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2. Life cycle assessment of alternative pulp mill sludge treatment methods in Finland.
- Author
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Salcedo-Puerto, Orlando, Breton, Marie, Sermyagina, Ekaterina, Gonçalves, Lindomar, Cardoso, Marcelo, Havukainen, Jouni, Vakkilainen, Esa, and Mendoza-Martinez, Clara
- Subjects
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PRODUCT life cycle assessment , *PULP mills , *GREENHOUSE gases , *SLUDGE management , *HYDROTHERMAL carbonization , *ENERGY consumption , *COMPOSTING - Abstract
• Advancements in sludge processing to reduce particle and acidification emissions. • Reduced environmental footprint through innovative sludge treatment. • Sludge hydrochar carbon stabilization contributes to climate change mitigation. Proper management of wastewater treatment plant side streams in pulp and paper mills is a matter of great interest. This study evaluates the environmental impact of different strategies in the management of biosludge from pulp and paper mills in Finland through a Life Cycle Assessment methodology. The base industrial standard practice, biosludge incineration for energy recovery and ash landfill disposal (Scenario 1), was compared to the alternative process of hydrothermal carbonization. The hydrochar generated from hydrothermal carbonization was evaluated for energy recovery through incineration (Scenario 2), or for use in composting for nutrient recovery (Scenario 3). The results showed that the hydrothermal process improved the overall environmental performance of the sludge management, particularly in terms of energy consumption and greenhouse gas emissions. The use of hydrochar as a soil amendment in composting also resulted in a significant reduction on the environmental impact compared to the other two scenarios. Overall, this study highlights the potential of hydrothermal carbonization and hydrochar utilization as sustainable options for managing biosludge from pulp mills. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Open Dialogue, need‐adapted mental health care, and implementation fidelity: A discussion paper.
- Author
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Waters, Edward, Ong, Benjamin, Mikes‐Liu, Kristof, McCloughen, Andrea, Rosen, Alan, Mayers, Steven, Sidis, Anna, Dawson, Lisa, and Buus, Niels
- Subjects
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PSYCHIATRIC nursing , *CONVALESCENCE , *PATIENT-centered care , *MEDICAL care , *PHILOSOPHY of nursing , *EVIDENCE-based nursing , *MEDICAL needs assessment , *MENTAL health services - Abstract
Open Dialogue is a need‐adapted approach to mental health care that was originally developed in Finland. Like other need‐adapted approaches, Open Dialogue aims to meet consumer's needs and promote collaborative person‐centred dialogue to support recovery. Need‐adapted mental health care is distinguished by flexibility and responsiveness. Fidelity, defined from an implementation science perspective as the delivery of distinctive interventions in a high quality and effective fashion is a key consideration in health care. However, flexibility presents challenges for evaluating fidelity, which is much easier to evaluate when manualization and reproducible processes are possible. Hence, it remains unclear whether Open Dialogue and other need‐adapted mental health interventions can be meaningfully evaluated for fidelity. The aim of this paper was to critically appraise and advance the evaluation of fidelity in need‐adapted mental health care, using Open Dialogue as a case study. The paper opens a discussion about how fidelity should be evaluated in flexible, complex interventions, and identifies key questions that need to be asked by practitioners working in need‐adapted mental health care to ensure they deliver these interventions as intended and in an evidence‐based fashion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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4. Energy efficiency at the paper mill-dilemma of improvement.
- Author
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Hämäläinen, Esa and Hilmola, Olli-Pekka
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ENERGY consumption of paper mills , *PAPER industry , *ELECTRIC power consumption , *NATURAL gas consumption , *PAPERMAKING machinery - Abstract
The paper industry is heavily using energy during all the phases of the manufacturing process. This is especially the case in Nordic mills where pressure ground wood is the source of fiber. The purpose of this case study is to show how energy consumption behaves on a monthly basis in a Finnish paper mill that has several paper machine lines. The research examines different categories of energy usage, as well as the overall costs. The results show that the monthly energy usage varies significantly. The electricity consumption of the case mill is rather steady, but there is significant monthly variation in steam and natural gas consumption. Moreover, steam and electricity unit costs increased significantly when coming to the end of the research period. The longitudinal case data shows that it is difficult to enhance energy consumption per produced unit at the paper mill. One reason for this is the bleak demand outlook for the end products, which often result in downsizing and closing operations inside the integrated unit. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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5. From an experimental paper to a playful screen: How the essence of materiality modulates the process of creation.
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Sintonen, Sara
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MATERIALISM , *MATERIAL culture , *EDUCATIONAL technology , *ART education , *DIGITIZATION , *CHILDREN , *EARLY childhood education - Abstract
The article seeks to develop a better understanding of the contribution of materiality in a discourse between a creator (content producer) and an interface, dealing with analogue and digital artefacts. Focus is in the materiality of the two different art‐creation learning processes, acrylic painting and digital painting. The objective of this paper is to consider especially the affect and meaning of these two different content creation modalities and intra‐action within that. Through reflective autoethnographic consideration, the purpose is to consider the essences of materials manifesting and modulating the processes of content creation as a posthumanist phenomenon. It will be shown that the creation processes with paper are more experimental whereas the processes with digital screen are more playful. There is a growing need to deeper understand the cultural change of material cultures and the people's intra‐action with the materials also enabling arts creation. This paper will widen our limited understanding and deepen our theoretical perspectives of the essence of materials which then avails confronting analogue and digital when developing teaching and learning in the posthuman era especially in early education. Practitioner NotesWhat is already known about this topic There is a growing interest in the new materialism and posthuman thinking amongst educational technology research and development.Reading analogue versus digital is well‐documented.What this paper adds New materialist thinking offers a useful perspective in education for looking at the essence of analogue and digital materiality modulating content creation.Characterising the nuances in analogue and digital production can help in evaluating their educational potential.Implications for practice and/or policy As practitioners we should critically question the political vision of education digitalisation especially concerning early childhood education.There is a need to move beyond debates about analogue versus digital to look at more specific examples of their advantages (and disadvantages) in developing posthumanist education and intra‐active pedagogy especially for young children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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6. Chemical and leaching properties of paper mill sludge.
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Kuokkanen, Toivo, Nurmesniemi, Hannu, Pöykiö, Risto, Kujala, Kauko, Kaakinen, Juhani, and Kuokkanen, Matti
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SEWAGE sludge , *PAPER mills , *SANITARY landfills , *SHEAR strength of soils , *TRACE elements - Abstract
Paper mills produce large amounts of paper mill sludge in the treatment of process water. According to overburden studies, the hydraulic conductivity of the paper mill sludge originating from a paper mill in Northern Finland at a pressure of 30 kPa was 4.4 x 10-10 m s-1, and 1.7 x 10-10m s-1 at a pressure of 100kPa. These values well meet the generally required values of between 1.0 x 10-7m s-1 and 1.0 x 10-9 m s-1 for a geological barrier in landfill base and sides at landfills in the European Union. Paper mill sludge can also be used in the artificially constructed geological barrier layer of landfill cover structures. The angle of internal friction of the paper mill sludge was 34.8° and the cohesion of interparticle adhesion 23 kPa, which are important measures for assessing the shear strength of paper mill sludge and thus the stability of the landfill layer in which it is used. During a 28-day period, the biodegradability of the paper mill sludge in soil was ca 0.4% and in ground water under 1%, whereas according to the OECD 301F standard concentrations (BOD2s), it was ca 8%. For the determination of total element concentrations in the paper mill sludge, the dried sample was digested using USEPA method 3052. A five-stage sequential leaching procedure was also used to fractionate trace elements in the paper mill sludge between the water-soluble (H2O), exchangeable (CH3COOH), easily reduced (HONH3Cl), oxidizable (H2O2+CH3COONH4), and (5) the residual (HF+HNO3+HCl) fractions. This paper covers also examples of case studies how paper mill sludge is utilized in Finland. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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7. Peer work in Open Dialogue: A discussion paper.
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Bellingham, Brett, Buus, Niels, McCloughen, Andrea, Dawson, Lisa, Schweizer, Richard, Mikes‐Liu, Kristof, Peetz, Amy, Boydell, Katherine, and River, Jo
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HOSPITAL health promotion programs , *INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *MENTAL health services , *PEER counseling , *SOCIAL networks , *CLIENT relations , *SOCIAL support , *PATIENT-centered care - Abstract
Abstract: Open Dialogue is a resource‐oriented approach to mental health care that originated in Finland. As Open Dialogue has been adopted across diverse international healthcare settings, it has been adapted according to contextual factors. One important development in Open Dialogue has been the incorporation of paid, formal peer work. Peer work draws on the knowledge and wisdom gained through lived experience of distress and hardship to establish mutual, reciprocal, and supportive relationships with service users. As Open Dialogue is now being implemented across mental health services in Australia, stakeholders are beginning to consider the role that peer workers might have in this model of care. Open Dialogue was not, initially, conceived to include a specific role for peers, and there is little available literature, and even less empirical research, in this area. This discussion paper aims to surface some of the current debates and ideas about peer work in Open Dialogue. Examples and models of peer work in Open Dialogue are examined, and the potential benefits and challenges of adopting this approach in health services are discussed. Peer work in Open Dialogue could potentially foster democracy and disrupt clinical hierarchies, but could also move peer work from reciprocal to a less symmetrical relationship of ‘giver’ and ‘receiver’ of care. Other models of care, such as lived experience practitioners in Open Dialogue, can be conceived. However, it remains uncertain whether the hierarchical structures in healthcare and current models of funding would support any such models. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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8. A case study of waste management at the Northern Finnish pulp and paper mill complex of Stora Enso Veitsiluoto Mills
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Nurmesniemi, Hannu, Pöykiö, Risto, and Keiski, Riitta Liisa
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WASTE management , *PAPER mills , *WOOD waste - Abstract
This work presents the current waste management system at the pulp and paper mill complex of Stora Enso Oyj Veitsiluoto Mills at Kemi, Northern Finland. This paper covers examples of case studies carried out at the mill and describes how the wastes and by-products are utilized as a neutralizing agent for acidic wastewaters (i.e., green liquor dregs from the causticizing process), as a hardener in filling mine cavities (i.e., ash from the fluidized bed boiler), as a landscaping agent (i.e., ash as well as the fibre clay from chemical wastewater treatment plant), as a hydraulic barrier material for landfills (i.e., fibre clay), and as a soil enrichment agent (i.e., calcium carbonate from the precipitated calcium carbonate plant). In addition, the wood waste from the wood-handling plant, sawmill, packaging pallet plant and from the groundwood mill, as well as the biosludge from the biological wastewater treatment plant, are all incinerated in the fluidized bed boiler for energy production. Due to effective utilization of the solid wastes generated at the mills, the annual amount of waste to be disposed of in the landfill has decreased between 1994 and 2004 from 42,990 to 6083tonn (expressed as wet weight). The paper also gives an overview of the relevant European Union legislation on the forest industry and on waste management, as well as of the pulping process and of the generation of major solid wastes in the pulp and paper mills. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2007
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9. Laser Optoacoustic Measurement of Paper Porosity.
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Karabutov, A. A., Pelivanov, I. M., and Podymova, N. B.
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POROSITY , *PAPER , *PHOTOACOUSTIC spectroscopy , *PERMEABILITY , *COMPUTER printers - Abstract
The propagation of broadband ultrasonic pulses in combined media that consist of printing paper of different porosity saturated with different liquids is studied. The experiments are performed with three types of paper, namely, Zoom Ultra (Stora Enso, Finland) with surface densities of 80 and 100g/m2 and Data Copy (Mo Do, Sweden) with a surface density of 160g/cm2, and with two types of saturating liquids: ethanol and transformer oil. To excite ultrasonic pulses and to detect them with a high time resolution, the laser optoacoustic spectroscopy method is used. For each type of liquid-saturated paper, the phase velocity of ultrasound is measured in the frequency range of 5–35 MHz. The absence of any noticeable frequency dispersion of the phase velocity is revealed. The possibility of measuring the porosity of printing paper on the basis of the theoretical model of a two-phase medium with the use of the corresponding experimental data is demonstrated. © 2005 Pleiades Publishing, Inc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
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10. Effects of Composted Pulp and Paper Industry Wastewater Treatment Residuals on Soil Properties And Cereal Yield.
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Sippola, Jouko, Makela-Kurtto, Ritva, and Rantala, Pirjo-Riitta
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PAPER industry , *PULP mills , *WASTEWATER treatment , *COMPOSTING , *SOILS , *CEREAL products , *INDUSTRIAL wastes , *AGRICULTURAL productivity , *CROP yields - Abstract
Presents a study that investigated the effects of pulp and paper industry wastewater treatment sludge composts on soil and cereal crops in Finland. Chemical characteristics of composts prepared using forest industry sludges and limit values for soil improvers used in agriculture; Details of crop yield and nutrient intake of compost.
- Published
- 2003
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11. Holistic Performance-Based Fire Design of Steel Structures—Case Study: Sports Hall.
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Jokinen, Timo, Ranua, Risto, and Salminen, Mikko
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PERFORMANCE-based design , *STEEL walls , *STEEL , *FINITE element method , *STEEL framing , *STEEL analysis - Abstract
This paper presents the performance-based fire safety analysis of steel structures of padel-center built in Nokia, Finland. The analyses are conducted using advanced calculation models (fire simulations using Fire Dynamics Simulator, FDS, and finite element method, FEM, based analyses of the steel frames in elevated temperatures using SAFIR software, including joint analysis) in support with less sophisticated models (critical temperatures of steel members). The following localized fire scenarios are studied: lounge area furniture fire (4 sofas), sporting equipment fire (10 sporting bags filled with flammable clothing), fire during maintenance (scissor lift fire with miscellaneous temporary fire load) and a fire on HVAC balcony near the trusses. The aim of the paper is showcase recent developments in design processes and methods that are in practical use today in performance-based fire design (PBD), to demonstrate that relatively extensive performance-based studies can be (commercially) viable also in relatively small and mundane steel buildings, and to present a fairly robust framework for PBD of similar steel structures. As a result of the performance-based design, most of the steel structures in the case building could be constructed without fire protection, but some critical structures were identified and protected to class R30. The proposed design was approved by the local municipal authorities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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12. Framework to Incorporate Sprinkler System in Structural Fire Engineering.
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Salminen, Mikko, Malaska, Mikko, Jokinen, Timo, and Ranua, Risto
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SPRINKLERS , *FIRE protection engineering , *STRUCTURAL engineering , *STRUCTURAL engineers , *FIRE prevention - Abstract
Sprinkler system can be very reliable and effective way to reduce fire risks in buildings if maintained properly. When the sprinkler system operates as designed, the temperatures affecting the load-bearing structures are often relatively low and the structural resistance is typically not compromised. Holistic Structural Fire Engineering (SFE) provides an opportunity to take active systems, like sprinklers, into account in the design. However, it is important to ensure that if the sprinkler system does not operate as designed, the consequences are still tolerable. Even though there are options to account sprinkler system in SFE, there is a lack of consistent guideline (at least in Finland). This can lead to totally different structural fire design and safety in similar buildings, depending on the interpretation and assumptions made. This paper presents a framework to take the effect of the sprinkler system consistently into account in SFE. The framework is based on Finland's fire regulations and on experience of multiple projects. Two case-examples, where this framework has been applied are presented in the paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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13. Recent Trends of Practical Theology in Finland: The Research Field of Practical Theology and Religious Education from the Perspective of Paradigms and the Operating Environment in the First Decades of the 21st Century at the University of Helsinki
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Räsänen, Antti and Knuutila, Jyrki
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RELIGIOUS education , *LITERATURE reviews , *TWENTY-first century , *POLITICAL doctrines , *PRACTICAL theology - Abstract
This paper explores historical and recent developments in Finnish Practical Theology and Religious Education. It reconstructs the operating environment under which PT and RE exist in Finland, i. e. its political, economic, and cultural circumstances. To this end, the authors highlight developments such as the transition from a rural-centric to an urban society, the impact of political left-wing ideology, and the impact of Finland's joining the European Union. Through an analysis of dissertation research at Helsinki University, the paper provides an overview of current topics of research in Finnish PT. The authors concluds with insights into likely future developments in the 21st century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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14. Inequitable discourses on refugee students resisted and maintained by educators – the perspective of decontextualisation.
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Petäjäniemi, Maria, Kaukko, M., and Haswell, N.
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EDUCATORS , *REFUGEES , *ANTI-racism education , *PEER relations , *TEACHER educators , *RACISM in language , *LEARNING readiness - Abstract
This paper examines discourses that place refugee students in an inequitable position in school. Focussing on decontextualisation – a depoliticising way of seeing education that overlooks contexts – the paper is based on semi-structured interviews with teachers (
n = 15) and open questions of a survey data (n = 267) collected from teachers, principals and teacher assistants at the end of 2022 in Finland. After analysing discourses, we found that educators both resisted and maintained the discourse of valuing skills in terms of the starting points/readiness of refugee students and in language hierarchies; the discourse of normality in inclusivity and in behaviour; the discourse of silence in antiracism education for teachers and in addressing racism in students’ peer relations. The paper concludes that decontextualisation is grounded in everyday schooling and fails to recognise the differing intersecting positions and contexts that create inequitable possibilities for different people in society. This paper calls for a continuous systematic effort of antiracism education at all levels, as well as curricular structures that support schools in understanding contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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15. A Snow Water Equivalent Retrieval Framework Coupling 1D Hydrology and Passive Microwave Radiative Transfer Models.
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Cao, Yuanhao, Luo, Chunzeng, Tan, Shurun, Kang, Do-Hyuk, Fang, Yiwen, and Pan, Jinmei
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MICROWAVE remote sensing , *RADIATIVE transfer , *STANDARD deviations , *SNOW accumulation , *HYDROLOGY , *MICROWAVE scattering - Abstract
The retrieval of continuous snow water equivalent (SWE) directly from passive microwave observations is hampered by ambiguity, which can potentially be mitigated by incorporating knowledge on snow hydrological processes. In this paper, we present a data assimilation (DA)-based SWE retrieval framework coupling the QCA-Mie scattering (DMRT-QMS) model (a dense medium radiative transfer (RT) microwave scattering model) and a one-dimensional column-based multiple-layer snow hydrology model. The snow hydrology model provides realistic estimates of the snowpack physical parameters required to drive the DMRT-QMS model. This paper devises a strategy to specify those internal parameters in the snow hydrology and RT models that lack observational records. The modeled snow depth is updated by assimilating brightness temperatures (Tbs) from the X, Ku, and Ka bands using an ensemble Kalman filter (EnKF). The updated snow depth is then used to predict the SWE. The proposed framework was tested using the European Space Agency's Nordic Snow Radar Experiment (ESA NoSREx) dataset for a snow field experiment from 2009 to 2012 in Sodankylä, Finland. The achieved SWE retrieval root mean square error of 34.31 mm meets the requirements of NASA and ESA snow missions and is about 70% less than the open-loop SWE. In summary, this paper introduces a novel SWE retrieval framework that leverages the combined strengths of a snow hydrology model and a radiative transfer model. This approach ensures physically realistic retrievals of snow depth and SWE. We investigated the impact of various factors on the framework's performance, including observation time intervals and combinations of microwave observation channels. Our results demonstrate that a one-week observation interval achieves acceptable retrieval accuracy. Furthermore, the use of multi-channel and multi-polarization Tbs is preferred for optimal SWE retrieval performance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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16. Exploring access-based consumption in last-mile logistics: a customer foresight study.
- Author
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Komonen, Pauli
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THIRD-party logistics , *CONSUMER behavior , *CONSUMERS , *YOUNG consumers , *TECHNOLOGICAL innovations , *MIDDLE age , *TECHNOLOGICAL progress - Abstract
Purpose: Due to e-commerce growth, technological advancements and environmental concerns, developing a more nuanced service portfolio has become a critical issue for last-mile logistics service providers. Concurrently, consumers are adopting new modes of consumption. This paper aims to investigate the potential for last-mile logistics service providers to act as intermediaries in access-based consumption and to revitalise their service offerings through product-service systems – a pioneering strategy not executed in the market yet. Design/methodology/approach: This strategic customer foresight study uses a quantitative survey of 1,000 respondents and an online focus group comprising 10 early adopter consumers to investigate emerging last-mile service models. Potential service concepts were identified through the survey, and two distinct concepts were subsequently selected for evaluation and co-development within the focus group. The research was conducted in partnership with an SME logistics company in Finland. Findings: The consumers expressed selective interest in access-based consumption related to the proposed offering of essential household goods. Young adults and consumers in early middle age living in the city centre emerged as the most potential user groups. Economic reasons and short-term needs were the primary motivations for adopting access-based consumption. Practical implications: The study showed that engaging consumers in a customer foresight process is viable for SMEs innovating their offerings and demonstrates how the process works in practice. Originality/value: Documented cases of customer integration into foresight processes are rare in earlier research, and this paper extends the knowledge base through a multidisciplinary examination of future consumer behaviour in the last-mile logistics domain. The paper also expands the limited literature on the role of logistics in access-based consumption. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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17. Implications of regulation based on the IPPC directive – A review on the Finnish pulp and paper industry
- Author
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Silvo, Kimmo, Jouttijärvi, Timo, and Melanen, Matti
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ENVIRONMENTAL permits , *PULP mills , *PAPER mills , *INDUSTRY & the environment , *INDUSTRIAL contamination , *TRADE regulation , *PAPER industry - Abstract
Abstract: This article evaluates the impacts of integrated environmental permits on the environmental performance of Finnish pulp and paper industry. It assesses the performance of the Finnish pulp and paper mills in relation to the EU best available techniques (BAT) associated emission levels and compares the emission limit values and product specific emissions of the mills with non-integrated permits to those of the mills with new integrated permits. A set of practical indicators for the assessment of BAT, local conditions and transboundary effects is presented and discussed. Moreover, the paper highlights some significant cross-media aspects in the Finnish pulp and paper industry. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2009
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18. Hilja Pärssinen and the religious grounds for socialist welfare in early twentieth-century Finland.
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Kemppainen, Mikko
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LUTHERAN Church , *MATERNITY leave , *EVANGELICAL churches , *COMPULSORY education , *SCHOOL food - Abstract
The schoolteacher and poet Hilja Pärssinen (1876–1935) was the most influential and internationally best-known female socialist in Finland before the Finnish Civil War (1918). She was a member of the Finnish Parliament, the leader of the Finnish Social Democratic Women’s Movement, and the most prominent ideologue of the Finnish Social Democratic Party’s (SDP) welfare programme. For instance, Pärssinen promoted paid maternity leave, public daycare, legalised abortion, and compulsory education with free meals and school supplies.Historians have acknowledged Pärssinen’s leading role as the architect of Finnish socialist welfare, but also pointed out that she was an aggressive opponent of the Evangelical Lutheran church. However, the studies have mainly failed to note that instead of rejecting religion itself, Pärssinen claimed all the reforms demanded by socialists were based on Christianity. Finnish scholars have argued—mainly based on writings by the party male elite—that the SDP rejected religion and adopted secular/antireligious ideology at the beginning of the twentieth century. I argue that this paradigm is based on an oversimplified and gendered interpretation. This paper will show that shifting the perspective from male socialist leaders to female ideologues can change and widen the comprehension of the history of socialism drastically. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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19. Olof Svart's Two Manors: Career and Ostentation in Early Sixteenth-Century Sweden and Finland.
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Salminen, Tapio and Rundkvist, Martin
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SIXTEENTH century , *CAREER changes , *KINGS & rulers , *MAPS , *CULTURAL landscapes - Abstract
This paper focuses on two manors, Kumo in Finland and Duvnäs in Sweden, through early sixteenth-century written sources and material remains. Both were, one after the other, in the custody of Olof Svart (obiit 1547), who was one of Gustav I's earliest administrators. Through a combination of historical and archaeological methods, including map studies, a successful career in the service of Sweden's first Early Modern king is traced and placed in the cultural landscape. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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20. The rationalities of strategic planning: a structural analysis of the legitimacy basis of MAL policy.
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Mattila, Hanna, Vatilo, Matti, and Jalasto, Petri
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STRATEGIC planning , *URBAN transportation , *INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) , *INFRASTRUCTURE funds , *FEDERAL government - Abstract
Due to the minimal role of statutory city-regional planning in Finland, the Finnish state promotes inter-municipal, integrated planning of land-use, housing and transportation in the biggest city regions by a strategic planning instrument and a contractual policy tool called MAL procedure. MAL procedure includes MAL agreements, where the central government agrees to fund transportation infrastructure, while the municipalities in the city-regions commit to certain planning principles. MAL policy has advanced sustainability goals in planning, but it has also been argued to be prone to legitimacy problems as MAL negotiations take place behind the backs of citizens. The article discusses the structure of the MAL policy, assessing the ways in which this structure supports the legitimacy of the policy. It focuses on the interplay of strategic and communicative rationalities in the MAL procedure, starting from the observation that the theorists of strategic planning have focused predominately on communicative rationality as the legitimacy basis of planning. This paper aims to show that from a broader, structural perspective, both rationalities – and the way in which they interact – have a role in maintaining the legitimacy of planning. The article builds on theoretical studies and interviews with actors engaged in the MAL procedure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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21. Exploring belonging in the documentary inclusief [inclusive] as a matter of care.
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Vandenbussche, Hanne, Van Hove, Geert, Claes, Claudia, and De Schauwer, Elisabeth
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HUMANITY , *STUDENTS with disabilities , *MAINSTREAMING in special education , *SOCIAL integration , *EXPERIENCE , *STORYTELLING , *STUDENT attitudes , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *MOTION pictures , *TEACHER-student relationships , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors - Abstract
In this article we study the concept of 'belonging' within the context of inclusive education. We see inclusion and belonging as two entangled concepts and focus on inclusion as an ethical process. We do this by analyzing the Flemish documentary Inclusief [Inclusive] to investigate the idea of belonging as building and finding roots. As a method we carry out a close reading of two episodes of the documentary and plug in theory to gain a deeper sense about the meaning of belonging in two students' life stories. In our writing process these fragments become tangible. Through the stories, we see how belonging emerges. We come to understand belonging in inclusive education as connected to the dynamic interplay with the context; listening with care; and radical relationality. By combining these elements schools can invest in becoming inclusive communities of care, and contribute to every student having a feeling of belonging. This paper explores the relation between inclusion in educational contexts and the sense of belonging of disabled students. The authors argue for a system approach to aim for inclusion instead of through case-by-case assessment. Through close reading of two episodes of the Flemish documentary Inclusief, the authors find that belonging is enhanced through the teachers' careful attention to the students' relations with each other. The authors state that creating space to enhance every student's belonging is carried out through listening with care and being open to many connections between the student and others. The interplay with the environment proves very important to stimulate a sense of belonging with every student. The authors argue that caring communities arise through close connections. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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22. Feeling Poor and Lonely: The Felt Experiences of Low-Income Working Lone Mothers in Finland.
- Author
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Säilävaara, Jenny, Ikonen, Hanna-Mari, and Jakonen, Mikko
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WORK , *QUALITATIVE research , *RESEARCH funding , *CONTENT analysis , *ATTITUDES of mothers , *LONELINESS , *WORKING mothers , *GUILT (Psychology) , *DESPAIR , *SOCIAL support , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *POVERTY , *EXPERIENTIAL learning - Abstract
This article analyzes the current feelings of Finnish low-income working lone mothers and their views on what it means to be poor in the welfare state of Finland. This is done by analyzing written accounts of lone mothers through a qualitative content analysis. The data was collected in 2015 and 2021. The analysis reveals that mothers' feelings of poverty have similarities to those described in data collected in a different context over 20 years ago. The article is inspired by an article published in Affilia in the year 2003 by Lynn McIntyre, Suzanne Officer, and Lynne M. Robinson. In their paper, McIntyre et al. analyzed the feelings of poor Canadian lone mothers. While the welfare regime and services influence how life is organized, it is evident that self-sacrifice for the children caused by poverty is very much a part of the written accounts of Finnish mothers. We show that while there are a few cultural differences in the feelings that lone mothers undergo on account of their low-income status, feelings such as loneliness are persistent and often shared regardless of time or geographical location. Therefore, we suggest that low-income mothers should be given greater support by society and governments to be able to feel hopeful and empowered rather than poor and alone. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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23. Comparison of the forest fertilizer properties of ash fractions from two power plants of pulp and paper mills incinerating biomass-based fuels
- Author
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Nurmesniemi, Hannu, Mäkelä, Mikko, Pöykiö, Risto, Manskinen, Kati, and Dahl, Olli
- Subjects
- *
FERTILIZERS , *FLY ash , *PAPER mills , *PLANT biomass , *BIOMASS energy , *POWER plants - Abstract
Abstract: In Finland, the new Decree on fertilizer products came into force on 13 September 2011. In this study, the forest fertilizer properties of bottom and fly ash fractions from two large-sized (246MW and 296MW) power plants of pulp and paper mills incinerating biomass-based fuels (i.e. peat, bark, woodchips and sawdust) were investigated. The concentrations of heavy metals (As, Cd, Cr, Cu, Hg, Pb, Ni and Zn) in the bottom ashes and fly ashes were clearly lower that their current Finnish limit values, and therefore, these residues are potential forest fertilizers. However, the Ca concentration in the bottom ash from a 246MW power plant and the sum of phosphorous and potassium concentrations (P+K) in all ash fractions did not meet the requirements of the current limit values. In this study, we present the current and previous Finnish limit values for ash used as a forest fertilizer. We also present the literature values of nutrient and heavy metal concentrations in the Finnish biomass-based ashes reported by the Finnish Food Safety Authority Evira, which registers and controls power plants that produce ash for use as fertilizer. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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24. Privatization in competitive environment: Evidence from Finland's manufacturing sector.
- Author
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Lähdemäki, Sakari
- Subjects
- *
PRIVATIZATION , *MANUFACTURING industries , *CONTROL groups - Abstract
This paper studies the effects of privatization on establishments/plants operating in Finland's manufacturing sector during 1988-2012, concentrating on operational efficiency (sales/ employment). Finland's privatizations allow considering a quasi-experimental design. Therefore, the paper utilizes standard and generalized event-study designs using a control group matched from similar private establishments. Additionally to the event where state ownership drops below 50 percent, the paper studies whether any reductions in state share affect productivity. The results suggest that privatization increases productivity due to a decrease in employment. • Privatization seems to have increased the productivity of manufacturing establishments in Finland. • The generalized event study approach suggests that clear reductions in state share raise productivity. • Productivity seems to rise because employment has decreased after privatization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. From intensive car-parenting to enabling childhood velonomy? Explaining parents' representations of children's leisure mobilities.
- Author
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Silonsaari, Jonne, Simula, Mikko, and te Brömmelstroet, Marco
- Subjects
- *
PARENTS , *PARENTING , *CRITICAL discourse analysis , *LEISURE , *WESTERN civilization - Abstract
Intensive parenting has become a key term for analysing the pressures and priorities of contemporary western parenting culture. For mobility studies it provides a discursive framework for understanding why children's leisure has shifted from free play and mobility towards various adult-led organised activities and why parents deem it necessary to control children's leisure journeys in an unprecedented manner. Most of the research on parenting and mobility has explained these trends with urban risks and safeguarding, but this paper highlights how parents also control, manage and enable children's mobility to resource and enrich them with various dispositions. We use children's mobility experiments and parents' interviews to explain two contrasting representations of children's mobility—intensive car-parenting and childhood velonomy—in a local community in Finland. The paper sheds new light on how community and place shape parents' notions of parenting, childhood and mobility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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26. Geography tests in the Finnish Matriculation Examination in paper and digital forms – An analysis of questions based on revised Bloom's taxonomy.
- Author
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Virranmäki, Eerika, Valta-Hulkkonen, Kirsi, and Pellikka, Anne
- Subjects
- *
BLOOM'S taxonomy , *ELECTRONIC paper , *PHYLOGEOGRAPHY , *GEOGRAPHY , *SCHOOL enrollment , *CONTENT analysis - Abstract
• Using revised bloom's taxonomy as a analysing framework for assessment of geography. • The cognitive processes of understanding, analysing and remembering are emphasised. • Conceptual and factual geographical knowledge is valued. • Minor differences between the paper-based and the digital forms of the tests. • Need for dialogue between institutions of the knowledge and skills assessed. This study examines the possible change in cognitive processes and geographical knowledge requirements during the digitalisation process of the Finnish Matriculation Examination in Geography (digitalised in the autumn of 2016). The theoretical background is derived from revised Bloom's taxonomy, which is applied as a framework for the content analysis of the questions (n = 331) of the geography tests between the autumn of 2013 and the spring of 2019. The results show that the questions mainly require an understanding of conceptual and factual knowledge. Because of the digitalisation, questions that require remembering have been reduced, whereas questions that require analysing have been increased. In addition, more comprehensive use and more extensive production of materials are required in the tests. Based on our research findings, we emphasise the need for a careful re-evaluation of the kind of cognitive processes and knowledge that should be assessed in geography tests, both nationally and internationally. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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27. Distributed pedagogical leadership practice for sustainable pedagogical improvement: A literature review (2010–2023)
- Author
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Okiri, Peter Ochieng and Hercz, Mária
- Subjects
- *
LITERATURE reviews , *SUSTAINABILITY , *EDUCATIONAL leadership , *LEADERSHIP , *EDUCATIONAL quality , *RESEARCH personnel - Abstract
Leadership from a distributed pedagogical perspective involves engaging multiple professionals in implementing shared responsibilities. In educational organizations, leadership responsibility structures have changed, with researchers advancing a more decentralized leadership system for sustainable pedagogical improvement. These global changes in education systems have informed the demand for sustainable quality teaching, the desire for 21st‐century learning skills, and rapid progress in education. As a result, traditional individual ‘heroic leadership’ is no longer tenable in any learning environment that intends to achieve quality pedagogical outcomes. Therefore, this narrative review paper aims to examine the essence of distributing pedagogical leadership responsibilities among multiple professionals to understand how the concept is perceived in diverse educational contexts and settings. This study reviewed relevant empirical research studies conducted to investigate the concept of distributed pedagogical leadership in Finland, Norway and Singapore. The findings revealed some gaps that informed our understanding of the concept and recommended further research studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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28. The remarkable stability of social housing in Vienna and Helsinki: a multi-dimensional analysis.
- Author
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Kadi, Justin and Lilius, Johanna
- Subjects
- *
HOUSING , *HOUSING research , *PRIVATIZATION - Abstract
The supply of social housing has been marked by erosion and decline in most Western Europe countries since the 1990s, albeit with considerable variation in timing, speed and degree. Recently, it has been suggested that the sector has kept a more prominent position at the local level, at least in some cities. This paper scrutinizes this claim by comparing the development of social housing in two cities in two distinct national housing systems that have traditionally had a strong commitment to social housing: Vienna and Helsinki. To do so, we build a multi-dimensional framework that encompasses sector size, stock privatization, new housing production, and residualization. We empirically demonstrate a remarkable stability along these dimensions in both cases, albeit with some differences in degree. A number of factors need to be considered to explain this stability. They relate to aspects of institutional design of the social housing systems, as well as to continuity in policies at national and local levels. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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29. Does sustainability really start with teachers? Reflections on integrating environmental education in pre-service teacher education in Namibia and Finland.
- Author
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Saari, Maria Helena, Poulton-Busler, Richardine, and Vladimirova, Anna
- Subjects
- *
TEACHER education , *TEACHER educators , *ENVIRONMENTAL education , *TEACHERS , *CLIMATE change - Abstract
AbstractIn this paper, we explore some of the challenges and opportunities of integrating environmental education in pre-service teacher education in Sub-Saharan Africa and the Arctic. Case examples from teacher education programs in Namibia and Finland set the scene for a critical analysis of environmental education in teacher training from these two distinct contexts. We begin with an overview of the current situation of environmental education in pre-service teacher education in Namibia and Finland, followed by a reflection on the courses we have developed at our respective higher education institutions. In response to the urgency of education to attend to the escalating climate crisis, through lessons learned from our environmental education courses and our collaboration on co-designing teacher education, we explore whether sustainability really does start with teachers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Carbon neutrality in the Finnish energy sector: prospects for a fossil‐fuel phase out.
- Author
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Proskurina, Svetlana
- Subjects
- *
ENERGY industries , *RENEWABLE energy sources , *ALTERNATIVE fuels , *ENERGY development , *FOREST biomass , *CARBON offsetting , *WIND power - Abstract
The Finnish government has set a target of reaching carbon neutrality by 2035 and renewable energy is playing an increasingly important role in the Finnish energy sector. Bioenergy from forest biomass is currently the most utilized renewable energy resource. European Union regulations are imposing limitations on the use of forest biomass for environmental reasons, however, and the energy sector is having to look for alternative renewable energy options to reach carbon neutrality. This paper reviews the latest changes in the energy industry in Finland and evaluates prospective renewable energy development and fossil fuel replacement in the future Finnish energy system. The study shows that only a combination of all available renewable energy forms can enable the carbon neutrality target to be achieved by 2035. There is a good possibility that Finland can replace fossil fuels fully in the energy sector; wind energy will increase its share of electricity production, and biomass will continue to play a crucial role in the heating sector. Industry and the transport sector, however, face greater challenges and should be studied in more detail. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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31. Weather-Based Prediction of Power Consumption in District Heating Network: Case Study in Finland.
- Author
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Vakhnin, Aleksei, Ryzhikov, Ivan, Brester, Christina, Niska, Harri, and Kolehmainen, Mikko
- Subjects
- *
HEATING from central stations , *MACHINE learning , *FEATURE selection , *EVOLUTIONARY algorithms , *DIFFERENTIAL evolution , *PLANT capacity , *GENETIC algorithms , *HEAT losses , *ENERGY consumption - Abstract
Accurate prediction of energy consumption in district heating systems plays an important role in supporting effective and clean energy production and distribution in dense urban areas. Predictive models are needed for flexible and cost-effective operation of energy production and usage, e.g., using peak shaving or load shifting to compensate for heat losses in the pipeline. This helps to avoid exceedance of power plant capacity. The purpose of this study is to automate the process of building machine learning (ML) models to solve a short-term power demand prediction problem. The dataset contains a district heating network's measured hourly power consumption and ambient temperature for 415 days. In this paper, we propose a hybrid evolutionary-based algorithm, named GA-SHADE, for the simultaneous optimization of ML models and feature selection. The GA-SHADE algorithm is a hybrid algorithm consisting of a Genetic Algorithm (GA) and success-history-based parameter adaptation for differential evolution (SHADE). The results of the numerical experiments show that the proposed GA-SHADE algorithm allows the identification of simplified ML models with good prediction performance in terms of the optimized feature subset and model hyperparameters. The main contributions of the study are (1) using the proposed GA-SHADE, ML models with varying numbers of features and performance are obtained. (2) The proposed GA-SHADE algorithm self-adapts during operation and has only one control parameter. There is no fine-tuning required before execution. (3) Due to the evolutionary nature of the algorithm, it is not sensitive to the number of features and hyperparameters to be optimized in ML models. In conclusion, this study confirms that each optimized ML model uses a unique set and number of features. Out of the six ML models considered, SVR and NN are better candidates and have demonstrated the best performance across several metrics. All numerical experiments were compared against the measurements and proven by the standard statistical tests. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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32. Are private investors overcompensated in infrastructure projects?
- Author
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Spohr, Jonas, Wikström, Kim, Ronikonmäki, Niko-Matti, Lepech, Michael, and In, Soh Young
- Subjects
- *
INDIVIDUAL investors , *INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) , *INVESTORS , *CAPITAL costs , *CREDIT ratings , *INVESTOR confidence , *TIME series analysis - Abstract
Private sector engagement in infrastructure procurement and ownership can have benefits for both investors and society. However, a significant challenge for authorities is determining when private sector participation provides value for money. Private investors may demand high returns on their investments even in projects with seemingly low risks. Governments with good credit ratings and access to lower cost capital may view private investors overprice in comparison to the level of risk they take. This paper examines whether the financing premiums (in addition to the cost of state financing) of four public-private partnership road projects in Finland are reasonable relative to the risks borne by private partners, using long time series of actual data. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to mostly use actual ex-post data on project costs over an extended period to evaluate whether the government overpays private investors. Our analysis indicates that the financing cost of the four projects is on average 201 basis points higher than the financing cost the government pays on its debt. We conclude that this premium is reasonable compensation for the risk the private investors bear in the projects. This finding has implications for selecting the most effective procurement policy for road projects. • We use long time series of actual financial data from PPPs to calculate the financing cost of PPPs. • We conclude that the extra financing cost of the PPPs is a justified compensation for the risk transfer. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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33. Fragile but resilient? Democratic consolidation in The Irish Free State.
- Author
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Girvin, Brian
- Subjects
- *
DEMOCRATIZATION , *DEMOCRACY , *CRISES , *WEATHERING , *SHARING - Abstract
Democratic institutions were seriously challenged across Europe between 1917 and 1939. In 1920, most European states were parliamentary democracies, by 1939 the majority had become authoritarian. However, some states weathered the crises they faced and successfully maintained democracy. There is a significant literature on democratic breakdown, but considerable attention has now been given to those that survived. This paper revisits the question of democratic survival by focussing on the Irish Free State and its experience when compared with other European states. It argues that while the Irish Free State was fragile in a comparative context, sharing many of the challenges associated with breakdown, it also showed considerable resilience. Various factors associated with survival and breakdown are critically assessed to explain the positive Irish outcome. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Hypes and the birth of new sustainable market categories – a socio-cultural perspective on the emergence of the meat substitute category in Finland.
- Author
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Vaskelainen, Taneli, Siltaoja, Marjo, and Hoskonen, Hilla
- Subjects
- *
MEAT alternatives , *EVIDENCE gaps , *PANEL analysis , *TOFU - Abstract
Hypes can be a significant contributor in the mainstreaming of sustainable products. Former research on hypes has been supplier oriented, and thus little is known of their effect on new market formation. Our paper contributes to this research gap by examining the establishment of the 'meat substitute' category in Finland using press articles, retailer interviews and consumer panel data. We show how the emergence and legitimation of the meat substitute category depended heavily on the hype arising around a single product, called Pulled Oats (PO). This hype was anchored in its association with trendy and socio-culturally relevant values and practices. We further discover that the hype had positive spill-over effects on other novel meat substitute products but not on longstanding vegetarian protein sources such as tofu or tempeh. We discuss the contribution of these findings to the literature on hypes and sustainability transitions, especially regarding socially constructed market boundaries and the fact that the hype on PO lacked a disappointment phase typical of hype cycles. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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35. From big apple to home of hockey: how scalar narratives and performative practices work in urban planning.
- Author
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Leino, Helena
- Subjects
- *
URBAN planning , *URBAN growth , *HOCKEY , *PUBLIC support , *CHANGE agents , *URBAN plants - Abstract
Drawing from a case study in Finland, the paper analyses the performative practice of urban development projects in order to win public support for the desired future. The role of famous architects as agents of urban change is pivotal. This raises the concern of how the performative trend in planning cuts down the public discussion of possible alternative futures. The analysis uses the concept techniques of futuring and follows the repetition of performative action. It is relevant to ask if the role of the public is to engage in the story presented instead of engaging in the planning process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Interventions to support nurses as second victims of patient safety incidents: A qualitative study of nurse managers' perceptions.
- Author
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Järvisalo, Paula, Haatainen, Kaisa, Von Bonsdorff, Monika, Turunen, Hannele, and Härkänen, Marja
- Subjects
- *
MANAGEMENT styles , *NURSES , *NURSE administrators , *VICTIM psychology , *PATIENT safety , *QUALITATIVE research , *OCCUPATIONAL roles , *HOSPITAL nursing staff , *INTERVIEWING , *CONTENT analysis , *RISK management in business , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *JUDGMENT sampling , *THEMATIC analysis , *ATTITUDES of medical personnel , *ADVERSE health care events , *SOCIAL support , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *MEDICAL incident reports - Abstract
Aims: To describe nurse managers' perceptions of interventions to support nurses as second victims of patient safety incidents and to describe the management of interventions and ways to improve them. Design: A qualitative study using interviews. Methods: A purposive sample of nurse managers (n = 16) recruited from three hospital districts in Finland was interviewed in 2021. The data were analysed using elements of inductive and deductive content analysis. Results: The study identified three main categories: (1) Management of second victim support, which contained three sub‐categories related to the nurse manager's role, support received by the nurse manager and challenges of support management; (2) interventions to support second victims included existing interventions and operating models; and (3) improving second victim support, based on the sub‐categories developing practices and developing an open and non‐blaming patient safety culture. Conclusion: Nurse managers play a crucial role in supporting nurses as second victims of patient safety incidents and coordinating additional support. Operating models for managing interventions could facilitate nurse managers' work and ensure adequate support for second victims. The support could be improved by increasing the awareness of the second victim phenomenon. Implications for the Profession and Patient Care: Mitigating the harmful effects of patient safety incidents can improve nurses' well‐being, reduce burden and attrition risks and positively impact patient safety. Impact: Increasing awareness of the second victim phenomenon and coherent operation models would provide equal support for the nurses and facilitate nurse managers' work. Reporting Method: COREQ checklist was used. What does this paper contribute to the wider global clinical community? Nurse managers' role is significant in supporting the second victims and coordinating additional support.Awareness of the second victim phenomenon and coherent operating models can secure adequate support for the nurses and facilitate nurse managers' work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Am I a math person? Linking math identity with students' motivation for mathematics and achievement.
- Author
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Radišić, Jelena, Krstić, Ksenija, Blažanin, Barbara, Mićić, Katarina, Baucal, Aleksandar, Peixoto, Francisco, and Schukajlow, Stanislaw
- Subjects
- *
ACADEMIC motivation , *EXPECTANCY-value theory , *MATHEMATICS students , *ACHIEVEMENT motivation , *MATHEMATICS , *SCHOOL children - Abstract
Based on the expectancy-value perspective on identity and identity formation, this paper explores the relationship between math identity (MI) and the dimensions of motivation (i.e. intrinsic value, attainment value, utility value and perceived competence) and math achievement in primary school. An additional aim of our research was to explore these relationships in different cultural contexts and investigate potential gender and grade differences concerning MI. The participants were 11,782 primary school students from Norway, Sweden, Estonia, Finland, Portugal and Serbia. All predictors from the motivation spectrum were significant for students' MI across the examined countries and had a stronger association with MI than math achievement. Among the motivational dimensions, intrinsic value had the strongest association with students' MI. Boys had significantly more positive math identities than girls in Estonia, Finland, Norway and Portugal. The results showed that the grade 4 students perceived themselves less as "math persons" than their grade 3 peers in all countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Children with palliative care needs – the landscape of the nordic countries.
- Author
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Winger, Anette, Holmen, Heidi, Birgisdóttir, Dröfn, Lykke, Camilla, Lövgren, Malin, Neergaard, Mette Asbjoern, Grönroos, Marika, Kero, Johanna, Kristinsdóttir, Oddný, Pétursdóttir, Ásta Bjarney, and Castor, Charlotte
- Subjects
- *
PALLIATIVE treatment , *DEMOGRAPHIC characteristics , *PEDIATRICS , *NEEDS assessment , *MEDICAL needs assessment - Abstract
Background: To strengthen palliative care for children in the Nordic countries, an updated status of current needs, resources, clinical services, education, and research is necessary to align and consolidate future research. A Nordic research collaboration initiative for children with palliative care needs was assembled in 2023. Building on this initiative, this paper presents an overview of pediatric palliative care (PPC) in the Nordic countries' (a) population characteristics, (b) care models and setting of care, (c) education and training, and (d) research. Methods: The Nordic initiative researchers collaboratively gathered and assessed available data on the characteristics of PPC within Denmark, Finland, Greenland, Iceland, Norway, the Faroe Islands, Sweden, and Åland. Data were compiled in a matrix with population characteristics, models- and setting of care, education and training, and areas of research in a Nordic context. The findings are narratively and descriptively presented, providing an overview of Nordic PPC. Results: In total, the Nordic child population comprises around six million children (0–19 years), of which about 41.200 are estimated to be living with a life-limiting and/or life-threatening condition. Healthcare services are provided through various care models, ranging from specialized care to homecare settings. Overall, there remain few opportunities for education and training with some exceptions. Also, Nordic research within PPC has been shown to be a growing field although much remains to be done. Conclusion: This overview is the first outline of the current PPC in Nordic countries. Although some differences remain important to acknowledge, overall, the strengths and challenges faced within PPC in the Nordic countries are comparable and call for joint action to increase evidence, services, and education to better serve the children, families, and healthcare personnel within PPC. Despite the varying structural premises for PPC, research endeavors aiming to provide evidence in this field seem increasing, timely and relevant for the Nordic countries, as well as the international context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Veterinarians and zoonotic pathogens, infections and diseases – questionnaire study and case series, Finland.
- Author
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Jokelainen, Pikka, Virtala, Anna-Maija K., Raulo, Saara, Kantele, Anu, Vapalahti, Olli, and Kinnunen, Paula M.
- Subjects
- *
PARASITIC diseases , *DOG bites , *VETERINARIANS , *VIRUS diseases , *BACTERIAL diseases , *BACILLUS anthracis - Abstract
Veterinarians are at risk for numerous zoonotic infections. In this paper, we summarise descriptions of zoonotic infections from a questionnaire study and a series of work-related zoonotic cases, aiming to add to the knowledge on occupational zoonotic risks of veterinarians. We collected data on zoonotic infections contracted by veterinarians in Finland in two studies:1) using a questionnaire in 2009, and 2) inviting veterinarians who had encountered an occupational zoonosis to report it in structured interviews in 2019. In the questionnaire study in 2009, of 306 veterinarians several reported zoonotic bacterial skin infections (12%), dermatophytosis (ringworm; 4.2%), virus infections (3.9%), bacterial gastroenteritis (3.3%), other bacterial zoonoses (2.3%), and parasitic infections/infestations (2.3%). In the 2019 interviews, 16 occupational zoonosis cases were reported. Of them, seven were selected to the case series. The selected cases included Capnocytophaga canimorsus sepsis following a dog bite, cryptosporidiosis after a contact with calves, cutaneous listeriosis following calving assistance, Salmonella gastroenteritis contracted at laboratory, Trichophyton dermatophytosis after equine contact, Bacillus anthracis exposure at necropsy, and exposure to rabies through a horse bite. In four of the seven cases, the veterinarian disagreed or strongly disagreed with having had good knowledge of the zoonosis before the incident. The results from the questionnaire study and the case series illustrate the variety of zoonotic pathogens that veterinarians may encounter. There is a need to improve the occupational health of veterinarians and to increase awareness in the occupational health sector. We encourage addressing this need using a One Health approach. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Frost quakes in wetlands in northern Finland during extreme winter weather conditions and related hazard to urban infrastructure.
- Author
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Afonin, Nikita, Kozlovskaya, Elena, Moisio, Kari, Kokko, Emma-Riikka, and Okkonen, Jarkko
- Subjects
- *
EXTREME weather , *WEATHER , *FROST , *EARTHQUAKE hazard analysis , *WETLANDS , *SEISMIC arrays - Abstract
The paper reports the first results of an experiment in northern Finland during winter 2022–2023 that aimed at studying seismic events caused by seasonal freezing in the so-called critical zone (CZ) of the Earth. These events have attracted public attention recently, as multiple reports about them from local inhabitants in Arctic and sub-Arctic areas appeared on social networks. To make an instrumental study of such events, to reveal the relationship between their occurrence and winter weather conditions, and to evaluate the possible hazard, we installed two high-resolution seismic arrays with co-located soil temperature stations at two sites in Finland, one of them being in the city of Oulu in the sub-Arctic area (65.04° N, 25.61° E) and the other one above the polar circle in the municipality of Sodankylä (67.36° N, 26.63° E). The equipment recorded continuous seismic and soil temperature data during November 2022–April 2023. Based on reports from the inhabitants of Talvikangas (Oulu) about the ground shaking and unusual noises on 6 January 2023 and their observations of new fractures on the roads there, we selected the time interval for the identification of frost quakes that originated during that day from continuous seismic records in Talvikangas and in Sodankylä. During the selected time interval, the extremely rapid air temperature drops of about -1.4 °C h -1 in Talvikangas and -0.88 °C h -1 in Sodankylä were observed. We identified and located two types of seismic events – namely, frost quakes with frequencies of about 10–20 Hz, with waveforms like those of tectonic events, and irregularly shaped frost tremors with frequencies of about 120–180 Hz. The sources of frost quakes in Talvikangas are mainly located on irrigated wetland, while in Sodankylä, about 50 % of registered frost quakes were caused by ice fracturing on the Kitinen River. However, several relatively strong events, with their origin in the wetlands, were also recorded. A significant number of sources of frost tremors are confined to wetland areas cut by irrigation channels and to roads cleaned from snow during winter both in Talvikangas and in Sodankylä. We calculated ground accelerations and ground velocities for the strongest events from both groups and compared them to equivalent properties of other seismic signals, like distant local earthquakes in the area, mining production blasts, and cargo train vibration. Our study shows that high-frequency frost tremors corresponding to surface fracture opening in the uppermost frozen surface layer of a thickness of up to 5 cm can directly damage infrastructure objects like roads and basements of buildings. Surface waves, produced by frost quakes and propagating inside the shallow soil layer, have large enough ground accelerations at epicentral distances of hundreds of metres. Therefore, frost quakes should be considered a phenomenon that can potentially damage infrastructures, and they have to be taken into account in seismic hazard assessments. Our research is the first instrumental study of seismic events originating from wetland areas. These events occur as a result of the interaction between the uppermost layer of the solid Earth's CZ and atmosphere processes that deserves further study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Attunement as a practice of encountering dementia time in long-term eldercare work.
- Author
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Hämäläinen, Antti, Leinonen, Emilia, and Era, Salla
- Subjects
- *
DEMENTIA , *ELDER care , *OLDER people , *THEMATIC analysis , *SEMI-structured interviews - Abstract
Discussing time and temporality in care work is becoming more central as societies with growing proportions of older persons with care needs strive to arrange cost-effective eldercare. As resources become scarcer, the efficiency of care work is emphasised, and care is increasingly sorted into cost-per-minute units. In our paper, we will analyse the different ways care professionals themselves describe their temporal experiences and practices concerning care interactions in long-term dementia care. Our data consists of semi-structured interviews with care professionals (n = 25) working in round-the-clock service housing in Finland. Using thematic content analysis to analyse the data, we show that, along with a holistic understanding of temporality, good dementia care necessitates understanding alterity, which is insufficiently regarded in linear or quantitative understandings of time. By using concepts of temporal duration (Bergson), crip time (Kafer) and dementia time (Yoshizaki-Gibbons), it is possible to understand another person's alter-temporal experience, into which care can aim to enter and towards which it can attune itself. We argue that a concept of attunement is needed to fully make sense of the ideal temporal practices of dementia care. Our analysis presents attunement as understanding dementia time, receptive practices, and expressive practices, and describes limitations of attunement as temporal discordance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. An Irreplaceable Place: Onto-Epistemological Contestation in the Environmental Impact Assessment Process of the Green Anglo American Sakatti Mine, Arctic Finland.
- Author
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Lassila, Maija M.
- Subjects
- *
ENVIRONMENTAL impact analysis , *TUNDRAS , *MINES & mineral resources ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Finland adopted the "green mining" concept to reconcile an increase in mineral extraction with conservation needs. Ongoing academic discussions call attention to the social and political factors supporting or challenging new mining projects in the Global North. Particularly understudied are the struggles over existence and knowledge that emerge during environmental accountability processes. This paper is an ethnographic investigation into the onto-epistemological conflict involving the Anglo American Sakatti mine project in the protected Viiankiaapa mire of the Finnish Arctic. It uses material from interviews and stakeholder meetings to analyze how the company's environmental impact assessment is being challenged and how people affected by mining are articulating their claims against the extractive ontology of replaceability. The findings, with parallels drawn to the Global South, suggest that green mine projects become ontologically conflicted and reveal their inherent fragility when companies increasingly try to minimize impacts and legitimate inevitable harm through offsetting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Home and Journey in Experiences of the Eastern Orthodox Divine Liturgy.
- Author
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Tiaynen-Qadir, Tatiana and Qadir, Ali
- Subjects
- *
LITURGICS , *ORTHODOX Christianity , *ETHNOLOGY , *THEORY of knowledge - Abstract
This paper explores the experiential reality surrounding the Divine Liturgy, a Byzantine rite in Orthodox Christianity that has remained central to Eastern practice globally since Late Antiquity. The article draws on multi-sited ethnography in the glocal context of the Orthodox Church of Finland (OCF), a national church of minority and a site of multicultural interaction. Our analysis shows participants articulate their experiences with the Liturgy in an epistemology of interiority by which (1) they constantly, if unevenly, and agentically engage with the Liturgy in a form of individual, vernacular artistry. This interiority is (2) both sensorial and interpretative, and (3) ambivalently grounded in motifs of being "at home" and, at the same time, "on a journey." That is, participants from different backgrounds make a connection to the Liturgy both as a spiritual and a literal home, relating to different elements—Finnish, Karelian, Byzantine, and Church Slavonic—in its ritualistic aesthetics. At the same time, Liturgy emerges as a perpetual journey of new openings and glimpses, informed by past experiences and life trajectories, and participants relate to these two aspects simultaneously. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. “I Do What I Do to Drive Change”: The SocialSymbolic Work of Sustainable Fashion Influencers.
- Author
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Kaivonen, Ines, Mesiranta, Nina, and Närvänen, Elina
- Subjects
- *
SUSTAINABLE fashion , *SUSTAINABLE consumption , *IDENTITY (Psychology) , *INFLUENCER marketing , *CONSUMPTION (Economics) , *DRUNK driving - Abstract
This paper aims to study how sustainable fashion influencers (SFIs) conduct social-symbolic work in their efforts to purposefully transform their followers’ fashion consumption patterns. We conducted a netnographic study of the Finnish SFI scene, including observations of the SFIs’ social media content and complementary in-depth interviews with a subset of SFIs. We identified three types of social-symbolic work conducted by the SFIs: identity work (narrating, reflecting and balancing), community work (tightening, expanding and magnetizing) and practice work (shaping meanings, competences, and materials). Most of the SFIs studied were micro-influencers in Finland. The paper contributes to research on sustainable fashion by highlighting the role of SFIs as drivers of institutional and cultural change, the role of social media in this pursuit, and the way sustainable fashion consumption is interlinked with digital life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Nature and Belonging in the Lives of Young Refugees: A Relational Wellbeing Perspective.
- Author
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Haswell, Nick
- Subjects
- *
REFUGEE resettlement , *WELL-being , *REFUGEES , *REFUGEE children , *REFUGEE families , *SEMI-structured interviews , *LAND settlement , *DESIRE - Abstract
This paper explores the relationship between nature contact, wellbeing and belonging in the resettlement experiences of young refugees in Finland. Drawing on qualitative data, including participant-made artworks and semi-structured interviews, it explores the different ways refugees encounter nature in their past, present and (imagined) future. Using a relational wellbeing approach, the paper considers how subjective, material and relational dimensions of wellbeing arise and interrelate within refugees' encounters with nature and how these encounters link with refugees' developing sense of belonging to people and places in Finland. The paper describes how, in the context of refugee resettlement, nature encounters can foster a sense of belonging in three ways: through restoration and attachment in the present, through maintaining links with the past, and through shaping desires about a future in which to thrive. Considering refugees' sense of belonging in Finland as part of the relational wellbeing generated, in part, from their encounters with nature, these three aspects of belonging represent particular interrelations between subjective, material and relational dimensions of refugees' wellbeing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Free Press, Regulated Competition: The Finnish Newspaper Cartel, 1910s–1970s.
- Author
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Kuorelahti, Elina and Jensen-Eriksen, Niklas
- Subjects
- *
FREEDOM of the press , *CARTELS , *NEWSPAPER publishing , *CONSUMER price indexes , *WORLD War II , *NEWSPAPERS , *CIVIL war , *PRICES - Abstract
This paper examines newspaper cartels, a largely unoccupied field in media history, from the perspective of longevity. We analyse Finnish newspaper industry from the 1910s to 1970s and show that newspapers sought to regulate various aspects of competition, such as subscription prices, advertisement tariffs, and newsprint prices. Data indicates that political rivalry shaped the newspaper cartel collaboration until late 1950s: the cartel was set up by right-wing and centrist papers and, unlike in other Nordic countries, the Social Democratic press remained outside of the association until 1958. Political shocks of the Finnish Civil War in 1918 and the Second World War also changed the composition of the cartel. The era of private cartels in the newspaper industry gradually started to fade away as a result of anti-cartel laws in the 1960s and governmental anti-inflation measures in the 1970s. We conclude that the economics of newspaper industry and the cartelisation of the wider business environment, newsprint suppliers in particular, encouraged newspapers to co-operate with each other. The results of this article increase the understanding on the collaborative and competitive environment of newspaper companies, but also contributes to broader questions on cartels and their inner dynamics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Assessing the efficiency of the forestry sector in EU countries.
- Author
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Staňková, Michaela, Popelová, Pavlína, and Pipíška, Tomáš
- Subjects
- *
FORESTS & forestry , *DATA envelopment analysis , *CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) , *COUNTRIES - Abstract
This paper deals with a quantitative assessment of the production efficiency of the forestry sector in EU countries, which is largely neglected in the literature. Only a few studies have been conducted so far, processing data mainly in the first half of the last decade. In contrast to these studies, in this article we focus on the period between 2016 and 2020. Therefore, the main objective of this paper is to compare the efficiency of the forest sector to fill the gap. The empirical results of this study show that the leaders in this sector are Germany, Finland, and the Czech Republic. These countries are fully efficient throughout the period under review. In contrast, Bulgaria lags far behind, with an efficiency score typically around 35%. The results of the cluster analysis show that although countries have similar characteristics, their efficiency scores are not necessarily at the same level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. DIARY AS DIALOGUE in Papermill Process Control.
- Author
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Robinson, Mike, Kovalainen, Mikko, and Auramäki, Esa
- Subjects
- *
INFORMATION retrieval , *DIARIES (Blank-books) , *PAPER mills , *PAPER industry workers , *PROCESS control systems - Abstract
The article focuses on the substitution of paper diaries by electronic diaries, used by the employees. Papermills are gigantic and complex machines, incorporating state-of-the-art technology. As part of a larger project a papermill in Finland was used to provide support for factory floor workers in process industries. Paper diaries were substituted with electronic diaries on one production line employing 35 workers. Entries constitute dialogues within and between work shifts, and partially with other organizational levels. The e-diary design was a cooperative effort between workers in an oil refinery a superintendent and foreman from the papermill, and the research group. It was piloted in the oil refinery, and a refined prototype was used in the papermill. All 35 production line staff workers received about four hours training on the diary including its underlying Microsoft Windows and Lotus Notes applications. E-diary entries are a text version of talking-out-loud-with extended spatial and temporal scope. INSET: An Example of Extended Dialogue Reject Carrier Problems in.....
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Pine needles (Pinus sylvestris L.) as a bioindicator of sodium and calcium deposition in the area around pulp and paper mills at Kemi, Northern Finland.
- Author
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Pöykiö, Risto, Kivilinna, Veli-Antti, and Nurmesniemi, Hannu
- Subjects
- *
PINE needles , *BIOINDICATORS , *SODIUM , *CALCIUM , *PAPER mills , *PULPING - Published
- 2010
50. Extractability of trace elements in precipitated calcium carbonate (PCC) waste from an integrated pulp and paper mill complex
- Author
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Nurmesniemi, Hannu, Pöykiö, Risto, Perämäki, Paavo, and Kuokkanen, Toivo
- Subjects
- *
FERTILIZERS , *SOIL fertility , *FORESTS & forestry , *RURAL industries , *SOIL remediation , *ENVIRONMENTAL protection , *PLANT nutrition - Abstract
Abstract: From the utilization point of view, it is notable that the total element concentrations in the precipitated calcium carbonate (PCC) waste were significantly lower than the maximal allowable heavy metal concentrations for fertilizers used in agriculture and in forestry, set on the basis of the EU and Finnish legislation. The easily soluble Ca concentration of 168.5gkg−1 (d.w.) in PCC waste was 105 times higher than the typical value of 1.6gkg−1 (d.w.) in the coarse mineral soil in Finland indicates that the PCC waste is a potential agent for soil remediation and for improving soil fertility if it is used as fertilizer. According to a five-stage sequential extraction procedure, the highest concentrations of most of the elements occurred either in HF+HNO3 +HCl or H2O2 +CH3COONH4 fraction. This means that the major part of the elements retained in the PCC waste are not easy to extract (leach) under conditions normally found in nature. This is beneficial since, if inorganic materials and by-products are utilized in earth construction, the content of harmful compounds must be low and the harmful components must be tightly bound to the matrix. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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