37 results
Search Results
2. Illicit drug use in university students in the UK and Ireland: a PRISMA-guided scoping review.
- Author
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Boden, Maeve and Day, Ed
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DRUG abuse , *COLLEGE students , *EVIDENCE gaps , *COLLEGE administrators , *DRUG utilization - Abstract
Background: Interest in the health and well-being of university students has increased in the UK and Ireland in the past two decades as their numbers have grown. Recent high-profile deaths of students after using illicit drugs have highlighted the importance of the topic for policy makers. This scoping review maps the state of the existing literature evaluating use of illicit drugs in university students in the UK and Ireland. It aims to highlight research gaps and inform policy. Method: We conducted a systematic search of papers related to psychoactive drug use in university students in the UK and Ireland published before August 2021. The 18 extracted study characteristics included author(s); year of publication; journal; location of data collection; study design; delivery method (e.g., online survey, in-person, postal survey); number of participants; response rate; participant course of study, year of study, degree level (i.e., undergraduate, postgraduate), gender and age; time-period assessed (e.g., lifetime, current use, past 12 months); primary aim; primary outcome; ethical approval; and funding source. Results: The PRISMA-guided search strategy identified 1583 papers for abstract review; of 110 papers retained for full-text review, 54 studies met criteria for inclusion for this paper. Primary outcomes were coded into five groups: prevalence and patterns of drug use; factors associated with drug use; attitudes and knowledge about, and motivation for, drug use; supply of drugs; consequences of drug use. The results show that there is no coherent body of research in this area. The prevalence of reported drug use has crept up and the range of substances reported has broadened over time, and attitudes to drugs on average have normalised. However, there are significant methodological limitations that limit the utility of these findings. There was little evidence of published work on prevention of, or intervention to reduce, drug-related harms. Conclusion: The domains identified offer a framework for university administrators, researchers and policy makers to understand the potential response to drug use in university students in the UK and Ireland. Recommendations are made to fill the gaps in the research evidence base. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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3. Call to action: a five nations consensus on the use of intravenous zoledronate after hip fracture.
- Author
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Johansen, Antony, Sahota, Opinder, Dockery, Frances, Black, Alison J, MacLullich, Alasdair M J, Javaid, M Kassim, Ahern, Emer, and Gregson, Celia L
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BONE fracture prevention , *OSTEOPOROSIS prevention , *CONSENSUS (Social sciences) , *THERAPEUTICS , *INTRAVENOUS therapy , *HEALTH services accessibility , *OSTEOPENIA , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *HIP fractures , *MEDICAL care , *ZOLEDRONIC acid , *OSTEOPOROSIS , *PREVENTIVE health services , *MEDICAL protocols , *COST effectiveness , *BONE density , *BONE fractures , *DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
Currently in the UK and Ireland, after a hip fracture most patients do not receive bone protection medication to reduce the risk of refracture. Yet randomised controlled trial data specifically examining patients with hip fracture have shown that intravenous zoledronate reduces refracture risk by a third. Despite this evidence, use of intravenous zoledronate is highly variable following a hip fracture; many hospitals are providing this treatment, whilst most are currently not. A range of clinical uncertainties, doubts over the evidence base and practical concerns are cited as reasons. This paper discusses these concerns and provides guidance from expert consensus, aiming to assist orthogeriatricians, pharmacists and health services managers establish local protocols to deliver this highly clinically and cost-effective treatment to patients before they leave hospital, in order to reduce costly re-fractures in this frail population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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4. Millions of digitized historical sea‐level pressure observations rediscovered.
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Hawkins, Ed, Alexander, Lisa V., and Allan, Rob J.
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ISLANDS , *TWO thousands (Decade) , *WEATHER , *TRANSCRIPTION (Linguistics) - Abstract
Millions of sub‐daily sea‐level pressure observations taken between 1919 and 1960 over the British and Irish Isles were transcribed from paper records in the early 2000s but were not published and subsequently forgotten. A chance discussion led to the rediscovery of the transcribed data and 5.47 million observations from 160 locations are now made available, although the data have not been fully quality‐controlled. Much of the data are 3‐hourly, allowing for detailed examinations of synoptic weather variations for this region and time period, and will be invaluable for constraining future reanalyses. We illustrate the value of the data using a stormy period during October and November 1928 and discuss the remaining quality‐control issues. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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5. Millions of historical monthly rainfall observations taken in the UK and Ireland rescued by citizen scientists.
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Hawkins, Ed, Burt, Stephen, McCarthy, Mark, Murphy, Conor, Ross, Catherine, Baldock, Mike, Brazier, John, Hersee, Gill, Huntley, Jacqui, Meats, Richard, O'Grady, John, Scrimgeour, Ian, and Silk, Tim
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ARCHIVAL resources , *NATIONAL archives , *ATMOSPHERIC sciences , *QUALITY control , *DROUGHTS - Abstract
Recovering additional historical weather observations from known archival sources will improve the understanding of how the climate is changing and enable detailed examination of unusual events within the historical record. The UK National Meteorological Archive recently scanned more than 66,000 paper sheets containing 5.28 million hand‐written monthly rainfall observations taken across the UK and Ireland between 1677 and 1960. Only a small fraction of these observations were previously digitally available for climate scientists to analyse. More than 16,000 volunteer citizen scientists completed the transcription of these sheets of observations during early 2020 using the RainfallRescue.org website, built using the Zooniverse platform. A total of 3.34 million observations from more than 6000 locations have so far been quality controlled and made openly available. This has increased the total number of monthly rainfall observations that are available for this time period and region by a factor of six. The newly rescued observations will enable longer and much improved reconstructions of past variations in rainfall across the British and Irish Isles, including for periods of significant flooding and drought. Specifically, this data should allow the official gridded monthly rainfall reconstructions for the UK to be extended back to 1836, and even earlier for some regions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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6. Towards an in situ non-lethal rapid test to accurately detect the presence of the nematode parasite, Anguillicoloides crassus , in European eel, Anguilla anguilla.
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De Noia, M., Poole, R., Kaufmann, J., Waters, C., Adams, C., McGinnity, P., and Llewellyn, M.
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ANGUILLA anguilla , *IN situ processing (Mining) , *CYTOCHROME oxidase , *NEMATODES , *FISHERY management , *ENDANGERED species , *PARASITES - Abstract
Anguillicoloides crassus is an invasive nematode parasite of the critically endangered European eel, Anguilla anguilla, and possibly one of the primary drivers of eel population collapse, impacting many features of eel physiology and life history. Early detection of the parasite is vital to limit the spread of A. crassus, to assess its potential impact on spawning biomass. However accurate diagnosis of infection could only be achieved via necropsy. To support eel fisheries management we developed a rapid, non-lethal, minimally invasive and in situ DNA-based method to infer the presence of the parasite in the swim bladder. Screening of 131 wild eels was undertaken between 2017 and 2019 in Ireland and UK to validate the procedure. DNA extractions and PCR were conducted using both a Qiagen Stool kit and in situ using Whatman qualitative filter paper No1 and a miniPCR DNA Discovery-System™. Primers were specifically designed to target the cytochrome oxidase mtDNA gene region and in situ extraction and amplification takes approximately 3 h for up to 16 individuals. Our in-situ diagnostic procedure demonstrated positive predictive values at 96% and negative predictive values at 87% by comparison to necropsy data. Our method could be a valuable tool in the hands of fisheries managers to enable infection control and help protect this iconic but critically endangered species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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7. 'Generation Pup' – protocol for a longitudinal study of dog behaviour and health.
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Murray, Jane Katherine, Kinsman, Rachel Heather, Lord, Michelle Susannah, Da Costa, Rosa Elizabete Pinto, Woodward, Joshua Luke, Owczarczak-Garstecka, Sara Cecylia, Tasker, Séverine, Knowles, Toby Grahame, and Casey, Rachel Alison
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HEALTH behavior , *DOG breeds , *LONGITUDINAL method , *DOGS , *PUPPIES , *ACQUISITION of data - Abstract
Background: Despite extensive research, many questions remain unanswered about common problems that impact dog welfare, particularly where there are multiple contributing factors that can occur months or years before the problem becomes apparent. The Generation Pup study is the first longitudinal study of dogs that recruits pure- and mixed-breed puppies, aiming to investigate the relative influence of environmental and genetic factors on a range of health and behaviour outcomes, (including separation related behaviour, aggression to familiar/unfamiliar people or dogs and obesity). This paper describes the study protocol in detail. Methods: Prior to commencing recruitment of puppies, the study infrastructure was developed, and subject specialists were consulted to inform data collection methodology. Questionnaire content and timepoint(s) for data collection for outcomes and potential predictors were chosen with the aim of providing the best opportunity of achieving the aims of the study, subject to time and funding constraints. Recruitment of puppies (< 16 weeks, or < 21 weeks of age if entering the United Kingdom or Republic of Ireland through quarantine) is underway. By 23 January 2020, 3726 puppies had been registered, with registration continuing until 10,000 puppies are recruited. Data collection encompasses owner-completed questionnaires issued at set timepoints throughout the dog's life, covering aspects such as training, diet, exercise, canine behaviour, preventative health care, clinical signs and veterinary intervention. Owners can elect to submit additional data (health cards completed by veterinary professionals, canine biological samples) and/or provide consent for access to veterinary clinical notes. Incidence and breed associations will be calculated for conditions for which there is currently limited information (e.g. separation related behaviour). Multivariable statistical analysis will be conducted on a range of outcomes that occur throughout different life stages, with the aim of identifying modifiable risk factors that can be used to improve canine health and welfare. Discussion: The Generation Pup project is designed to identify associations between early-life environment, genotypic make-up and outcomes at different life stages. Modifiable risk factors can be used to improve canine health and welfare. Research collaboration with subject specialists is welcomed and already underway within the fields of orthopaedic research, epilepsy, epigenetics and canine impulsivity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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8. The Potential Impact of Climate Change on Oat Lodging in the UK and Republic of Ireland.
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Mohammadi, Mohammadreza, Finnan, John, Baker, Chris, and Sterling, Mark
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CLIMATE change , *METEOROLOGICAL stations , *PROBABILITY density function , *RAINFALL probabilities , *OATS - Abstract
This paper examines the impact that climate change may have on the lodging of oats in the Republic of Ireland and the UK. Through the consideration of a novel lodging model representing the motion of an oat plant due to the interaction of wind and rain and integrating future predictions of wind and rainfall due to climate change, appropriate conclusions have been made. In order to provide meteorological data for the lodging model, wind and rainfall inputs are analysed using 30 years' time series corresponding to peak lodging months (June and July) from 38 meteorological stations in the United Kingdom and the Irish Republic, which enables the relevant probability density functions (PDFs) to be established. Moreover, climate data for the next six decades in the British Isles produced by UK climate change projections (UKCP18) are analysed, and future wind and rainfall PDFs are obtained. It is observed that the predicted changes likely to occur during the key growing period (June to July) in the next 30 years are in keeping with variations, which can occur due to different husbandry treatments/plant varieties. In addition, the utility of a double exponential function for representing the rainfall probability has been observed with appropriate values for the constants given. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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9. Trial Forge Guidance 2: how to decide if a further Study Within A Trial (SWAT) is needed.
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Treweek, Shaun, Bevan, Simon, Bower, Peter, Briel, Matthias, Campbell, Marion, Christie, Jacquie, Collett, Clive, Cotton, Seonaidh, Devane, Declan, El Feky, Adel, Galvin, Sandra, Gardner, Heidi, Gillies, Katie, Hood, Kerenza, Jansen, Jan, Littleford, Roberta, Parker, Adwoa, Ramsay, Craig, Restrup, Lynne, and Sullivan, Frank
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DECISION making , *FORGING - Abstract
The evidence base available to trialists to support trial process decisions-e.g. how best to recruit and retain participants, how to collect data or how to share the results with participants-is thin. One way to fill gaps in evidence is to run Studies Within A Trial, or SWATs. These are self-contained research studies embedded within a host trial that aim to evaluate or explore alternative ways of delivering or organising a particular trial process.SWATs are increasingly being supported by funders and considered by trialists, especially in the UK and Ireland. At some point, increasing SWAT evidence will lead funders and trialists to ask: given the current body of evidence for a SWAT, do we need a further evaluation in another host trial? A framework for answering such a question is needed to avoid SWATs themselves contributing to research waste.This paper presents criteria on when enough evidence is available for SWATs that use randomised allocation to compare different interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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10. Regional inequalities in self-reported conditions and non-communicable diseases in European countries: Findings from the European Social Survey (2014) special module on the social determinants of health.
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Thomson, Katie H., Renneberg, Ann-Christin, McNamara, Courtney L., Akhter, Nasima, Reibling, Nadine, and Bambra, Clare
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HYPERTENSION epidemiology , *CARDIOVASCULAR diseases , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *DIABETES , *DISEASES , *HEALTH status indicators , *OBESITY , *PAIN , *POPULATION geography , *PROBABILITY theory , *RESEARCH funding , *STATISTICAL sampling , *SELF-evaluation , *SEX distribution , *SURVEYS , *TUMORS , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *HEALTH equity , *DISEASE prevalence , *HEALTH & social status , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background: Within the European Union (EU), substantial efforts are being made to achieve economic and social cohesion, and the reduction of health inequalities between EU regions is integral to this process. This paper is the first to examine how self-reported conditions and non-communicable diseases (NCDs) vary spatially between and within countries. Methods: Using 2014 European Social Survey (ESS) data from 20 countries, this paper examines how regional inequalities in self-reported conditions and NCDs vary for men and women in 174 regions (levels 1 and 2 Nomenclature of Statistical Territorial Units, 'NUTS'). We document absolute and relative inequalities across Europe in the prevalence of eight conditions: general health, overweight/obesity, mental health, heart or circulation problems, high blood pressure, back, neck, muscular or joint pain, diabetes and cancer. Results: There is considerable inequality in self-reported conditions and NCDs between the regions of Europe, with rates highest in the regions of continental Europe, some Scandinavian regions and parts of the UK and lowest around regions bordering the Alps, in Ireland and France. However, for mental health and cancer, rates are highest in regions of Eastern European and lowest in some Nordic regions, Ireland and isolated regions in continental Europe. There are also widespread and consistent absolute and relative regional inequalities in all conditions within countries. These are largest in France, Germany and the UK, and smallest in Denmark, Sweden and Norway. There were higher inequalities amongst women. Conclusion: Using newly available harmonized morbidity data from across Europe, this paper shows that there are considerable regional inequalities within and between European countries in the distribution of self-reported conditions and NCDs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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11. DNA analysis of Castanea sativa (sweet chestnut) in Britain and Ireland: Elucidating European origins and genepool diversity.
- Author
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Jarman, Rob, Mattioni, Claudia, Russell, Karen, Chambers, Frank M., Bartlett, Debbie, Martin, M. Angela, Cherubini, Marcello, Villani, Fiorella, and Webb, Julia
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CHESTNUT , *DNA analysis , *MICROSATELLITE repeats , *LAST Glacial Maximum , *HISTORIC sites , *FORESTS & forestry - Abstract
Castanea sativa is classified as non-indigenous in Britain and Ireland. It was long held that it was first introduced into Britain by the Romans, until a recent study found no corroborative evidence of its growing here before c. AD 650. This paper presents new data on the genetic diversity of C. sativa in Britain and Ireland and potential ancestral sources in continental Europe. Microsatellite markers and analytical methods tested in previous European studies were used to genotype over 600 C. sativa trees and coppice stools, sampled from ancient semi-natural woodlands, secondary woodlands and historic cultural sites across Britain and Ireland. A single overall genepool with a diverse admixture of genotypes was found, containing two sub groups differentiating Wales from Ireland, with discrete geographical and typological clusters. C. sativa genotypes in Britain and Ireland were found to relate predominantly to some sites in Portugal, Spain, France, Italy and Romania, but not to Greece, Turkey or eastern parts of Europe. C. sativa has come to Britain and Ireland from these western European areas, which had acted as refugia in the Last Glacial Maximum; we compare its introduction with the colonization/translocation of oak, ash, beech and hazel into Britain and Ireland. Clones of C. sativa were identified in Britain, defining for the first time the antiquity of some ancient trees and coppice stools, evincing both natural regeneration and anthropogenic propagation over many centuries and informing the chronology of the species’ arrival in Britain. This new evidence on the origins and antiquity of British and Irish C. sativa trees enhances their conservation and economic significance, important in the context of increasing threats from environmental change, pests and pathogens. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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12. Exploiting the Irish Border to Estimate Minimum Wage Impacts in Northern Ireland.
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McVicar, Duncan, Park, Andrew, and McGuinness, Seamus
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MINIMUM wage , *WORKING hours , *LIVING wage movement , *EMPLOYMENT , *EXPERIMENTAL design - Abstract
This paper examines the impacts of the introduction of the UK National Minimum Wage (NMW) in 1999 and the introduction of the UK National Living Wage (NLW) in 2016 in Northern Ireland (NI) on employment and hours. NI is the only part of the UK with a land border where the NMW and NLW cover those working on one side of the border but not those working on the other side of the border (i.e., Republic of Ireland). This discontinuity in minimum wage coverage enables a research design that estimates the impacts of the NMW and NLW on employment and hours worked using difference-in-differences estimation. We find a small decrease in the employment rate of 22–59/64-year-olds in NI, of up to 2% points, in the year following the introduction of the NMW, but no impact on hours worked. We find no clear evidence that the introduction of the NLW impacted either employment or hours worked in NI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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13. Towards a more effective approach to the development and maintenance of SEA guidance.
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Montaño, Marcelo and Fischer, Thomas B.
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ENVIRONMENTAL impact analysis , *GUIDELINES , *QUALITY standards - Abstract
Written guidance can contribute to the development of effective SEA, delivering relevant information for those involved in policy, plan and programme making processes. Generally speaking, guidance should aim at setting best practice standards. However, to date, how guidance is impacting on SEA effectiveness and how it is best developed and maintained has not been explored to any great extent. As a consequence, it has remained unclear how a key ingredient of effective SEA, namely the support of an enabling context, should be approached. In this paper, we look at the perceived relevance of written guidance for the delivery of effective SEA, based on a two-stage survey with 26 practitioners (all with over 10 years of experience) from the UK and the Republic of Ireland, conducted between 2015 and 2017. Survey participants included representatives of the regulatory, consultancy and academic sectors. Our findings indicate that guidance can promote SEA effectiveness if it: (a) aims to go beyond basic legislative requirements; (b) is able to respond to the specific situation of application; (c) can establish a minimum standard for SEA; and (d) is able to stimulate the advancement of quality standards within a tiered approach to SEA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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14. Traits data for the butterflies and macro‐moths of Great Britain and Ireland.
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Cook, Patrick M., Tordoff, George M., Davis, Tony M., Parsons, Mark S., Dennis, Emily B., Fox, Richard, Botham, Marc S., and Bourn, Nigel A. D.
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BUTTERFLIES , *PREDATION , *PLANT ecology , *CITIZEN science , *LEPIDOPTERA , *SPECIES distribution , *HOST plants - Abstract
Butterflies and moths, collectively Lepidoptera, are integral components of ecosystems, providing key services such as pollination and a prey resource for vertebrate and invertebrate predators. Lepidoptera are a relatively well studied group of invertebrates. In Great Britain and Ireland numerous citizen science projects provide data on changes in distribution and abundance. The availability of high‐quality monitoring and recording data, combined with the rapid response of Lepidoptera to environmental change, makes them ideal candidates for traits‐based ecological studies. Recently, there has been an increase in the number of studies documenting traits‐based responses of Lepidoptera, highlighting the demand for a standardized and referenced traits database. There is a wide range of primary and secondary literature sources available regarding the ecology of British and Irish Lepidoptera to support such studies. Currently these sources have not been collated into one central repository that would facilitate and enhance future research. Here, we present a comprehensive traits database for the butterflies and macro‐moths of Great Britain and Ireland. The database covers 968 species in 21 families. Ecological traits fall into four main categories: life cycle ecology and phenology, host plant specificity and characteristics, breeding habitat, and morphological characteristics. The database also contains data regarding species distribution, conservation status, and temporal trends for abundance and occupancy. This database can be used for a wide array of purposes including further fundamental research on species and community responses to environmental change, conservation and management studies, and evolutionary biology. There are no copyright restrictions, and this paper must be cited if data are used in publications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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15. 'A New Spirit of Hope': Educating the Book Trade, 1920-1930.
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Rayner, Samantha
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BOOKSELLERS & bookselling , *BUSINESS partnerships - Abstract
This paper looks at the initiatives by the Associated Booksellers of Great Britain and Ireland between 1920 and 1930 to formalise training for booksellers, reflecting on the current moves to reinstate some kind of bookselling qualification through the partnership of Waterstones with the University of Derby. It uses as primary sources the trade papers of The Publishers' Circular and Booksellers' Record and The Bookseller, both key narrative repositories for histories of this nature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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16. The fate of abstracts presented at annual meetings of the Society for Cardiothoracic Surgery in Great Britain and Ireland from 1993 to 2007.
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Drury, Nigel E., Maniakis-Grivas, Georgios, Rogers, Vanessa J.C., Williams, Lynne K., Pagano, Domenico, and Martin-Ucar, Antonio E.
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SURGERY , *CARDIOVASCULAR surgery , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *SOCIETIES ,ABSTRACTS - Abstract
Although the presentation of original research to learned societies is valuable, the target should be publication in a peer-reviewed journal. Therefore, the strength of a meeting may be assessed by the rate of the subsequent publication of papers from the presented abstracts. We conducted an analysis of abstracts presented at consecutive annual meetings of the Society for Cardiothoracic Surgery (SCTS) in Great Britain and Ireland over a 15-year period. Abstract books and other documentation from the 1993–2007 meetings were reviewed; abstracts from other major Cardiothoracic Surgery meetings held in 2007 were also reviewed. Medline was searched to identify the peer-reviewed publications arising from each work presented. For abstracts presented at SCTS in 2003–07, the factors potentially associated with publication were analysed by logistic regression. If no publications were identified, authors were contacted through a standardized email questionnaire to ascertain its status and reasons for non-publication. Over the 15-year period, 909 abstracts were presented at the SCTS meetings. The rate of publication rose from ∼30% in the mid-1990s to consistently >60% from recent meetings, with a high of 81.3% from 2006. However, in comparison with other Cardiothoracic Surgery meetings in 2007, the chance of subsequent publication from SCTS (66.7%) was lower than from the European Association for Cardio-Thoracic Surgery (75.0%), the American Association for Thoracic Surgery (83.9%) and The Society of Thoracic Surgeons (72.5%) meetings. For abstracts presented at the last five SCTS meetings, publication was most commonly in a speciality journal (56.3%) and the median time for publication was 15 months (range −24 to 63 months) with 14 papers published prior to presentation at the meeting. On regression analysis, the only factor associated with publication was the study design comparing randomized trials and systematic reviews with other types of study (P < 0.01). Of the 90 unpublished abstracts, 48 (53.3%) authors replied to an email questionnaire revealing that 41 (85.4%) were never submitted for publication. The most common reasons given were low priority (29.6%) and low likelihood of acceptance (24.1%). In recent years, the annual meeting of the Society has become a forum for the presentation of high-quality research that usually withstands peer-review, most commonly in a speciality journal. The rate of publication has increased to consistently >60%, although those that remain unpublished are generally never submitted. This compares favourably with national meetings of other surgical societies, although it is lower than other major cardiothoracic meetings which have an affiliated journal. At a time when it has been suggested that medical research in the UK is in decline, cardiothoracic surgery appears to be thriving. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
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17. Testing for Asymmetric Pricing Behaviour in Irish and UK Petrol and Diesel Markets.
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Bermingham, Colin and O'Brien, Derry
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PRICING , *PETROLEUM industry , *DIESEL fuels - Abstract
This paper empirically tests whether Irish and UK petrol and diesel markets are characterised by asymmetric pricing behaviour. The econometric assessment uses threshold autoregressive models and a dataset of monthly refined oil and retail prices covering the period 1994 to mid-2009. In addition to providing an appraisal of the existence of asymmetry in the Irish and UK markets, the paper provides an important methodological contribution. Tests of asymmetry in the literature normally partition the sample into periods of falling and rising international oil prices. This fails to account for price pressures coming from the equilibrium error of the cointegrating relationship. In particular, the possibility of conflicting price pressures arising from short-run dynamics in retail prices and responses to disequilibrium errors needs to be explicitly modelled. We take this issue into account in an econometric model and we highlight the importance of this distinction. In terms of the asymmetric behaviour of these markets, the paper finds no evidence to support the "rockets and feathers" hypothesis that prices rise faster than they fall in response to changes in the value of international oil prices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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18. Prisoner of His Majesty: postcoloniality and the archaeology of British penal transportation.
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Casella, Eleanor Conlin
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PENAL transportation , *ARCHAEOLOGY , *PUNISHMENT , *CORRECTIONAL institutions , *CRIMINAL justice system - Abstract
Abstract As institutions established to administer the penal exile of British imperial subjects, the historic gaols of Australia and Ireland are linked by a painful legacy of involuntary transportation. Today, outstanding examples of these prisons are conserved and publicly presented as monuments of national significance. This paper considers material meanings associated with these unusual heritage places. Given their explicit historic association with British imperial power, what role do heritage prisons play in the formation of a postcolonial affiliation or consciousness? This paper will consider how heritage prisons have come to embody the emotive links of longing and belonging forged between the modern nations of Ireland and Australia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
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19. Patenting in England, Scotland and Ireland during the Industrial Revolution, 1700-1852.
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Bottomley, Sean
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PATENTS , *TECHNOLOGICAL innovations & economics , *INDUSTRIAL revolution , *PATENTS -- History , *COMMERCIAL markets , *INVENTORS , *COMMERCE , *HISTORY - Abstract
There are two competing accounts for explaining Britain's technological transformation during the Industrial Revolution. One sees it as the inevitable outcome of a largely exogenous increase in the supply of new ideas and ways of thinking. The other sees it as a demand side response to economic incentives--that in Britain, it paid to invent the technology of the Industrial Revolution. However, this second interpretation relies on the assumption that inventors were sufficiently responsive to new commercial opportunities. This paper tests this assumption, using a new dataset of Scottish and Irish patents. It finds that the propensity of inventors to extend patent protection into Scotland and/or Ireland was indeed closely correlated with the relative market opportunity of the patented invention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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20. The 'dance' of kinship care in England and Ireland: Navigating a course between regulation and relationships.
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Munro, Emily R. and Gilligan, Robbie
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KINSHIP care , *CHILD care , *CHILD welfare policy , *FAMILIES , *SOCIAL policy ,BRITISH social policy - Abstract
There has been a significant growth in the use of formal kinship care in the UK and Ireland in the last 20 years. The paper charts some of the reasons for the 'organic growth' of kinship care and the multiple dynamics that have shaped this. It shows that kinship care has grown relatively slowly in the more regulated care system of England, compared to the less regulated system in Ireland. Examination of these different trajectories suggests that: where the tendency to regulation is strong the choices of individual family members may also have an impact in response to state provision; cultural differences in the importance of family ties may play a part in decision-making processes; and that variations in levels of regulation and support may impact on the profile of the care system. It also serves to highlight that relationships may be the glue that brings formal kinship placements together and they may also be the glue that holds them together. Regulation (and how it is interpreted on the ground) can influence the climate of choices of the carer to start or keep going, but it cannot determine those choices. Clearly, regulation is required, but it seems wise not to see regulation as all-conquering in terms of influence. 'Culture' in a range of senses seems also to play a part. Further comparative study may reveal more about this 'dance' of kinship care and its balancing of regulatory and 'cultural' factors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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21. Leaving Utopia Behind: Maria Edgeworth's Views of America.
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Fernández-Rodríguez, Carmen María
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- *
AMERICAN Dream , *MULTICULTURALISM , *UTILITARIANISM , *ETHNOLOGY ,SOCIAL conditions in Great Britain - Abstract
Maria Edgeworth was an Anglo-Irish writer who was born in 1768 and died in 1849 and thus was able to witness the economic and ideological changes that shaped British society in the aftermath of the French Revolution. Though Edgeworth upheld utilitarian and enlightened ideas very similar to the ones inspiring the American Founding Fathers, studies on her oeuvre have never been interested in the vision of America reflected in her tales and novels. This paper analyses some of Edgeworth's little-explored narratives and corresponds to three different moments in her career. Edgeworth considered America to be a place where the individual could begin a new life away from home ("Tomorrow" [1804]), a tolerant country open to all religious creeds (Harrington [1817]) and an alternative motherland for the Irish during the Famine (Orlandino [1847]). The author was conditioned by the historical circumstances in Ireland, and she remained faithful to her pedagogic aim. However, instead of resorting to an idealisation of America, Edgeworth associated the new land with freedom and hope. In these narratives, and from a more or less serious point of view, she depicted America as a prize reserved for courageous hardworking people and even as an escape from the grim reality at home. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Excavating Ireland's Contemporary Heritage in Eilís Ní Dhuibhne's The Bray House.
- Author
-
del Río, Constanza
- Subjects
- *
SCIENCE fiction , *DYSTOPIAS , *SOCIAL history , *ECONOMIC trends ,IRISH history - Abstract
Eilís Ní Dhuibhne's first novel, The Bray House (1990), is a futuristic, dystopian fantasy that envisions Ireland, Great Britain and most of Western Europe - except for the northern territories - as already laid waste by nuclear disaster in an unspecified near future. In this paper, my intention is to consider how the narrative, like other futuristic and science-fiction stories, displaces the present onto an apocalyptic future so as to bring out and criticise present-day social, cultural and political trends, particularly, the institutional tendency in Ireland to package and market History as Heritage. Some of the issues raised by the novel which will be addressed here are: For what purposes and from what perspective and attitude is the past interpreted and translated? What happens when it is precisely our treasured lifestyles that we see dissected, interpreted and analysed as if they already formed part of an arcane past? How can we feel the sense of nostalgia that heritage-based analyses imply if we are asked to mourn what we have not yet lost? [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Elemental interplay: the production, circulation and deposition of Bronze Age metalwork in Britain and Ireland.
- Author
-
Stevens, Fay
- Subjects
- *
METALWORK , *FOUR elements (Philosophy) , *MATERIAL culture , *BRONZE Age - Abstract
This paper considers how people were compellingly engaged with, and drew upon, their elemental world in the Bronze Age (c. 2000 - 800 bc). It takes into account the production, circulation and deposition of metalwork and presents a number of themes concerned with the social construction of objects, places and people in the Bronze Age, while exploring how elements are drawn upon to facilitate this. The case study focuses on evidence from Britain and Ireland, although the interpretative themes presented can be applied to a wider geographical dataset. In particular, it considers how elements are interplayed in order to bring about and articulate wider social and material transformations taking place in the Bronze Age. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. A Place of Community: “Celtic” Iona and Institutional Religion.
- Author
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Power, Rosemary
- Subjects
- *
SPIRITUALITY , *CELTIC rite (Catholic Church) , *CHRISTIANITY , *PILGRIMS & pilgrimages , *RELIGION - Abstract
This paper identifies the concept of a “Celtic” form of spirituality that has developed recently within Christianity in Britain and Ireland, in particular in relation to ancient pilgrimage sites. One of these, the Scottish island of Iona, has always been subject to reinterpretation; but while the resident population and the Iona Community may have contributed to current expectations, they do not necessary identify with them. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Chipped Stone Tool Industries of the Earlier Neolithic in Eastern Scotland.
- Author
-
Warren, Graeme
- Subjects
- *
STONE implements , *FLINT , *AXES , *NEOLITHIC Period - Abstract
This paper reviews chipped stone tool industries of the Earlier Neolithic in eastern Scotland. Assemblage size, raw materials and primary and secondary technology are discussed and some preliminary models are proposed: these suggest that assemblages are often small and dominated by flint. Very small quantities of Arran pitchstone are often present. Narrow flake and blade platform technologies are present and there is evidence for curation of cores. Bipolar working forms an important component of these assemblages. Retouched pieces are generally in keeping with earlier Neolithic forms in other regions: leaf shaped arrowheads, elongate piano-convex knives, and a range of convex scrapers. Polished axes are rare in the kinds of contexts in which flaked lithic artefacts are found. Lithic assemblages are often included in 'structured' deposits of varied kinds. The eastern Scottish material is thus in keeping with Early Neolithic stone-working across most of Britain and Ireland. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Proceedings of the Anatomical Society of Great Britain and Ireland.
- Subjects
- *
CONFERENCES & conventions , *MEETINGS , *VISUAL pathways , *NEURONS - Abstract
The article presents information on the Winter Meeting of the Anatomical Society of Great Britain and Ireland. The meeting was held at Saint Anne's College, Oxford, England, from January 5 to 7, 2005. It included a symposium on "Craniofacial Development: Making Faces." Various communications and posters were presented at the meeting. In the research paper "Evidence of a Role for Kir4.1 on Setting the Resting Membrane Potential of Optic Nerve Glia," it has been stated that neuronal activity results in the release of K ions into the extracellular space, and if uncorrected the increase in K ions would affect neuronal electrical properties.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. The migration of nurses: trends and policies.
- Author
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Buchan, James and Sochalski, Julie
- Subjects
- *
INTERNAL migration , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *NURSES , *EMPLOYMENT in foreign countries , *LABOR supply - Abstract
This paper examines the policy context of the rise in the international mobility and migration of nurses. It describes the profile of the migration of nurses and the policy context governing the international recruitment of nurses to five countries: Australia, Ireland, Norway, the United Kingdom, and the United States. We also examine the policy challenges for workforce planning and the design of health systems infrastructure. Data are derived from registries of professional nurses, censuses, interviews with key informants, case studies in source and destination countries, focus groups, and empirical modelling to examine the patterns and implications of the movement of nurses across borders. The flow of nurses to these destination countries has risen, in some cases quite substantially. Recruitment from lower-middle income countries and low-income countries, as defined by The World Bank, dominate trends in nurse migration to the United Kingdom, Ireland, and the United States, while Norway and Australia, primarily register nurses from other high-income countries. Inadequate data systems in many countries prevent effective monitoring of these workforce flows. Policy options to manage nurse migration include: improving working conditions in both source and destination countries, instituting multilateral agreements to manage the flow more effectively, and developing compensation arrangements between source and destination countries. Recommendations for enhancements to workforce data systems are provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
28. Injuries in professional horse racing in Great Britain and the Republic of Ireland during 1992-2000.
- Author
-
Turner, M., McCrory, P., and Halley, W.
- Subjects
- *
HORSE racing , *SPORTS injuries - Abstract
Professional horse racing is an exciting and demanding sport with high injury rates. Surprisingly few epidemiological studies have been published and no prospective studies have been reported. This paper reviews the literature and provides a detailed breakdown of injuries in Great Britain and the Republic of Ireland for 1992-2000. The introduction of protective equipment is discussed and evidence for its effectiveness put forward. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. The decline of the corncrake <em>Crex crex</em> in Britain and Ireland in relation to habitat change.
- Author
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Green, R. E. and Stowe, T. J.
- Subjects
- *
CORNCRAKE , *HABITATS , *GRASSLAND management , *HABITAT suitability index models , *ANIMAL populations , *APPLIED ecology - Abstract
Censuses of singing male corncrakes Crex crex (L.) on agricultural land in seven sample areas of Britain and Ireland in 1988 and 1991 indicated that a century-long decline in numbers was continuing. Areas differed in the magnitude of the population change during the 3-year period. Changes ranged from a 4% increase to a 70% decrease. Vegetation surveys were carried out in 1988 and 1991 at sites that were occupied by corncrakes in 1988. A logistic regression model, developed in a previous paper, which describes differences in vegetation between sites that corncrakes had continued or ceased to occupy between 1978/79 and 1988, was applied to the 1988 and 1991 vegetation data in order to estimate area-specific changes in habitat suitability over the 3-year period. Variation in the rate of change of corncrake numbers among geographical areas was well explained both by the absolute value of the habitat suitability index in 1991 and the change in the index between 1988 and 1991. Changes in corncrake numbers were better explained by the habitat suitability index than by any of the individual vegetation cover variables used in its calculation. Declines in corncrake numbers were generally associated with reductions in the area of hay-meadows, but increases in short pasture and grassland dominated by Juncus spp. also contributed to declines in corncrake habitat suitability in some areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Measuring energy and environmental efficiency interactions towards CO2 emissions reduction without slowing economic growth in central and western Europe.
- Author
-
Zhang, Jijian, Patwary, Ataul Karim, Sun, Huaping, Raza, Muhammad, Taghizadeh-Hesary, Farhad, and Iram, Robina
- Subjects
- *
ENERGY consumption , *ECONOMIC expansion , *SUSTAINABLE development , *CONSUMPTION (Economics) , *GROSS domestic product - Abstract
Given the economic growth and energy consumption patterns, most countries are striving to solve the problems of CO 2 emissions reduction to achieve sustainable development. This paper employs an improved DEA model to measure energy and environmental efficiency for some selected countries in central and western Europe. In addition, the DEA window evaluation technique is applied to measure cross-sectional efficiency using two inputs (energy consumption, labor force), a desirable output (gross domestic product), and an undesirable output (CO 2 emission) for the period from 2010 to 2014. The study finds that the UK ranks the highest position in term of energy and environmental efficiency. This shows that the UK has more effective policies regarding energy efficiency, consumption, production, import and energy intensity measures for sustainable economic growth as well as environmental protection. Ireland is the second-best country after the United Kingdom. The efficiency scores of the two countries are 0.99 and 0.89 respectively. On the empirical outcomes, this study suggests effective reforms in energy sector for countries with less energy efficiency that are still facing the problem of environmental degradation. •There is an urgent need to balance sustainable development and economic growth. •DEA window technique was applied to measure cross-sectional efficiency. •Ireland is second best country after UK with energy and environmental efficiency. •The market-centric structure would be more useful and advantageous for the society. •We provide recommendations about emission reduction with moderate economic growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Ethics briefings.
- Author
-
Brannan, Sophie, Chrispin, Eleanor, English, Veronica, Mussel, Rebecca, Sheather, Julian, and Sommerville, Ann
- Subjects
- *
MEDICINE , *MEDICAL ethics , *ABORTION laws , *ABORTION - Abstract
The article offers various developments taking place in the field of medicine in Great Britain. It is reported that, a woman from the Republic of Ireland has won a court case at the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) against the restrictive abortion legislation of Ireland, to go for abortion. The government of Great Britain, as reported, had issued a white paper in July 2010 indicating that it will bring a value-based pricing policy for medicines by the year 2014.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Reply.
- Author
-
Rowley-Conwy, Peter
- Subjects
- *
ORIGIN of agriculture , *PREHISTORIC land settlement patterns , *HUNTER-gatherer societies , *NEOLITHIC Period , *DOMESTICATION of animals - Abstract
Replies to comments on a paper which suggests a reconsideration of agricultural origin in Great Britain, Ireland, and southern Scandinavia. Post-processual approach; Domestication; Rapid agricultural uptake; Middle-range theory; Use of archaeological data; Coastal fishing evidence; Neolithic traits.
- Published
- 2004
33. Comments.
- Author
-
Straus, Lawrence Guy
- Subjects
- *
ORIGIN of agriculture , *HUNTER-gatherer societies , *PREHISTORIC land settlement patterns , *MESOLITHIC Period , *NEOLITHIC revolution , *ARCHAEOLOGY - Abstract
Comments on a paper by Peter Rowley-Conwy which suggests a reconsideration of agricultural origin in Great Britain, Ireland, and southern Scandinavia. Reasoned appeal to archaeological common sense in the interpretation of Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in north-western Europe; Claim that the transition was a rapid economic revolution; Indictment of an archaeology in which seductive ideas have come to take precedence over the meticulously developed empirical record.
- Published
- 2004
34. Comments.
- Author
-
Nielsen, Poul Otto
- Subjects
- *
ORIGIN of agriculture , *PREHISTORIC land settlement patterns , *HUNTER-gatherer societies , *MESOLITHIC Period , *NEOLITHIC Period - Abstract
Comments on a paper by Peter Rowley-Conwy suggesting a reconsideration of agricultural origin in Great Britain, Ireland, and southern Scandinavia. Evidence of the continued use of coastal as well as inland sites for hunting, fishing, and gathering during the first part of the Early Neolithic period; Shift from a marine to a terrestrial diet at the transition from the Mesolithic to the Neolithic; Simultaneous agricultural activity and grazing of domesticated animals during the first centuries of the Neolithic over a large part of northern Europe.
- Published
- 2004
35. Comments.
- Author
-
Budja, Mihael
- Subjects
- *
ORIGIN of agriculture , *HUNTER-gatherer societies , *PREHISTORIC land settlement patterns , *MATERIAL culture - Abstract
Comments on Peter Rowley-Conwy's paper which suggests a reconsideration of agricultural origin in Great Britain, Ireland, and southern Scandinavia. Ideological and subsistence dynamics and the current interpretations of their correlation that have achieved axiomatic status in postprocessual views of the transition in north-western Europe; Theoretical and interpretative postulates and available data on palaeoeconomy, palaeodiet, and cultural continuum in northwestern Europe; Economy and material culture.
- Published
- 2004
36. Comments.
- Author
-
Arias, Pablo
- Subjects
- *
ORIGIN of agriculture , *HUNTER-gatherer societies , *DOMESTICATION of animals , *PREHISTORIC land settlement patterns - Abstract
Comments on a paper by Peter Rowley-Conwy which suggests a reconsideration of agricultural origin in Great Britain, Ireland, and southern Scandinavia. Post-processual approach; Domestication as one option from among a broad range of relationships between human society and animal or plant species; Hunter-gatherer intensification.
- Published
- 2004
37. The bones of the past.
- Subjects
- *
ASSASSINATION ,GREAT Britain-Ireland relations - Abstract
The article looks at a 2012 investigation into British involvement in the 1989 assassination of Catholic solicitor Pat Finucane by the loyalist gang Ulster Defence Association (UDA). Topics include papers that detail how British intelligence officers helped plan and British agents in the UDA helped commit Finucane's assassination, British Prime Minister David Cameron's adroitness in admitting British wrongs against Ireland, and how the situation in Ireland has improved since 1989.
- Published
- 2012
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