LGBT Liberation

2021 ◽  
pp. 135-148

Should the gay right’s movement aim for “liberation” or “equality”? Peter Tatchell offers a careful and nuanced consideration of the trade-off involved in either approach, and the different visions of the world they imply. Ultimately, siding with “Liberation” he offers a more radical vision for the movement; of not simply acceptance of homosexuality by a heteronormative culture, but a total change in that culture that allows all of us to be happier in our romantic and sexual relationships.

Author(s):  
Natasha Warner ◽  
Daniel Brenner ◽  
Jessamyn Schertz ◽  
Andrew Carnie ◽  
Muriel Fisher ◽  
...  

AbstractScottish Gaelic is sometimes described as having nasalized fricatives (/ṽ/ distinctively, and [f̃, x̃, h̃], etc. through assimilation). However, there are claims that it is not aerodynamically possible to open the velum for nasalization while maintaining frication noise. We present aerodynamic data from 14 native Scottish Gaelic speakers to determine how the posited nasalized fricatives in this language are realized. Most tokens demonstrate loss of nasalization, but nasalization does occur in some contexts without aerodynamic conflict, e.g., nasalization with the consonant realized as an approximant, nasalization of [h̃], nasalization on the preceding vowel, or sequential frication and nasalization. Furthermore, a very few tokens do contain simultaneous nasalization and frication with a trade-off in airflow. We also present perceptual evidence showing that Gaelic listeners can hear this distinction slightly better than chance. Thus, instrumental data from one of the few languages in the world described as having nasalized fricatives confirms that the claimed sounds are not made by producing strong nasalization concurrently with clear frication noise. Furthermore, although speakers most often neutralize the nasalization, when they maintain it, they do so through a variety of phonetic mechanisms, even within a single language.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-19
Author(s):  
Rogério de Souza Farias

Summary Policy planning has a long history in the Ministries of Foreign Affairs around the world. This article provides an overview of almost 70 years of this technique in Brazil’s Ministry of External Relations (Itamaraty). I will argue that there has been a clear trade-off between predicting, preaching, disrupting and managing. Despite its failures, planning has been an important tool for coping with uncertainty and has provided coherence in foreign policy-making.


2017 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 35
Author(s):  
Hasan Mastrisiswadi ◽  
Herianto Herianto

Robot rehabilitasi pasien pasca stroke saat ini telah dikembangkan oleh negara-negara maju di dunia, tidak terkecuali Indonesia meskipun sebagai negara berkembang. Salah satu pengembang robot rehabilitasi pasien pasca stroke itu berada di Universitas Gadjah Mada yang telah melakukan penelitian beberapa tahun ini. Penelitian ini bertujuan untuk mengidentifikasi kepentingan relatif konsumen terhadap robot rehabilitasi pasien pasca stroke untuk kemudian digunakan sebagai bahan masukan dalam pengembangan robot selanjutnya. Metode yang digunakan dalam penelitian ini adalah Conjoint Analysis. Metode ini memiliki keunggulan dalam menganalisis trade off antar atribut. Dari hasil pengolahan Conjoint Analysis dengan bantuan program SPSS, dapat diketahui bahwa kebutuhan konsumen paling tinggi terhadap robot rehabilitasi pasien stroke adalah  dapat dipasangkan ke tangan pasien dengan mudah, baru setelah itu kemampuannya untuk dipakai di kedua tangan (kanan dan kiri) dan material yang digunakan dalam pembuatan robot haruslah aman bagi pasien.AbstractPost-stroke rehabilitation robot has been developed in the world, including Indonesia as a developing country. One of this robot developers is Universitas Gadjah Mada who has conducted research for post stroke rehabilitation robot in recent years. This study aims to identify the consumer’s relative importance of the  post-stroke rehabilitation robot that can be used for the next robot development. The method used in this study is Conjoint Analysis. This method has the advantage in analyzing trade-offs between attributes. From this research, we have known that the highest rank of the robot consumer needs are: can be attached to the patient's hand with ease, the ability to be used in both hands (right and left) and the movement of the robot which can be varied according to the needs of the patient.


2009 ◽  
pp. 2306-2322
Author(s):  
Rohit Prasad ◽  
Varadharajan Sridhar

With 225 million subscribers, India has the world’s third largest mobile subscriber base in the world. The Indian mobile industry is also one of the most competitive in the world with 4-7 operators in each service area. A large number of operators bring competition and its associated benefits such as decrease in price and hence corresponding growth of the market. On the other hand in the presence of economies of scale, too many operators may result in inefficient scales and high unit costs. This article analyses the trade-off between competition and economies of scale by estimating the production function for mobile subscribers and traffic carried. Analysis of panel data reveals the existence of economies of scale in the Indian mobile sector. We then derive an upper bound on the optimal number of operators in each license area and discuss policy implications.


Itinerario ◽  
1988 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 17-32
Author(s):  
Robert van Niel

On August 31, 1803, a group of seven men, comprising the Commission for East Indies Affairs (Commissie tot de Oost-Indische Zaken), submitted the final report of its deliberations to the Government of the State of the Batavian Republic (Staatsbewind der Bataafsche Republiek) in The Hague. This Commission had been called into existence in November 1802 to make recommendations on how best to administer and conduct trade with the nation's possessions in the East Indies in a fashion that would render the greatest advantage to the nation's finances and profit to its commerce. Only a couple of years earlier Holland's monopolistic United East Indies Company (VOC) had been terminated by the Republic, and its assets and liabilities assumed by the State. The liabilities were immediately identifiable, for they consisted of debts which had to be paid in hard cash. The assets, on the other hand, consisted of territories – most of which had fallen under English control – and factories that somehow had to be made profitable, but seemed, given the then-existing conditions in the world, to be almost out of reach. The Commission was supposed to make recommendations as to how the remaining, territories of the VOC should be managed and how the trade with the East Indies and Asia in general was to be made profitable. This was no small task, so it may appear somewhat wondrous that the Commission was able to complete its work in less than ten months. The dispatch with which the Commission's work was completed, however, is more understandable if it is realised that the financial collapse of the VOC had been openly recognised since 1786, and various proposals for either reform or total change of the Company's system had been presented and discussed. These alternative proposals were well known to the members of the Commission. Their work, therefore, involved striking a balance among these proposals rather than creating a system de novo.


2002 ◽  
Vol 20 (2) ◽  
pp. 147-164
Author(s):  
Roberta Gatti

Abstract This paper reviews the economic rationale for and against decentralization with particular attention to the organization and delivery of education. The paper frames the overview within the standard efficiency-equity trade off and highlights the increasingly important role of incentive mechanisms, accountability, and citizens' participation. The discussion then turns to the issues that are specific to decentralizing education, including the pros and cons of financing schools from local taxes, and a taxonomy and description of institutional arrangements around the world. A brief review of evaluation studies of decentralization reforms in education concludes the paper.


1991 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 471-485 ◽  
Author(s):  
John R. Anderson

AbstractCan the output of human cognition be predicted from the assumption that it is an optimal response to the information-processing demands of the environment? A methodology called rational analysis is described for deriving predictions about cognitive phenomena using optimization assumptions. The predictions flow from the statistical structure of the environment and not the assumed structure of the mind. Bayesian inference is used, assuming that people start with a weak prior model of the world which they integrate with experience to develop stronger models of specific aspects of the world. Cognitive performance maximizes the difference between the expected gain and cost of mental effort. (1) Memory performance can be predicted on the assumption that retrieval seeks a maximal trade-off between the probability of finding the relevant memories and the effort required to do so; in (2) categorization performance there is a similar trade-off between accuracy in predicting object features and the cost of hypothesis formation; in (3) casual inference the trade-off is between accuracy in predicting future events and the cost of hypothesis formation; and in (4) problem solving it is between the probability of achieving goals and the cost of both external and mental problem-solving search. The implemention of these rational prescriptions in neurally plausible architecture is also discussed.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
M Dubois ◽  
A Bowler ◽  
ME Moses-Payne ◽  
J Habicht ◽  
N Steinbeis ◽  
...  

AbstractDuring childhood and adolescence, exploring the unknown is important to build a better model of the world. This means that youths have to regularly solve the exploration-exploitation trade-off, a dilemma in which adults are known to deploy a mixture of computationally light and heavy exploration strategies. In this developmental study, we investigated how youths (aged 8 to 17) performed an exploration task that allows us to dissociate these different exploration strategies. Using computational modelling, we demonstrate that tabula-rasa exploration, a computationally light exploration heuristic, is used to a higher degree in children and younger adolescents compared to older adolescents. Additionally, we show that this tabula-rasa exploration is more extensively used by youths with high attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) traits. In the light of ongoing brain development, our findings show that children and younger adolescents use computationally less burdensome strategies, but that an excessive use thereof might be a risk for mental health conditions.


Author(s):  
Aldro Frigerio ◽  
Ciro De Florio

In this paper, we aim to examine the relationships between four solutions to the dilemma of divine foreknowledge and human freedom—theological determinism, Molinism, simple foreknowledge and open theism—and divine providence and theodicy. Some of these solutions—theological determinism and Molinism, in particular—highlight God’s government of the world.  Some others—simple foreknowledge and open theism—highlight human autonomy and freedom. In general, the more libertarian human freedom is highlighted, the less God’s government of the history of the world seems possible. However, the task of theodicy becomes easier because humans are fully responsible for the evil they do. Conversely, the more God’s government is highlighted, the more human freedom seems to be restricted. Moreover, God seems to be directly or indirectly responsible for evil in the world. Because of the trade–off between control and freedom, each solution finds itself at ease with some problems, while on other fronts, it must adopt a defensive position. As we will see, no solution can solve all problems; thus, the pros and cons of each solution should be weighed carefully.


2012 ◽  
pp. 454-457
Author(s):  
Carel N. Bezuidenhout ◽  
Samantha Moodley

Sugarcane is a high bulk perishable low value density product and its transport is, therefore, a challenge and amounts to one of the largest cost components within sugar industries worldwide. Grab-loaders are generally versatile, mobile and are used in many parts of the world. Ideally a sugarcane loading operation should be cheap, fast, accurate, safe, effective and environmentally friendly. However, many of these ideal conditions tend to trade-off against each other. The aim of this short communication was to collate a code of practise with respect to sugarcane grab-loader operations and to explore the trade-offs between the various practises. Thirty guidelines were collated and were brought in context with each other in a TRIZ-type cross reference matrix approach.


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