947 resultados para regional security complex
Resumo:
The project involves rural/regional community pharmacists integrating care for complex needs patients and delivering a range of services, based on a care plan developed collaboratively with the GP and the consumer. The pharmacist will coordinate other services based on the multidisciplinary care plan. This research follows a successful pilot project and offers an opportunity to investigate new health service delivery in rural areas for patients at greater health related risk. Care integration will be compared to usual care, with outcomes relating to medication and health service usage, as well as clinical and quality of life outcomes being compared
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A research program on atmospheric boundary layer processes and local wind regimes in complex terrain was conducted in the vicinity of Lake Tekapo in the southern Alps of New Zealand, during two 1-month field campaigns in 1997 and 1999. The effects of the interaction of thermal and dynamic forcing were of specific interest, with a particular focus on the interaction of thermal forcing of differing scales. The rationale and objectives of the field and modeling program are described, along with the methodology used to achieve them. Specific research aims include improved knowledge of the role of surface forcing associated with varying energy balances across heterogeneous terrain, thermal influences on boundary layer and local wind development, and dynamic influences of the terrain through channeling effects. Data were collected using a network of surface meteorological and energy balance stations, radiosonde and pilot balloon soundings, tethered balloon and kite-based systems, sodar, and an instrumented light aircraft. These data are being used to investigate the energetics of surface heat fluxes, the effects of localized heating/cooling and advective processes on atmospheric boundary layer development, and dynamic channeling. A complementary program of numerical modeling includes application of the Regional Atmospheric Modeling System (RAMS) to case studies characterizing typical boundary layer structures and airflow patterns observed around Lake Tekapo. Some initial results derived from the special observation periods are used to illustrate progress made to date. In spite of the difficulties involved in obtaining good data and undertaking modeling experiments in such complex terrain, initial results show that surface thermal heterogeneity has a significant influence on local atmospheric structure and wind fields in the vicinity of the lake. This influence occurs particularly in the morning. However, dynamic channeling effects and the larger-scale thermal effect of the mountain region frequently override these more local features later in the day.
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Recent studies have revealed marked regional variation in pyramidal cell morphology in primate cortex. In particular, pyramidal cells in human and macaque prefrontal cortex (PFC) are considerably more spinous than those in other cortical regions. PFC pyramidal cells in the New World marmoset monkey, however, are less spinous than those in man and macaques. Taken together, these data suggest that the pyramidal cell has become more branched and more spinous during the evolution of PFC in only some primate lineages. This specialization may be of fundamental importance in determining the cognitive styles of the different species. However, these data are preliminary, with only one New World and two Old World species having been studied. Moreover, the marmoset data were obtained from different cases. In the present study we investigated PFC pyramidal cells in another New World monkey, the owl monkey, to extend the basis for comparison. As in the New World marmoset monkey, prefrontal pyramidal cells in owl monkeys have relatively few spines. These species differences appear to reflect variation in the extent to which PFC circuitry has become specialized during evolution. Highly complex pyramidal cells in PFC appear not to have been a feature of a common prosimian ancestor, but have evolved with the dramatic expansion of PFC in some anthropoid lineages.
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The idea of “human security” is gaining attention among policy-makers and security analysts. Little scholarly attention has been given to the questions of why states accept (or reject) a human security agenda or how such an agenda is incorporated into policy practices. The article suggests that a human security approach is most likely to be applied when both humanitarian and national interests combine. Yet when states or organisations adopt a human security approach, they often misjudge the complex and long-term commitment required of such an approach. There is also the potential for such an agenda to be manipulated to justify questionable courses of action. These issues frame an analysis of six recent case studies.
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Renewable based power generation has significantly increased over the last years. However, this process has evolved separately from electricity markets, leading to an inadequacy of the present market models to cope with huge quantities of renewable energy resources, and to take full advantage of the presently existing and the increasing envisaged renewable based and distributed energy resources. This paper proposes the modelling of electricity markets at several levels (continental, regional and micro), taking into account the specific characteristics of the players and resources involved in each level and ensuring that the proposed models accommodate adequate business models able to support the contribution of all the resources in the system, from the largest to the smaller ones. The proposed market models are integrated in MASCEM (Multi- Agent Simulator of Competitive Electricity Markets), using the multi agent approach advantages for overcoming the current inadequacy and significant limitations of the presently existing electricity market simulators to deal with the complex electricity market models that must be adopted.
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Thesis submitted to the Instituto Superior de Estatística e Gestão de Informação da Universidade Nova de Lisboa in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Information Management – Geographic Information Systems
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A producer of 5.4 M bbl/d, totalling almost half of the consumption of the entire European Union, the Gulf of Guinea is a fundamental lifeline and maritime link between Europe, the Americas and Africa. Geographically positioned as a staging post for transit originating in Latin America and coupled with its relatively porous borders, the region is also the perfect stepping stone for contraband heading to European shores. While blessed with an enviable wealth of marine and mineral resources, the region is also plagued by an ever-increasing spectre of maritime piracy; accounting for around 30% of incidents in African waters from 2003 to 2011. It is for these reasons that this research centres around the issues of maritime security in the Gulf of Guinea, with a particular focus on the first two decades of the 21st century. This research looks to examine the overall picture of the present state of play in the area, before going on to provide an analysis of potential regional developments in maritime security. This research begins with the analysis of concepts/phenomena that have played a notable role in the shaping of the field of maritime security, namely Globalisation and security issues in the post-Cold War era. The ensuing chapter then focuses in on the Gulf of Guinea and the issues dominating the field of maritime security in the region. The penultimate chapter presents a SWOT analysis, undertaken as part of this research with the aim of correlating opinions from a variety of sectors/professions regarding maritime security in the Gulf of Guinea. The final chapter builds upon the results obtained from the abovementioned SWOT analysis, presenting a series of potential proposals/strategies that can contribute to the field of maritime security in the region over the coming years. This research draws to a close with the presentation of conclusions taken from this particular investigation, as well as a final overview of the earlier presented proposals applicable to the field of maritime security during the second decade of the 21st century.
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Security risk management is by definition, a subjective and complex exercise and it takes time to perform properly. Human resources are fundamental assets for any organization, and as any other asset, they have inherent vulnerabilities that need to be handled, i.e. managed and assessed. However, the nature that characterize the human behavior and the organizational environment where they develop their work turn these task extremely difficult, hard to accomplish and prone to errors. Assuming security as a cost, organizations are usually focused on the efficiency of the security mechanisms implemented that enable them to protect against external attacks, disregarding the insider risks, which are much more difficult to assess. All these demands an interdisciplinary approach in order to combine technical solutions with psychology approaches in order to understand the organizational staff and detect any changes in their behaviors and characteristics. This paper intends to discuss some methodological challenges to evaluate the insider threats and its impacts, and integrate them in a security risk framework, that was defined according to the security standard ISO/IEC_JTC1, to support the security risk management process.
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Las reacciones bioquímicas que ocurren como consecuencia del tratamiento y almacenamiento de los alimentos, mejoran la seguridad alimentaria, las propiedades sensoriales y la vida útil. Sin embargo, el tratamiento térmico, la exposición a la luz y el oxígeno pueden causar daño oxidativo a los lípidos y proteínas. Los procesos oxidativos de matrices complejas tienen características distintivas que no se manifiestan cuando los componentes son sometidos a oxidación individualmente. La hipótesis de trabajo es que la oxidación de proteínas en matrices alimentarias complejas altera la estructura y las propiedades funcionales de las proteínas y, que las modificaciones que se producen varían según las condiciones de procesamiento y de la composición química del alimento. Nuestros estudios intentan demostrar que el estado oxidativo de las proteínas de un alimento es un parámetro importante para la evaluación de las propiedades funcionales, sensoriales y nutricionales de un producto lácteo. El objetivo general del proyecto es el estudio de los procesos de oxidación de matrices alimentarias complejas (la leche, miel) y su relación con distintos procesos y materiales utilizados en la industria. Es decir, nos proponemos estudiar las consecuencias funcionales y biológicas (calidad nutricional, coagulación) de la oxidación proteica en modelos experimentales “in vitro” y en productos comerciales. 1. Estudiar los fenómenos de peroxidación proteica en leche entera y descremada sometida a los distintos procesos tecnológicos de la producción de leche y queso a escala laboratorio. Se realizarán las mismas experiencias con albúmina sérica y con proteínas aisladas de suero de leche para comparar diferencias entre una matriz compleja y una simple. 2. Determinar la relación entre oxidación y composición proteica de la leche, y los cambios en las fracciones proteicas aisladas (caseínas y beta-lactoglobulina). 3. Analizar el impacto de los procesos tecnológicos a nivel de producción primaria (composición proteica y estado de oxidación) en los indicadores de inflamación (contenido de células somáticas y proteína C Reactiva) y de estado redox (capacidad antioxidante de los productos lácteos y nivel de carbonilos de proteinas). 4. Comparar las características de composición química y el estado de oxidación de leche provenientes de las tres regiones (Buenos Aires, Santa Fe y Córdoba) que conforman la cuenca láctea Argentina. Este objetivo se realizará conjuntamente con los integrantes de nuestro grupo de investigación que trabajan en el Laboratorio de Control de Calidad de la Escuela Superior de Lechería. 5. Determinar los metabolitos secundarios de mieles uniflorales propuestos como responsables de la capacidad antioxidante de estas (polifenoles) y como indicadores de su origen botánico. 6. Valorar la capacidad antioxidante total de mieles uniflorales. 7. Validar los métodos analíticos y semicuantitativos utilizados y a utilizar en el presente proyecto teniendo en cuenta lo efectos de matrices típico de los fluidos biológicos y las mezclas. El estudio de las modificaciones oxidativas de matrices complejas es un tema que es importante tanto desde el punto de vista del conocimiento básico como del aplicado. Nosotros creemos que el presente proyecto aportará conocimiento sobre las características de las vías oxidativas de proteínas en matrices complejas y que podrá ser utilizado para diseñar estrategias productivas tendientes a disminuir el deterioro de la calidad de la leche debido a la exposición a energía radiante. Parte de la experiencia ganada por el grupo ha sido ya volcada a subsanar dificultades y problemas de oxidación y deterioro de la calidad de alimentos. Además, se contribuirá a discernir la paradoja que existe en el área sobre las propiedades oxidantes/antioxidantes de los polifenoles y la relación entre estas y el estado oxidativo de un alimento. The biochemical reactions that occur as a result of food treatment and storage, improve food security, sensory properties and shelf life. Heat treatment, exposure to light and oxygen can cause oxidative damage to lipids and proteins. Oxidative processes in complex matrices display distinctive features that do not appear when the components are individually subjected to oxidation. The hypothesis is that protein oxidation in complex food matrices alters the structure and functional properties of proteins and that the modifications vary according to process conditions and food composition. The main goal is to study oxidation of complex food matrices (milk, honey) with different processes and materials used in the industry. The specific aims are: 1. To study protein oxidation in whole milk and skim subject to various technological processes. The same experiences will be done with serum albumin and isolated whey proteins to compare complex and simple matrices. 2. To determine the relationship between oxidation and milk protein composition, and changes in casein and beta-lactoglobulin. 3. Analyze the impact of technological processes at the level of primary production on markers of inflammation and redox (antioxidant capacity and protein carbonyls). 4. Compare characteristics of chemical composition and oxidation state of milk. 5. Determine secondary metabolites of honey responsible for the antioxidant capacity of these. 6. To evaluate the total antioxidant capacity unifloral honey. This project will provide knowledge about characteristics of oxidative pathways of proteins in complex matrices that can be used to design production strategies aimed at reduce the deterioration of milk quality. Also, it would help to discern the paradox that exists on the oxidants/antioxidants properties of polyphenols and the relationship between these and the oxidative status of a food.
Resumo:
As a consequence of the terrorist attacks of 9/11 and the US-led war against Iraq, WMD and their proliferation have become a central element of the EU security agenda. In December 2003, the European Council adopted even a EU Strategy against Proliferation of WMD. The approach adopted in this Strategy can be largely described as a ‘cooperative security provider’ approach and is based on effective multilateralism, the promotion of a stable international and regional environment and the cooperation with key partners. The principal objective of this paper is to examine in how far the EU has actually implemented the ‘cooperative security provider’ approach in the area which the Non-proliferation Strategy identifies as one of its priorities – the Mediterranean. Focusing on the concept of security interdependence, the paper analyses first the various WMD dangers with which the EU is confronted in the Mediterranean area. Afterwards, it examines how the EU has responded to these hazards in the framework of the Barcelona process and, in particular, the new European Neighbourhood Policy. It is argued that despite its relatively powerful rhetoric, the EU has largely failed, for a wide range of reasons, to apply effectively its non-proliferation approach in the Mediterranean area and, thus, to become a successful security provider.
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Åknes is an active complex large rockslide of approximately 30?40 Mm3 located within the Proterozoic gneisses of western Norway. The observed surface displacements indicate that this rockslide is divided into several blocks moving in different directions at velocities of between 3 and 10 cm year?1. Because of regional safety issues and economic interests this rockslide has been extensively monitored since 2004. The understanding of the deformation mechanism is crucial for the implementation of a viable monitoring system. Detailed field investigations and the analysis of a digital elevation model (DEM) indicate that the movements and the block geometry are controlled by the main schistosity (S1) in gneisses, folds, joints and regional faults. Such complex slope deformations use pre-existing structures, but also result in new failure surfaces and deformation zones, like preferential rupture in fold-hinge zones. Our interpretation provides a consistent conceptual three-dimensional (3D) model for the movements measured by various methods that is crucial for numerical stability modelling. In addition, this reinterpretation of the morphology confirms that in the past several rockslides occurred from the Åknes slope. They may be related to scars propagating along the vertical foliation in folds hinges. Finally, a model of the evolution of the Åknes slope is presented.
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Since the independence processes in the African continent, armed conflicts, peace and security have raised concern and attention both at the domestic level and at the international scale. In recent years, all aspects have undergone significant changes which have given rise to intense debate. The end of some historical conflicts has taken place in a context of slight decrease in the number of armed conflicts and the consolidation of post-conflict reconstruction processes. Moreover, African regional organizations have staged an increasingly more active internal shift in matters related to peace and security, encouraged by the idea of promoting “African solutions to African problems”. This new scenario, has been accompanied by new uncertainties at the security level and major challenges at the operational level, especially for the African Union. This article aims to ascertain the state of affairs on all these issues and raise some key questions to consider.
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The location and timing of domestication of the olive tree, a key crop in Early Mediterranean societies, remain hotly debated. Here, we unravel the history of wild olives (oleasters), and then infer the primary origins of the domesticated olive. Phylogeography and Bayesian molecular dating analyses based on plastid genome profiling of 1263 oleasters and 534 cultivated genotypes reveal three main lineages of pre-Quaternary origin. Regional hotspots of plastid diversity, species distribution modelling and macrofossils support the existence of three long-term refugia; namely the Near East (including Cyprus), the Aegean area and the Strait of Gibraltar. These ancestral wild gene pools have provided the essential foundations for cultivated olive breeding. Comparison of the geographical pattern of plastid diversity between wild and cultivated olives indicates the cradle of first domestication in the northern Levant followed by dispersals across the Mediterranean basin in parallel with the expansion of civilizations and human exchanges in this part of the world.
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Six hundred and ninety three male inmates from three penitentiaries, two (A and B) maximum-security systems and one (C) minimum-security facility, located in Campinas, State of São Paulo, Brazil were studied for the presence of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) antibodies, using a cross-sectional design. The search for anti-HIV antibodies in 693 samples of sera collected was carried out by two serological tests: (a) the Microparticle enzyme immunoassay-HIV-1 and HIV-2 (MEIA) (Abbott Laboratories) and (b) the Western Blot-HIV-1 (WB) (Cambridge Biotech Corporation) to confirm positive results with MEIA. Sera reactivity for HIV antibodies was 14.4%. The highest frequency of anti-HIV antibodies was found in the A and B maximum-security prisons: 17% and 21.5%, respectively. In prison C, the frequency of reagents was 10.9%. Seventy three inmates, initially negative in the MEIA test, were checked again five and seven months later. Three of them, all from the maximum-security facilities, became reactive in the MEIA test, with confirmation in the WB, suggesting that serological conversion had occurred after imprisonment.