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Child protective services: a guide for workers
In: DHHS publication
In: (OHDS) 79-30203
In: Child abuse and neglect user manual series
Enfranchising the water consumer: lessons from England/Wales and Ireland
In: Water and environment journal, Volume 25, Issue 3, p. 441-443
ISSN: 1747-6593
The impact of politics on the application of the Drinking Water Directive (80/778/EEC)
In: Water and Environment Journal, Volume 24, Issue 3, p. 228-236
Problem based learning in practice: understanding human water needs
In: Planet, Volume 16, Issue 1, p. 32-35
ISSN: 1758-3608
The Appearance of Equality: Racial Gerrymandering, Redistricting, and the Supreme Court
In: Journal of government information: JGI ; an international review of policy, issues and resources, Volume 27, Issue 5, p. 661-662
ISSN: 1352-0237
Water use attitudes in the UK pharmaceutical industry
In: Water and environment journal, Volume 27, Issue 4, p. 575-580
ISSN: 1747-6593
AbstractThis paper presents the findings of a small‐scale pilot study that sought to identify and explore attitudes toward water use in the pharmaceutical industry based in the United Kingdom. As a result of a series of in‐depth semi‐structured interviews, it is established that because water use is viewed as a comparatively inexpensive resource, this undermines investment in water efficient technologies. However, the study also reveals such attitudes to sit alongside largely positive attitudes toward the need for increased water efficiency on a global organisational level. The paper concludes by arguing that greater attention should be accorded to the geographical location in which views toward water use are ascertained. In particular, it is highlighted that the geographical location of individuals, and organisations, can affect views toward water use. These differences are then argued to have the potential to undermine global initiatives on water use because individuals and organisations, in particular locations, may not see water use as an issue worthy of a response.
Improving health and safety on construction in Romania. A comparison with Ireland; lessons to be learned
The purpose of health and safety procedures in the construction industry is to ensure the health, safety and wellbeing of workers. Due to high accident rates on construction sites internationally, health and safety legislation has focused on minimizing accident causation and promoting construction worker's safety. However, little attempts has been made to research the effects of those health and safety interventions on the safety behavior on construction sites in Romania. Therefore, the objective of this research was to explore the health and safety improvements on construction sites in Ireland and compare these with the current state-of-play of the construction sector in Romania. Based on the findings in Ireland, an opportunity exists to improve Health and Safety performance on construction sites in Romania. The main findings demonstrate that the safety can be improved through the introduction of safe working systems, enhanced regulation and enforcement, the role of the management and increased staff awareness and training.
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President Truman Speaks: A Study of who Believes What
In: Journalism quarterly, Volume 28, Issue 1, p. 39-48
Further findings in an analysis of reactions to the President's "Twin Cities" speech challenge the notion that audiences will be more likely to accept an objective news story than the opinion-loaded sentences of an editorial. The authors are all members of the faculty at the University of Minnesota.
President Truman Speaks: A Study of Ideas vs. Media
In: Journalism quarterly, Volume 27, Issue 3, p. 251-262
The way in which each individual related ideas to his own needs and values had more effect upon recall, in this instance, than repetition of a theme by either speaker or media. Dr. Swanson is director of the Research Division, School of Journalism, University of Minnesota, where Jones is a staff member. Jones is also on the staff in Psychology, as is Jenkins.
Reviews: Asia's Clean Revolution: Industry, Growth and the Environment, Making Local Governance Work: Networks, Relationships and the Management of Change, the Daily Globe: Environmental Change, the Public and the Media, Environmental Governance in Europe: An Ever Closer Ecological Union?
In: Environment and planning. C, Government and policy, Volume 20, Issue 2, p. 311-316
ISSN: 1472-3425
Reviews: Review Essay: Planning and the Geographies of (Un)Sustainability: Ecologically Based Municipal Land Use Planning, Land and Limits: Interpreting Sustainability in the Planning Process, Rationalities of Planning: Development versus Environment in Planning for Housing, the Shaping of Environme...
In: Environment and planning. C, Government and policy, Volume 21, Issue 5, p. 779-790
ISSN: 1472-3425
Review: Planning, Markets and Hospitals, a Primer on Environmental Policy Design, Planning and the Political Market: Public Choice and the Politics of Government Failure, Placing the Social Economy, Unravelling the Rag Trade: Immigrant Entrepreneurship in Seven World Cities, Environmental Politics: ...
In: Environment and planning. C, Government and policy, Volume 21, Issue 3, p. 467-474
ISSN: 1472-3425
Reviews: Environmental Dilemmas and Policy Design, the Political Culture of the Left in Affluent Britain, 1951–64: Old Labour, New Britain, the Government and Politics of the European Union, Just Sustainabilities: Development in an Unequal World, Climate Change and Sustainable Development: Prospects...
In: Environment and planning. C, Government and policy, Volume 22, Issue 1, p. 149-158
ISSN: 1472-3425
The Next Generation Transit Survey (NGTS)
We describe the Next Generation Transit Survey (NGTS), which is a ground-based project searching for transiting exoplanets orbiting bright stars. NGTS builds on the legacy of previous surveys, most notably WASP, and is designed to achieve higher photometric precision and hence find smaller planets than have previously been detected from the ground. It also operates in red light,maximizing sensitivity to late K and earlyMdwarf stars. The survey specifications call for photometric precision of 0.1 per cent in red light over an instantaneous field of view of 100 deg2, enabling the detection of Neptune-sized exoplanets around Sun-like stars and super-Earths around M dwarfs. The survey is carried out with a purpose-built facility at Cerro Paranal, Chile, which is the premier site of the European Southern Observatory (ESO). An array of twelve 20 cm f/2.8 telescopes fitted with back-illuminated deep-depletion CCD cameras is used to survey fields intensively at intermediateGalactic latitudes. The instrument is also ideally suited to ground-based photometric follow-up of exoplanet candidates from space telescopes such as TESS, Gaia and PLATO. We present observations that combine precise autoguiding and the superb observing conditions at Paranal to provide routine photometric precision of 0.1 per cent in 1 h for stars with I-band magnitudes brighter than 13. We describe the instrument and data analysis methods as well as the status of the survey, which achieved first light in 2015 and began full-survey operations in 2016. NGTS data will be made publicly available through the ESO archive. ; The capital costs of the NGTS facility were funded by the University of Warwick, the University of Leicester, Queen's University Belfast, the University of Geneva, the Deutsches Zentrum fur Luft- und ¨ Raumfahrt e.V. (DLR; under the 'Großinvestition GI-NGTS'), the University of Cambridge and the UK Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC; project reference ST/M001962/1). The facility is operated by the consortium institutes with support from STFC (also project ST/M001962/1). We are grateful to ESO for providing access to the Paranal site as well as generous in-kind support. The research leading to these results has received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme (FP/2007-2013)/ERC Grant Agreement n. 320964 (WDTracer). The contributions at the University of Warwick by PJW, RGW, DLP, FF, DA, BTG and TL have been supported by STFC through consolidated grants ST/L000733/1 and ST/P000495/1. TL was also supported by STFC studentship 1226157. EF is funded by the Qatar National Research Foundation (programme QNRF-NPRP-X-019-1). MNG is supported by STFC studentship 1490409 as well as the Isaac Newton Studentship. JSJ acknowledges support by FONDECYT grant 1161218 and partial support by CATA-Basal (PB06, CONICYT). AJ acknowledges support from FONDECYT project 1171208, BASAL CATA PFB-06, and by the Ministry for the Economy, Development, and Tourism's Programa Iniciativa Cient´ıfica Milenio through grant IC 120009, awarded to the Millennium Institute of Astrophysics (MAS). FF acknowledges support from 'Accordo ASIINAF for PLATO' No. 2015-019-R.0 July 29, 2015.
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