scholarly journals For Whom Does the Clock Tick?: Male Repro-Temporality in Fertility Campaigns, Scientific Literature, and Commercial Accounts

2021 ◽  
Vol 42 (1) ◽  
pp. 81-96
Author(s):  
Charlotte Kroløkke

Sperm swimming in circles or a lone sperm cell with two heads: male reproductive aging is increasingly equated with poor sperm quality, the prevalence of offspring learning disabilities even schizophrenia. To discuss the construction of a male biological clock, this article asks: how does the biological clock intervene in men’s reproductive bodies. And secondly: how is male repro-temporality visually and rhetorically invoked in fertility campaigns, in medical scientific accounts and in the marketing material of one elective sperm-freezing company? Situated within an interdisciplinary theoretical framework, the article draws upon biomedicalization theory (e.g. Clarke et al. 2003), reproductive masculinity studies (e.g. Daniels 2006; Almeling and Waggoner 2013), and social scientific theorizing of time and temporality (e.g. Amir 2006; van de Wiel 2014a; 2014b) to discuss the emergence of male repro-temporality. This article contributes to the interdisciplinary scholarly agenda on time and temporality by theorizing the emergence of a male biological clock as a type of repro-temporality that, in its discursive and aesthetic framing, portrays male reproductive aging as involving loss and disability. The article concludes that while the biological clock derives its temporal force from the logic of decay, it simultaneously cements heteronormative ideals of the nuclear family, re-naturalizes the genetic unit, and situates men as proactive and modern in their anticipation of future infertility.

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liam Swiss

This article highlights an emerging research agenda for the study of foreign aid through a World Society theory lens. First, it briefly summarizes the social scientific literature on aid and sociologists' earlier contributions to this research. Next, it reviews the contours of world society research and the place of aid within this body of literature. Finally, it outlines three emergent threads of research on foreign aid that comprise a new research agenda for the sociology of foreign aid and its role in world society globalization.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
pp. 01-02
Author(s):  
Carlos Teixeira Brandt ◽  
Camilla Ribeiro Lima de Farias ◽  
Kalyanne Mayara Luna Alves

Sexual functioning is an important, yet often overlooked, aspect of life quality for many individuals with obesity, especially regarding to man. Fertility and sperm quality are even less explored in the scientific literature. To the best of our knowledge, there is no report of man being a father after bariatric surgery. Here, we report a four men recruited from a prospective cohort of individuals, from both gender, who underwent bariatric surgery in the past three years. The total sample was 192 (146 women – 76.0% and 46 men – 24.0%). From the 46 men, 4 (8.7%) became father of six normal offspring. The ages of the men were respectively: 34; 38; 41; and 43 years of age. These patients were married. The post bariatric surgery pregnancies, from the samespouses before surgical procedures, were without any abnormalities and the newborns presented no congenital anomalies. These individuals referred increased sexual desire after surgery and improvement of erectile function. This case seriesreported highlights the contribution of bariatric surgery in the sexuality, fertility and fatherhood of obese man.


2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (8) ◽  
pp. 2781 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patricia Peris-Frau ◽  
Ana Josefa Soler ◽  
María Iniesta-Cuerda ◽  
Alicia Martín-Maestro ◽  
Irene Sánchez-Ajofrín ◽  
...  

Sperm cryopreservation represents a powerful tool for livestock breeding. Several efforts have been made to improve the efficiency of sperm cryopreservation in different ruminant species. However, a significant amount of sperm still suffers considerable cryodamage, which may affect sperm quality and fertility. Recently, the use of different “omics” technologies in sperm cryobiology, especially proteomics studies, has led to a better understanding of the molecular modifications induced by sperm cryopreservation, facilitating the identification of different freezability biomarkers and certain proteins that can be added before cryopreservation to enhance sperm cryosurvival. This review provides an updated overview of the molecular mechanisms involved in sperm cryodamage, which are in part responsible for the structural, functional and fertility changes observed in frozen–thawed ruminant sperm. Moreover, the molecular basis of those factors that can affect the sperm freezing resilience of different ruminant species is also discussed as well as the molecular aspects of those novel strategies that have been developed to reduce sperm cryodamage, including new cryoprotectants, antioxidants, proteins, nanoparticles and vitrification.


Author(s):  
Walter DeKeseredy

There is a small, but growing, social scientific literature on the racist and violent nature of contemporary adult pornography. However, considerably more empirical and theoretical work needs to be done to advance a critical criminological understanding of how such hurtful sexual media contribute to various forms of woman abuse in intimate relationships. The main objective of this article is to briefly review the relevant literature and to suggest a few new progressive empirical and theoretical directions.


2017 ◽  
Vol 66 (2) ◽  
pp. 376-391 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Alan Sparling

The study of political corruption has been beset by disagreements concerning the exact definition of the term. One definition that has grown increasingly popular in the social-scientific literature in recent years is that proposed by Oskar Kurer and developed by Bo Rothstein: political corruption should be understood as a breach of the norm of impartiality. This article argues that while this definition has intuitive plausibility and while its relative parsimony makes it attractive for cross-cultural social-scientific research, it suffers from a number of the ills attending all attempts to depoliticize inherently political concepts. Not only is the definition insufficient to capture numerous instances of the abuse of the public office for private gain, but it is dangerous insofar as it papers over fundamental disagreements about the nature of the good regime. To insist upon this parsimonious definition of corruption is to foreclose a number of essential questions of political philosophy.


Author(s):  
Jason Brennan

This chapter examines some relevant social-scientific literature that suggests that voters and citizens are often ignorant, irrational, and systematically in error in their political beliefs. Though voters tend to vote for what they believe serves the nation's interests, this does not imply that they are justified in these beliefs or that their beliefs are true. Voters intend to promote the national interest, but that does not imply that they in fact do so. Good intentions are not enough to make good policy. Voters might not know what they are doing. It may turn out that some or many of them are mistaken about what promotes the national interest. If so, then their altruistic intentions do not benefit anyone.


2021 ◽  
Vol 36 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
A Bañuelo. Linares ◽  
K Berrisford ◽  
L Kellam ◽  
A Campbell

Abstract Study question Are there any advantages in using High security tubes rather than High Security straws for conventional slow sperm freezing? Summary answer Freezing sperm in High Security tubes (HST) improved post-thaw recovery rate and motility, and also reduced processing and handling compared to High Security straws (HSS). What is known already The use of High Security freezing consumables (HSFC) in an IVF setting is a safe and effective way of eliminating concerns related to viral cross-contamination during storage. The lower diameter of HSS does make them susceptible to warming during handling. The HSFC used in this study is the only CE marked products that are made of resin, leak-proof and shatter-proof in all cryogenic temperatures even in LN2. No previous studies have compared the use of HST with HSS for conventional human sperm freezing. This study sets out to investigate the performance of HST compared to HSS. Study design, size, duration The study was designed as a controlled split-sample study with blind post-thaw analysis. Following the routine WHO analysis of 20 semen samples, the remainder of each of the samples was evenly divided and cryopreserved by conventional slow freezing in each of the two different HSFC. The freeze was conducted simultaneously by the same practitioner, employing the same freezing protocol and cryoprotectant. The pre-freeze and post-thaw concentration, total and progressive sperm motility were recorded. Participants/materials, setting, methods At one IVF clinic, semen samples with sperm density ≥15million/ml, ≥40% motility, ≥1.5ml were included. Cryoprotectant (SpermFreeze, Fertipro) was added dropwise to unprepared semen and kept at room temperature for 10 minutes before loading into HSFC (0.5ml CBS™HSS; CBS™HST). HSFC were heat-sealed (SYMS; SYMSIII sealers) and placed in vapour for 30 minutes before plunging into LN2. Samples were thawed by immersion in a 37Cº water bath for 5 minutes and analysed using WHO methods. Main results and the role of chance Paired-t test was used to compare the percentage motility between the different HSFC. All analysis was considered statistically significant when p < 0.01. We demonstrated that the sperm recovery rate (Percentage total motility post-thaw/ Percentage total motility pre-freeze) in HST was 66.63 ± 14.94 (mean ± standard deviation) compared to 40.80 ± 14.69 in HSS. In the HSS, the percentage post-thaw total motility was 19.99 ± 7.21 and the percentage post-thaw progressive motility was 12.26 ± 2.59. In the HST, the percentage post-thaw total motility was 32.57 ± 8.33 and the percentage post-thaw progressive motility was 23.08 ± 5.53. The overall improvement when using HST against HSS was 12.53 ± 5.69, 10.44 ± 5.29 for the total motility and the progressive motility respectively. Comments were recorded regarding the handling and the condition of the HSS and HST for each freeze event. Neither device displayed any leakage of LN2 or any explosion during the warming. The freezing process was easier and faster using HST rather than HSS. It was also noted that the entire sample can be recovered from the HST, unlike the HSS. Limitations, reasons for caution The study looked at sperm recovery in terms of motility only. DNA damage was not considered as a parameter of sperm quality. Also, fertilization, pregnancy rates, live birth rates and the use of poorer quality sperm samples have not been investigated. Wider implications of the findings: For conventional sperm freezing, the use of HST resulted in improved sperm motility and progression post-thaw, when compared to HSS. This finding supports the use of HST to improve the post thaw quality of sperm, benefitting patients with own frozen samples, recipients of donor sperm and donor sperm banks. Trial registration number Not applicable.


2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 75-80 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin Zaghi ◽  
Shimi Barda ◽  
Sandra Edith Kleiman ◽  
Ron Hauser
Keyword(s):  

2019 ◽  
Vol 49 (3) ◽  
pp. 210-231
Author(s):  
María Jiménez-Buedo ◽  
Juan Carlos Squitieri

The idea that mechanisms are crucially important to differentiate between genuine and spurious causal relations is ubiquitous both in the philosophical and in the social scientific literature. Yet philosophers of the social sciences have seldom attempted to spell out systematically the way in which mechanistic reasoning or evidence are concretely used to deal with spurious association and the problem of confounders in the social sciences. In this paper, we analyze two recent such accounts, proposed by Harold Kincaid and Daniel Steel. We show how these two accounts radically differ in their notion of mechanism (a process account, and a complex system account, respectively), and how this ultimately impacts in the way in which they understand the inferential role of mechanisms in the social sciences. We then confront both accounts with the details of a well-known controversy around the purportedly causal association between the legalization of abortion and the subsequent fall in criminality in the United States. We show the limitations of both accounts in representing accurately the role of mechanistic evidence and hypotheses in practice.


2003 ◽  
Vol 27 (2) ◽  
pp. 165-196
Author(s):  
Patrick Hossay

The author provides a critical response to the social scientific literature that cast political interest and cleavages as the projection of sociocultural dynamics onto the political scene. Sociopolitical cleavages in general, and nationalism in particular, are thus viewed as having taken form outside the partisan arena, and only subsequent to their societal formation do they take on political importance. Through a comparison of the development of political nationalism in interwar Scotland and Flanders, the author argues for the importance of political forces in defining and shaping the political and social meaning and significance of nationalism. In Scotland, despite the potential popular appeal of nationalism, it does not emerge as a significant and autonomous political cleavage, principally due to configurations of partisan programs and alliances, and a politically unfavorable “demographic geometry.” In Flanders, on the other hand, markedly different political conditions fostered the development and societal significance of nationalism. Hence, political nationalism did not emerge as a necessary concomitant to societal and cultural change; it was in part the result of political conditions and institutions that could foster or constrain the sociopolitical significance and meaning of nationalism.


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