douglas Schuurman

AbstractIn this article I reflect upon the implications of Christendom for Christian vocation. It begins by describing the condition of Christendom in the United States. Then it traces John Howard Yoder's critique of Christendom. Finally, it assesses Yoder's critique with a view to a revised understanding of the public vocation of the Christian in a post-Christendom USA. Part of that assessment involves distinguishing three forms of Christendom: state-enforced Christendom, voluntary cultural Christendom, and Christian culture within the church as minority community of obedient witness. I propose that Reformed vocation should join embrace Yoder's rejection of state-enforced Christendom and affirm his call to develop Christian culture as a minority community. But unlike Yoder Reformed vocation requires Christians, where possible, to work toward voluntary Christendom in the broader society.


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