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This title uses oral history methodology to record stories of
people who experienced the brunt of racist forced removals in the
city of Cape Town, South Africa. Through life stories and community
case studies, it traces the human impact of this disruptive, often
violent feature of apartheid's social engineering.
Until recently, development economists tended to assume a role
for private enterprise in reducing poverty, but they didn't
articulate it explicitly. The new institutional economics
literature, with its emphasis on transaction costs, addresses the
environment in which private businesses operate in various
countries - the "investment climate."
Building on this new thinking, Pathways Out of Poverty begins by
citing the worldwide drop in the number of very poor people and
goes on to identify the ways in which private firms and farms
contribute to economic mobility and poverty reduction and what
governments can do to enhance this contribution. In four Parts, the
editors and contributors address economic mobility, offer numerous
global examples, consider the importance of good investment
climates, and examine the impact of public policies and public
attitudes. Their theory, hard economic analysis, and case studies
provide rich and innovative mechanisms for reducing poverty in
developing and transition countries.
"This book provides an informative global perspective on soilless
culture systems (SCS) around the world...the book promises to bring
together the current best practice in SCS horticulture to create an
important industry reference for all participants." ISHS - Chronica
Horticulturae Soilless cultivation techniques (including hydroponic
systems) have attracted growing attention as a way of growing
horticultural crops more efficiently without taking up more land.
These controlled environment systems are also less vulnerable to
climate change and are particularly suited to urban farming as part
of the shift to more localised, circular food systems. Advances in
horticultural soilless culture provides a comprehensive assessment
of recent research in this important area, paying close attention
to the advances in optimising substrates for soilless cultivation,
as well as the developments in solid and liquid-medium container
systems, fertigation systems, modelling and process control. The
collection includes case studies on horticultural crops such as
tomatoes, strawberries and ornamentals. With its distinguished
editor and international range of expert authors, Advances in
horticultural soilless culture will be a standard reference for
university and other researchers involved in horticultural science,
hydroponics and soilless cultivation. It will also be a valuable
resource for government and other agencies supporting vertical and
urban farming systems, as well as companies involved in this
sector.
More than three billion people, nearly half of humankind, live on
less than two-and-a-half U.S. dollars per person per day. Studies
have shown repeatedly that the main and often the sole asset of the
poor is their labor. It follows that to understand global poverty
one must understand labor markets and labor earnings in the
developing world. Excellent books exist on ending world poverty
that discuss in depth many important aspects of economic
development but do not focus on employment and self-employment,
work and non-work. Working Hard, Working Poor fills in where the
other books leave off. Issues of analyzing poverty and low earnings
in the developing world are quite different from those in the
developed world. The discourse in the developed world is about
incentive effects of social welfare programs, cultures of poverty,
single-parenthood, homelessness, drug and alcohol abuse, ill
health, mental illness, domestic violence, and the like. But in the
developing world, different issues predominate, such as own-account
work and household enterprises, agricultural work, casual
employment, and informal work. And some of the policy
issues-stimulating economic growth, harnessing the energies of the
private sector, increasing paid employment, and raising the returns
to self-employment-take a different twist. This book shows how
people in poverty work, what has been effective in helping the poor
earn their way out of poverty, and how readers might help.
In this original and highly readable book, Peter S. Field explains
how Ralph Waldo Emerson became the first democratic intellectual in
American history. By focusing on his public career, Field contends
that Emerson was a democrat in two senses: he single-handedly
sought to create a vocation equal to his conviction that America
represented the democratic promise of the western world; and as
importantly, he acted the part of the democrat by attempting to
bring culture to all Americans. Utterly disaffected with the
self-satisfied Boston Brahmin establishment into which he had been
born, he set forth through the nation in order to assume the role
of conscience, critic, and gentle exhorter to the people. More poet
than philosopher, Emerson demands to be understood as a public
intellectual. Peter Field deftly portrays Emerson as he attempted
to create himself-as a unique, irenic prophet to the American
people.
This Element reviews the social psychology of effective collective
action, highlighting the importance of considering activists'
goals, timeframes, and psychological perspectives in seeking to
conceptualise this construct. A novel framework 'ABIASCA' maps
effectiveness in relation to activists' goals for mobilisation and
change (Awareness raising; Building sympathy; turning sympathy into
Intentions; turning intentions into Actions; Sustaining groups over
time; Coalition-building; and Avoiding opponents'
counter-mobilisation). We also review the DIME model of
Disidentification, Innovation, Moralization and Energization, which
examines the effects of failure in creating trajectories of
activists' disidentification from collective action; innovation
(including to radicalisation or deradicalisation); and increased
moral conviction and energy. The social psychological drivers of
effective collective action for four audiences are examined in
detail, in four sections: for the self and supporters, bystanders,
opponents, and for third parties. We conclude by highlighting an
agenda for future research, and drawing out key messages for
scholars.
How often do working-class children obtain college degrees and then
pursue professional careers? Conversely, how frequently do the
children of doctors and lawyers fail to enter high status careers
upon completion of their schooling? As inequalities of wealth and
income have increased in industrialized nations over the past 30
years, have patterns of between-generation mobility changed?
In this volume, leading sociologists and economists present
original findings and conceptual arguments in response to questions
like these. After assessing the range of mobility patterns observed
in recent decades, the volume considers the mechanisms that
generate mobility, focusing on both the training and skills that
are rewarded in the labor market as well as the role of educational
institutions in certifying graduates for professional positions.
The volume concludes with chapters that assess the contexts of
social mobility, examining the impact of macroeconomic conditions
and societal levels of inequality on social and economic mobility.
How often do working-class children obtain college degrees and then
pursue professional careers? Conversely, how frequently do the
children of doctors and lawyers fail to enter high status careers
upon completion of their schooling? As inequalities of wealth and
income have increased in industrialized nations over the past 30
years, have patterns of between-generation mobility changed? In
this volume, leading sociologists and economists present original
findings and conceptual arguments in response to questions like
these. After assessing the range of mobility patterns observed in
recent decades, the volume considers the mechanisms that generate
mobility, focusing on both the training and skills that are
rewarded in the labor market as well as the role of educational
institutions in certifying graduates for professional positions.
The volume concludes with chapters that assess the contexts of
social mobility, examining the impact of macroeconomic conditions
and societal levels of inequality on social and economic mobility.
This volume represents the formal presentations and discussions
which took place during a three-day meeting in March 1988 at The
University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston. It is"
dedicated to my friend of more than thirty years, Prof. Dr. Klaus
Joachim Ziilch, who died in Berlin on December 2. 1988 while this
volume was still in preparation. Klaus Zulch had devoted a
significant portion of his professional life to a better
understanding of central nervous tumors. Over the past two decades
he served as the Director of the Collaborating Center for CNS
Tumors, under the auspices of the World Health Organization (WHO),
and it was largely through his efforts that the work of the CelJ.
ter in developing criteria for a histologic classification of these
neoplasms was kept alive. Without his stimulus this Houston meeting
would probably not have taken place. In early 1987 he approached me
with the idea of convening, at an early date, a meeting in Houston
in collaboration with the Department of Neuro-Oncology of the
Cancer Center, of which I was then Chairman. The purpose of this
proposed meeting was to discuss recent research developments that
might have a profound influence on the classification of brain
tumors and ultimately necessitate revision of the "Blue Book" of
the WHO on Histological Typing 0/ Tumours 0/ the Central Nervous
System.
This text describes a system of reporting breast fine needle
aspiration biopsy that uses five clearly defined categories, each
described by a specific term and each with a specific risk of
malignancy. The five categories are insufficient/inadequate,
benign, atypical, suspicious of malignancy and malignant. Each
category has a risk of malignancy and is linked to management
recommendations, which include several options because it is
recognized that diagnostic infrastructure, such as the availability
of core needle biopsy and ultrasound guidance, vary between
developed and low and middle income countries. This text includes
key diagnostic cytological criteria for each of the many lesions
and tumors found in the breast. The cytopathology of specific
lesions is illustrated with high quality photomicrographs with
clear figure descriptions. Chapters also discuss current and
potential future ancillary tests, liquid based cytology, nipple
cytology and management. An additional chapter provides an overview
of an approach to the diagnosis of direct smears of breast fine
needle aspiration biopsies. The International Academy of Cytology
Yokohama System for Reporting Breast Fine Needle Aspiration Biopsy
Cytopathology provides a clear logical approach to the diagnosis
and categorization of breast lesions by FNAB cytology, and aims to
facilitate communication with breast clinicians, further research
into breast cytopathology and related molecular pathology, and
improve patient care.
Economists have traditionally concentrated on aggregate economic
growth to measure a country's development, but previously they have
also considered income distribution performance. In this book Gary
Fields reverses conventional approaches by using income
distribution as the primary indicator. He examines what is known
about the distribution of income and poverty, inequality, and
development. He explores the main causes of poverty and inequality
and the extent to which they have been reduced by individual
countries in the course of their economic growth. Recognizing that
conclusions vary with the type of income distribution measure used,
Fields proposes that changes in absolute poverty be adopted as the
primary index of a developing nation's progress and suggests that
the growth rate of the GNP and character of that growth be regarded
as the principal determinants of the levels of poverty and
inequality. This framework calls for new models new data. and new
microanalytic techniques in order to understand the results of
development efforts. Fields employs evidence from case studies of
six developing nations to suggest some explanations for differing
patterns of development and calls for development planning founded
on a firm commitment to helping the poor.
This is an open access title available under the terms of a CC
BY-NC-SA 3.0 IGO licence. It is free to read at Oxford Scholarship
Online and offered as a free PDF download from OUP and selected
open access locations. This book examines the links between
economic growth, changing employment conditions, and the reduction
of poverty in Latin America in the 2000s. Our analysis answers the
following broad questions: Has economic growth resulted in gains in
standards of living and reductions in poverty via improved labour
market conditions in Latin America in the 2000s, and have these
improvements halted or been reversed since the international crisis
of 2008? How do the rate and character of economic growth, changes
in the various employment and earnings indicators, and changes in
poverty and inequality indicators relate to each other? Our
contribution is an in-depth study of the multi-pronged
growth-employment-poverty nexus based on a large number of labour
market indicators (twelve employment and earnings indicators and
four poverty and inequality indicators) for a large number of Latin
American countries (sixteen of them). The book presents a positive
and hopeful set of findings for the period 2000 to 2012/13.
Economic growth took place and brought about improvements in almost
all labour market indicators and consequent reductions in poverty
rates. But not all improvements were equal in size or caused by the
same things. Some macroeconomic factors were associated with
changes in labour market conditions, some of them always in the
welfare-improving direction and some others always in the
welfare-reducing direction. Most countries in the region suffered a
deterioration in at least some labour market indicators as a
consequence of the international crisis of 2008, but the negative
effects were reversed very quickly in most countries.
This book uses oral history methodology to record stories of people
who experienced the brunt of racist forced removals in the city of
Cape Town, South Africa. Through life stories and community case
studies, it traces the human impact of this disruptive, often
violent feature of apartheid's social engineering.
This is an open access title available under the terms of a CC
BY-NC-SA 3.0 IGO licence. It is free to read at Oxford Scholarship
Online and offered as a free PDF download from OUP and selected
open access locations. Based on studies of a range of countries in
the Global South, this book examines heterogeneity within informal
work by applying a common conceptual framework and empirical
methodology. The country studies use panel data to study the
dynamics of worker transitions between formal and heterogeneous
informal work and present a comparative perspective across
developing countries in Asia, Latin America, Sub-Saharan Africa,
and North Africa and the Middle East. Each study provides a nuanced
view of informality, dividing workers into six work statuses:
formal wage-employees, upper-tier informal wage-employees,
lower-tier informal wage employees, formal self-employed, and
upper-tier informal self-employed. Based on this common conceptual
framework, the country studies examine the distribution of workers
across each of these work statuses, and document transition
patterns across different formality and work statuses. The panel
data analysed in each country study provide a basis for making
statements about labour market transitions that are not warranted
when using comparable cross-sections. The studies also examine the
individual- and household-level characteristics associated with
workers in each work status. Using these characteristics, each
study constructs a 'job ladder' that ranks each work status, and
then examines the characteristics of workers that are associated
with transitions up (and down) the job ladder.
Employment and Development brings together the contributions of
2014 IZA Prize in Labor Economics award winner Gary S. Fields to
address global employment and poverty problems. Most of the poor in
developing countries live in households in which people work, but
still they are poor because the best available work pays so little.
Employment and Development: How Work Can Lead From and Into Poverty
questions how economic growth affects standards of living, how
labor markets work in developing countries, and how different labor
market policies affect well-being. Through a collection of essays,
this book tackles major questions in development and labor
economics. Who benefits from economic growth and who is hurt by
economic decline? Why are distributional factors and labor market
conditions improving in some countries but not in others? How do
developing countries' labor markets work? How would labor market
conditions change if different policies were to be put into effect?
What are the welfare consequences of these changes? Through
distributional analysis, Fields examines inequality, poverty,
income mobility, and economic well-being, and through analysis of
changing labor market conditions he examines employment and
unemployment, employment composition, and labor earnings. By
concentrating on the poor and understanding how the labor markets
work for them and how their labor market earnings might be raised
in response to different policy interventions, Fields addresses
questions of first-order importance for human well-being.
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