Fabrication of Branched PCL Nerve Guide Conduit with a Dual Structure Using Porous/Biodegradable PCL Filaments

2021 ◽  
Vol 45 (4) ◽  
pp. 205-210
Author(s):  
Yong Sang Cho
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Desmond Ng

While mainstream research has treated entrepreneurship as a highly individualised and agentic process, institutional researchers contend that entrepreneurship operates within a greater embedded setting. Various researchers have appealed to Giddens’ dual structure to explain an entrepreneur’s embedded-agency. According to Giddens’ dual structure, this embedded-agency consists of the rules or norms of a social group in which these rules constrain and enable an entrepreneur’s resources. Yet, despite Giddens’ contributions, Giddens is criticised for conflating the rules of this embedded setting with an entrepreneur’s resources in which neither affects the other in any significant way. By drawing on concepts of the Austrian entrepreneur and embeddedness, a theory of institutional entrepreneurship is developed to address this conflation problem. This institutional entrepreneurship offers an embedded-agency to explain how an entrepreneur can create, maintain and disrupt their embedded social settings. This embedded-agency addresses Giddens’ conflation problem and broadens the agent-centric focus of institutional entrepreneurship research.


Author(s):  
Timothy Jinam ◽  
Yosuke Kawai ◽  
Yoichiro Kamatani ◽  
Shunro Sonoda ◽  
Kanro Makisumi ◽  
...  

AbstractThe “Dual Structure” model on the formation of the modern Japanese population assumes that the indigenous hunter-gathering population (symbolized as Jomon people) admixed with rice-farming population (symbolized as Yayoi people) who migrated from the Asian continent after the Yayoi period started. The Jomon component remained high both in Ainu and Okinawa people who mainly reside in northern and southern Japan, respectively, while the Yayoi component is higher in the mainland Japanese (Yamato people). The model has been well supported by genetic data, but the Yamato population was mostly represented by people from Tokyo area. We generated new genome-wide SNP data using Japonica Array for 45 individuals in Izumo City of Shimane Prefecture and for 72 individuals in Makurazaki City of Kagoshima Prefecture in Southern Kyushu, and compared these data with those of other human populations in East Asia, including BioBank Japan data. Using principal component analysis, phylogenetic network, and f4 tests, we found that Izumo, Makurazaki, and Tohoku populations are slightly differentiated from Kanto (including Tokyo), Tokai, and Kinki regions. These results suggest the substructure within Mainland Japanese maybe caused by multiple migration events from the Asian continent following the Jomon period, and we propose a modified version of “Dual Structure” model called the “Inner-Dual Structure” model.


Author(s):  
Peipei Li ◽  
Yinglu Liu ◽  
Hailin Shi ◽  
Xiang Wu ◽  
Yibo Hu ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2016 ◽  
Vol 32 ◽  
pp. 187-194 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jianyu Yuan ◽  
Kunyuan Lu ◽  
Michael Ford ◽  
Guillermo C. Bazan ◽  
Wanli Ma

Hypatia ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 36 (4) ◽  
pp. 781-799
Author(s):  
Rita Laura Segato ◽  
Pedro Monque

AbstractThis essay collects four decades of my own reflections, as an anthropologist and feminist, on gender and coloniality across various contexts in Latin America. It also highlights the decolonial methodology and vocabulary that I have had to develop in my various roles as scholar, public intellectual, and expert witness over the years. Briefly, what I present here is a decolonial feminist perspective that argues for the existence of a patriarchal political order in communal societies before colonization. Yet, in my view, precolonial gender has a dual structure that is plural in essence and differs markedly from the binary gender structure of colonial-modern societies, which works in terms of a One and its marginalized others. As I argue, the capturing and transformation of precolonial dual gender structures by the modern gender system exacerbates inequality, increases violence against women, and disempowers them politically. For that reason, I speak of “low-intensity” and “high-intensity” patriarchal systems.


Author(s):  
André Parent ◽  
Lili-Naz Hazrati ◽  
Brigitte Lavoie
Keyword(s):  

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