937 resultados para Household Wealth
Resumo:
To tackle global climate change, it is desirable to reduce CO2 emissions associated with household consumption in particular in developed countries, which tend to have much higher per capita household carbon footprints than less developed countries. Our results show that carbon intensity of different consumption categories in the U.S. varies significantly. The carbon footprint tends to increase with increasing income but at a decreasing rate due to additional income being spent on less carbon intensive consumption items. This general tendency is frequently compensated by higher frequency of international trips and higher housing related carbon emissions (larger houses and more space for consumption items). Our results also show that more than 30% of CO2 emissions associated with household consumption in the U.S. occur outside of the U.S. Given these facts, the design of carbon mitigation policies should take changing household consumption patterns and international trade into account.
Resumo:
Introdução: A Organização Mundial da Saúde indica que a prevalência do déficit de altura tem diminuído no planeta nas últimas décadas, pouco se sabe ainda sobre os fatores associados a este declínio ou sua associação com a desigualdade social. Objetivo: Descrever a evolução do déficit de altura e da desigualdade socioeconômica em diferentes regiões do mundo. Métodos: A pesquisa foi baseada em dados secundários provenientes do programa Demografic Health Surveys DHS de 6 sub-regiões do mundo representando 24 países em um total de 48 pesquisas na década de 90 e na primeira década do século 21 com 377.151 crianças menores de 5 anos. Foi considerada como variável de interesse o Déficit de altura para idade considerado como a ocorrência deste índice inferior a -2 escore Z da distribuição de referência WHO-2006. Foram imputados através de modelo de regressão os valores faltantes das variáveis água para beber, esgoto sanitário e escolaridade materna. Foi estimado o Índice de Concentração para as variáveis déficit de altura, educação materna deficiente, água para beber insegura, esgoto domiciliar deficiente e ocorrência de doenças, tendo como variável de ranqueamento o Índice de Riqueza. Dados do poder de paridade de compra fornecidos pelo Banco Mundial foram utilizados para verificar as diferenças na evolução da desnutrição. Resultados: Nessa análise acerca da evolução da desigualdade socioeconômica do déficit de altura para idade em países em desenvolvimento constatou-se que: a) a prevalência do déficit de altura para idade decresceu em 87 por cento dos países; b) apenas 8 países (33 por cento ) aumentaram a diferença entre prevalência do déficit de altura nos quintos extremos c) quatorze países (58 por cento ) evoluíram com diminuição do déficit de altura e aumento do índice de concentração; d) Dois países que diminuíram a o déficit de altura e a desigualdade tinham os menores valores de escolaridade materna deficiente; e) 13 países (93 por cento ) daqueles que diminuíram déficit mas aumentaram a desigualdade possuíam indicadores de vulnerabilidade infantil deficientes. Conclusões: Os países em desenvolvimento apresentam redução no déficit de altura em crianças menores de 5 anos. A diminuição da desigualdade na riqueza e na escolaridade materna deficiente explicaram maior parte da melhoria da desigualdade do déficit de altura para idade.
Resumo:
The Municipality of Anchorage (MOA) is required to better manage, operate and control municipal solid waste (MSW) after the Anchorage Assembly instituted a Zero Waste Policy. Two household curbside recycling programs (CRPs), pay-as-you-throw (PAYT) and single-stream, were compared and evaluated to determine an optimal municipal solid waste diversion method for households within the MOA. The analyses find: (1) a CRP must be designed from comprehensive analysis, models and data correlation that combine demographic and psychographic variables; and (2) CRPs can be easily adjusted towards community-specific goals using technology, such as Geographic Information System (GIS) and Radio Frequency Identification (RFID). Combining resources of policy-makers, businesses, and other viable actors are necessary components to produce a sustainable, economically viable curbside recycling program.
Resumo:
Decades of mixed messages from three federal agencies left many Americans unaware of the hazards associated with the indiscriminate disposal of unwanted or expired medicines. For this Capstone project, a systematic review of state and federal regulations was undertaken to determine how these laws obstruct household pharmaceutical waste collection. In addition, a survey of 654 Atlanta residents was conducted to evaluate unwanted medicine disposal habits, awareness of pharmaceutical compounds being detected in drinking water, surface, and ground waters, and willingness to participate in a household pharmaceutical waste collection program. Survey responses were tabulated to provide overall results and by age group, gender, and race. A household pharmaceutical waste collection plan was developed for the city and included as an appendix.
Resumo:
BACKGROUND: Household service work has been largely absent from occupational health studies. We examine the occupational hazards and health effects identified by immigrant women household service workers. METHODS: Exploratory, descriptive study of 46 documented and undocumented immigrant women in household services in Spain, using a phenomenological approach. Data were collected between September 2006 and May 2007 through focus groups and semi-structured individual interviews. Data were separated for analysis by documentation status and sorted using a mixed-generation process. In a second phase of analysis, data on psychosocial hazards were organized using the Copenhagen Psychosocial Questionnaire as a guide. RESULTS: Informants reported a number of environmental, ergonomic and psychosocial hazards and corresponding health effects. Psychosocial hazards were especially strongly present in data. Data on reported hazards were similar by documentation status and varied by several emerging categories: whether participants were primarily cleaners or carers and whether they lived in or outside of the homes of their employers. Documentation status was relevant in terms of empowerment and bargaining, but did not appear to influence work tasks or exposure to hazards directly. CONCLUSIONS: Female immigrant household service workers are exposed to a variety of health hazards that could be acted upon by improved legislation, enforcement, and preventive workplace measures, which are discussed.
Resumo:
Three-page handwritten essay in English by Buckminster with a story about a wealthy young Englishman named Francis who discovers that money is not the source of happiness. The essay is titled with a quote from Edward Young's poem, "The Complaint." Buckminster's essay begins, "Francis was the son of a rich English nobleman."
Resumo:
Sovereign wealth funds (SWFs), government-owned or managed investment vehicles, have proliferated at a remarkable rate over the past decade, even as political controversy has surrounded them. Why? The extant literature depicts the process of SWF creation as driven by functional imperatives associated with “excess” revenue and reserves accumulated from commodity booms and large current account surpluses. I argue that SWF creation also reflects in large part a process of contingent emulation in which first this policy has been constructed as appropriate for countries with given characteristics, and then when countries took on these characteristics, they followed their peers. Put simply, fashions and fads in finance matter for policy diffusion. I assess this argument using a new dataset on SWF creation that covers nearly 80 countries from 1984 to 2007. The results suggest peer-based contingent emulation has been a crucial factor shaping the decision of many countries to create a SWF, especially among fuel exporters. An earlier version of this paper was presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, Washington, DC, 2 – 5 September 2010. The author would like to thank Eric Neumayer for his many suggestions and comments on previous versions of the manuscript. The author would also like to thank Zachary Elkins for sharing data. Finally, the author would like to acknowledge the research assistance of Natali Bulamacioglu and Christopher Gandrud.