1000 resultados para Europe -- Langues
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A charophyte succession has been established in nineteen sections and eight isolated outcrops from the Ebro Basin, ranging from the Priabonian ro the Aquitanian. Most assemblages were recovered fmm continuous sections and their abundance and diversity allow to define a new zonal scheme for the Upper Eocene-Lower Miocene of Europe. The new zonation includes nine subdivisions, based on the distribution of thirty-two species and directly correlated with the mammal standard levels. Changes in diversity, occurring mainly in the Middle and Upper Oligocene, have been related to climatíc variations. A new species, Chara sp. A. is also described and figured.
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The Prostate Cancer Programme of the European School of Oncology developed the concept of specialised interdisciplinary and multiprofessional prostate cancer care to be formalized in Prostate Cancer Units (PCU). After the publication in 2011 of the collaborative article "The Requirements of a Specialist Prostate Cancer Unit: A Discussion Paper from the European School of Oncology", in 2012 the PCU Initiative in Europe was launched. A multiprofessional Task Force of internationally recognized opinion leaders, among whom representatives of scientific societies, and patient advocates gathered to set standards for quality comprehensive prostate cancer care and designate care pathways in PCUs. The result was a consensus on 40 mandatory and recommended standards and items, covering several macro-areas, from general requirements to personnel to organization and case management. This position paper describes the relevant, feasible and applicable core criteria for defining PCUs in most European countries delivered by PCU Initiative in Europe Task Force.
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Actes de Géoforum 2004 (Poitiers) : "Les migrations internationales : connaitre et comprendre".
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Dans un monde toujours plus globalisé depuis le milieu du XXcmc siècle, le couple linguistiquement mixte est une constellation conjugale de plus en plus fréquente en Suisse comme ailleurs. Le choix du lieu de la vie commune implique souvent la migration de l'un des partenaires vers le pays de l'autre, et donc parfois vers une nouvelle langue - en l'occurrence ici le français - qu'il s'agit de s'approprier. Cette thèse se penche donc sur les liens entre ce contexte a priori positif que représente le couple, et l'appropriation langagière du/de la partenaire alloglotte. De par sa base affective, mais surtout de par le fait que la personne migrante peut compter sur quelqu'un qui est prêt et disposé à l'aider, notamment parce que la migration a été décidée dans le cadre d'un projet commun, le couple favorise la socialisation et donc le contact de la personne nouvellement arrivée avec différentes (variétés de) langues qu'elle s'approprie progressivement : contrairement à beaucoup de migrant-e-s venu-e-s seul-e-s dans un nouveau pays, le/la partenaire alloglotte de ces couples se voit souvent pourvu-e d'une famille (belle-famille et enfants), d'un réseau social (ami-e-s du partenaire francophone), et d'une médiation culturelle et linguistique utile pour accéder notamment au marché de l'emploi, mais également pour comprendre les différents enjeux sociaux dans lesquels elle se voit plongée. Cette médiation affective, linguistique et socio-culturelle proposée par le couple lui permet d'identifier plus aisément des solutions utiles pour dépasser certaines barrières sociales, économiques, administratives, linguistiques et/ou culturelles. Pour autant, le/la partenaire alloglotte du couple linguistiquement mixte est avant tout un acteur social à part entière, qui vit aussi hors du couple et s'aménage - sans doute plus vite, plus facilement et plus naturellement que d'autres migrant-e-s - ses propres modalités de socialisation, en fonction de son vécu et de ses projections pour le futur. Dans une perspective fondamentalement socioconstructiviste du développement humain, l'appropriation langagière est donc ici considérée comme la construction par la personne d'une capacité à agir dans l'espace social et dans la langue. Si l'appropriation a lieu dans et par l'interaction, il s'agit d'investiguer à la fois certains des enjeux de pouvoir dans lesquels s'inscrit cette interaction, et le sens que la personne donne à ces enjeux en fonction de sa subjectivité propre. Le cadre épistémologique de ce travail convoque ainsi des outils issus de la sociologie bourdieusienne et foucaldienne, de la sociolinguistique critique, de la psychologie sociale et de la psycho-sociolinguistique afin d'explorer certaines des limites sociales et psycho-affectives qui influencent les modalités de l'appropriation langagière de la personne alloglotte. La méthode adoptée pour explorer ces deux types de limites s'inscrit dans la tradition de la recherche sur les récits de vie, tout en s'en distanciant sur deux points. D'une part, si le récit de vie considère la personne qui se raconte comme narratrice de sa propre vie, l'autobiographie langagière réflexive met l'accent sur une démarche potentiellement formatrice lui permettant de « penser » sa trajectoire de vie en lien avec son appropriation langagière. D'autre part, les analyses menées sur ces textes écrits et oraux sont tout à la fois thématiques et discursives, puisque la manière dont les événements sont racontés permet de retracer les enjeux souvent ambivalents, parfois contradictoires, qui influencent le sens que la personne donne à son parcours avec le français et la construction de son sentiment de légitimité ou d'illégitimité à vivre en Suisse et en français. En dernière instance, cette thèse défétichise le couple, considéré comme la rencontre de deux subjectivités autour d'un projet de « vivre ensemble », plus que comme un lien romantique et amoureux. Elle défétichise la langue, comprise comme un répertoire langagier forcément plurilingue et hétéroglossique. Elle défétichise l'appropriation langagière, qui apparaît comme un effet collatéral et contextuel de la vie en couple et en société. Elle défétichise enfin le récit de soi, en le poussant vers la réflexion d'un soi ancré dans le social. Si les partenaires des huit couples interrogés ont une voix forte dans l'entier de ce texte, c'est qu'ils et elles existent comme personnes, indépendamment du couple, de la langue, de l'appropriation langagière et de la démarche autobiographique réflexive qui les font se rejoindre dans le contexte particulier de cette recherche mais qui ne constituent que certains de leurs positionnements identitaires et sociaux.
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The short version of the Oxford-Liverpool Inventory of Feelings and Experiences (sO-LIFE) is a widely used measure assessing schizotypy. There is limited information, however, on how sO-LIFE scores compare across different countries. The main goal of the present study is to test the measurement invariance of the sO-LIFE scores in a large sample of non-clinical adolescents and young adults from four European countries (UK, Switzerland, Italy, and Spain). The scores were obtained from validated versions of the sO-LIFE in their respective languages. The sample comprised 4190 participants (M = 20.87 years; SD = 3.71 years). The study of the internal structure, using confirmatory factor analysis, revealed that both three (i.e., positive schizotypy, cognitive disorganisation, and introvertive anhedonia) and four-factor (i.e., positive schizotypy, cognitive disorganisation, introvertive anhedonia, and impulsive nonconformity) models fitted the data moderately well. Multi-group confirmatory factor analysis showed that the three-factor model had partial strong measurement invariance across countries. Eight items were non-invariant across samples. Significant statistical differences in the mean scores of the s-OLIFE were found by country. Reliability scores, estimated with Ordinal alpha ranged from 0.75 to 0.87. Using the Item Response Theory framework, the sO-LIFE provides more accuracy information at the medium and high end of the latent trait. The current results show further evidence in support of the psychometric proprieties of the sO-LIFE, provide new information about the cross-cultural equivalence of schizotypy and support the use of this measure to screen for psychotic-like features and liability to psychosis in general population samples from different European countries.
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En prenant pour objet la migration des médecins d'Afrique vers trois pays d'Europe (Royaume-Uni, France, Suisse), cet article vise à dépasser une approche s'intéressant de manière exclusive aux facteurs de la décision de migrer. Il prend en considération l'ensemble de la carrière du migrant et notamment les modes d'insertion professionnelle dans le pays d'installation. Ce faisant, l'article vise à appréhender ce qu'il y a de commun dans les motifs du choix de partir et ce qu'il y a de profondément différent dans les situations d'arrivée. L'analyse des contextes nationaux étudiés met en évidence l'importance considérable de l'héritage politico-institutionnel du pays d'arrivée quant à la possibilité d'exercer une carrière médicale.
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The pumpkinseed Lepomis gibbosus, an omnivorous, nest guarding North American sunfish, was introduced into European waters about 100 years ago. To assess growth performance following introduction, we reviewed the available data for North American and European populations of pumpkinseed and compared the back-calculated age-specific growth for juveniles (standard length, SL, at age two) and adults (age two to five increment) as well as adult body size (SL at age five), von Bertalanffy growth model parameters and the index of growth (in length) performance (φ′). For continental comparisons of growth trajectory, mean growth curves for North American and Europe were calculated with the von Bertalanffy model using pooled data sets for each continent. Juvenile growth rate did not differ between European and North American pumpkinseed, but mean adult body size and adult growth rate were both significantly greater in North American than European populations. Adult body size decreased with increasing latitude (ANOVA) in North American populations, but this was not observed with adult growth rate. In contrast, adult body size tended to increase with latitude in European populations. Adult body size correlated significantly with φ′. The von Bertalanffy model described the overall growth patterns of North American and European populations reasonably well, but on the individual population level, length asymptotes were unrealistic (estimates that were > 20 % of the mean back-calculated size for the oldest age class) for a third of European populations and 80% of the North American populations. In contrast to North American pumpkinseed populations, somatic growth in European populations appears to be compromised by limited, but adequate, food resources, probably due to strong intraspecific interactions. This appears to be especially acute in adults, having potential ramifications for life span and reproductive allocation
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This thesis consists of four articles and an introductory section. The main research questions in all the articles are about proportionality and party success in Europe, at European, national or district levels. Proportionality in this thesis denotes the proximity of seat shares parties receive compared to their respective vote shares, after the electoral system’s allocation process. This proportionality can be measured through numerous indices that illustrate either the overall proportionality of an electoral system or a particular election. The correspondence of a single party’s seat shares to its vote shares can also be measured. The overall proportionality is essential in three of the articles (1, 2 and 4), where the system’s performance is studied by means of plots. In article 3, minority party success is measured by advantage-ratios that reveal single party’s winnings or losses in the votes to seat allocation process. The first article asks how proportional are the European parliamentary (EP) electoral systems, how do they compare with results gained from earlier studies and how do the EP electoral systems treat different sized parties. The reasons for different outcomes are looked for in explanations given by traditional electoral studies i.e. electoral system variables. The countries studied (EU15) apply electoral systems that vary in many important aspects, even though a certain amount of uniformity has been aspired to for decades. Since the electoral systems of the EP elections closely resemble the national elections, the same kinds of profiles emerge as in the national elections. The electoral systems indeed treat the parties differentially and six different profile types can be found. The counting method seems to somewhat determine the profile group, but the strongest variables determining the shape of a countries’ profile appears to be the average district magnitude and number of seats allocated to each country. The second article also focuses on overall proportionality performance of an electoral system, but here the focus is on the impact of electoral system changes. I have developed a new method of visualizing some previously used indices and some new indices for this purpose. The aim is to draw a comparable picture of these electoral systems’ changes and their effects. The cases, which illustrate this method, are four elections systems, where a change has occurred in one of the system variables, while the rest remained unchanged. The studied cases include the French, Greek and British European parliamentary systems and the Swedish national parliamentary system. The changed variables are electoral type (plurality changed to PR in the UK), magnitude (France splitting the nationwide district into eight smaller districts), legal threshold (Greece introducing a three percent threshold) and counting method (d’Hondt was changed to modified Sainte-Laguë in Sweden). The radar plots from elections after and before the changes are drawn for all country cases. When quantifying the change, the change in the plots area that is created has also been calculated. Using these radar plots we can observe that the change in electoral system type, magnitude, and also to some extent legal threshold had an effect on overall proportionality and accessibility for small parties, while the change between the two highest averages counting method had none. The third article studies the success minority parties have had in nine electoral systems in European heterogeneous countries. This article aims to add more motivation as to why we should care how different sized parties are treated by the electoral systems. Since many of the parties that aspire to represent minorities in European countries are small, the possibilities for small parties are highlighted. The theory of consociational (or power-sharing) democracy suggests that, in heterogeneous societies, a proportional electoral system will provide the fairest treatment of minority parties. The OSCE Lund Recommendations propose a number of electoral system features, which would improve minority representation. In this article some party variables, namely the unity of the minority parties and the geographical concentration of the minorities were included among possible explanations. The conclusions are that the central points affecting minority success were indeed these non-electoral system variables rather than the electoral system itself. Moreover, the size of the party was a major factor governing success in all the systems investigated; large parties benefited in all the studied electoral systems. In the fourth article the proportionality profiles are again applied, but this time to district level results in Finnish parliamentary elections. The level of proportionality distortion is also studied by way of indices. The average magnitudes during the studied periodrange from 7.5 to 26.2 in the Finnish electoral districts and this opens up unequal opportunities for parties in different districts and affects the shape of the profiles. The intra-country case allows the focus to be placed on the effect of district magnitude, since all other electoral systems are kept constant in an intra-country study. The time span in the study is from 1962 to 2007, i.e. the time that the districts have largely been the same geographically. The plots and indices tell the same story, district magnitude and electoral alliances matter. The district magnitude is connected to the overall proportionality of the electoral districts according to both indices, and the profiles are, as expected, also closer to perfect proportionality in large districts. Alliances have helped some small parties to gain a much higher seat share than their respective vote share and these successes affect some of the profiles. The profiles also show a consistent pattern of benefits for the small parties who ally with the larger parties.