17 results on '"Tessa Minter"'
Search Results
2. Displacement in the Name of Development. How Indigenous Rights Legislation Fails to Protect Philippine Hunter-Gatherers
- Author
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Renée V. Hagen and Tessa Minter
- Subjects
Sociology and Political Science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Philippines ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Legislation ,02 engineering and technology ,legal uncertainty ,010501 environmental sciences ,Environmental Science (miscellaneous) ,Development ,hunter-gatherers ,01 natural sciences ,Agta ,Indigenous ,Development-induced displacement ,Competition (economics) ,Political science ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,media_common ,indigenous peoples ,Commodification ,021107 urban & regional planning ,Certainty ,Indigenous rights ,Displacement (linguistics) ,development-induced displacement ,Southeast Asia ,collective land rights ,Political economy - Abstract
Yearly, development-induced displacement affects some 20 million people, a disproportionate share of whom are indigenous. Within the diverse category of indigenous peoples, hunter-gatherers are especially vulnerable to displacement as they form the least powerful sectors of society. While displacement poses a major threat to the few remaining hunter-gatherer peoples, case studies of how this process unfolds are scarce. This ethnographic study details how two decades of indigenous land rights legislation have been ineffective in preventing displacement of indigenous communities in the Philippines, through the case of Agta hunter-gatherers of Dimasalansan. The paper demonstrates how procedural inconsistencies, institutional competition and a development paradigm focused on commodification of land have undermined the legal titling process. We argue that the ensuing land-rush that currently displaces Agta is symptomatic for how the implementation of indigenous land rights legislation is undermined by business interests, thereby creating more uncertainty than certainty for the least powerful.
- Published
- 2019
3. Sinking Islands, Drowned Logic; Climate Change and Community-Based Adaptation Discourses in Solomon Islands
- Author
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Hugh Govan, Jan van der Ploeg, Tessa Minter, Hampus Eriksson, and M. Sukulu
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climate finance ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Geography, Planning and Development ,TJ807-830 ,Climate change ,010501 environmental sciences ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Climate Finance ,TD194-195 ,01 natural sciences ,Renewable energy sources ,GE1-350 ,Narrative ,resilience ,indigenous peoples ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,media_common ,Community based ,policy narratives ,Environmental effects of industries and plants ,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,Abandonment (legal) ,media ,Livelihood ,Rural development ,Environmental sciences ,Geography ,Economy ,Psychological resilience ,rural development - Abstract
The saltwater people of Solomon Islands are often portrayed to be at the frontline of climate change. In media, policy, and development discourses, the erosion and abandonment of the small, man-made islands along the coast of Malaita is attributed to climate change induced sea-level rise. This paper investigates this sinking islands narrative, and argues that a narrow focus on the projected impacts of climate change distracts attention and resources from more pressing environmental and development problems that are threatening rural livelihoods.
- Published
- 2020
4. Hunter-gatherer health and development policy: How the promotion of sedentism worsens the Agta's health outcomes
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Andrea Bamberg Migliano, Abigail E. Page, Tessa Minter, and Sylvain Viguier
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Adult ,Male ,Health (social science) ,Sanitation ,Adolescent ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Health Status ,Philippines ,Psychological intervention ,Vulnerability ,Black People ,Development ,Agta ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,Promotion (rank) ,History and Philosophy of Science ,Political science ,Ethnography ,Humans ,0601 history and archaeology ,Socioeconomics ,Child ,Hunter-gatherer ,media_common ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,060101 anthropology ,030505 public health ,Sedentism ,Infant ,Agriculture ,Sedentarisation ,06 humanities and the arts ,Feeding Behavior ,Middle Aged ,Health Surveys ,Policy ,Health ,Child, Preschool ,Multi-level modelling ,Hunter-gatherers ,Female ,Ideology ,Sedentary Behavior ,0305 other medical science - Abstract
Many hunter-gatherer groups live on the outskirts of wider society, experiencing poor health outcomes with little access to medical care. From a development perspective, key interventions include the sedentarisation of these mobile peoples into camps nearby larger towns with sanitation infrastructure and medical care, as increased access to services is assumed to improve outcomes. However, recent research in the Agta (Philippine foragers from North-east Luzon) has demonstrated that individuals residing in more ‘developed’ communities suffer from increased morbidity and mortality. Here, using quantitative and ethnographic data on health collected between 2002 and 2014, we explore why this trend occurs by examining the relationship between key development initiatives with self-reported illness and the uptake of medical interventions with 415 Agta men, women and children. We demonstrate that health outcomes worsen as sedentarisation progresses, despite some increases in medical access. We argue this is because the development paradigm is not evidence-based, but rather stems from an ideological dislike of mobile hunter-gatherer lifestyles. Compounded by cultural insensitivity and daily discrimination, current interventions are ill-suited to the unique needs of hunter-gatherers, and thus ineffective. Based on our findings we offer future short and long-term policy suggestions which seek to reduce the Agta's vulnerability, rather than increase it.
- Published
- 2018
5. Data management in anthropology: The next phase in ethics governance?
- Author
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Anita von Poser, Heather Richards-Rissetto, Metje Postma, Igor Boog, Margaret Sleeboom-Faulkner, Michael Schönhuth, Rosa Cordillera A. Castillo, Bob Simpson, Zane Kripe, Peter Pels, J. Henrike Florusbosch, Rena Lederman, Tessa Minter, and Hansjörg Dilger
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Gestion de données ,Scrutiny ,Sociology and Political Science ,Anthropology ,100 Philosophie und Psychologie::120 Epistemologie::121 Epistemologie ,Data management ,Audit culture ,Culture de l'audit ,Epistemology ,050905 science studies ,Gouvernance universitaire ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Political science ,Ethnography ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,éthique ,0601 history and archaeology ,Academic governance ,Ethics ,060101 anthropology ,business.industry ,Corporate governance ,05 social sciences ,600 Technik, Medizin, angewandte Wissenschaften::650 Management, Öffentlichkeitsarbeit::658 Allgemeines Management ,06 humanities and the arts ,Transparency (behavior) ,Academic ethics ,Accountability ,Epistémologie ,0509 other social sciences ,business ,Discipline - Abstract
Recent demands for accountability in ‘data management’ by funding agencies, universities, international journals and other academic institutions have worried many anthropologists and ethnographers. While their demands for transparency and integrity in opening up data for scrutiny seem to enhance scientific integrity, such principles do not always consider the way the social relationships of research are properly maintained. As a springboard, the present Forum, triggered by such recent demands to account for the use of ‘data’, discusses the present state of anthropological research and academic ethics/integrity in a broader perspective. It specifically gives voice to our disciplinary concerns and leads to a principled statement that clarifies a particularly ethnographic position. This position is then discussed by several commentators who treat its viability and necessity against the background of wider developments in anthropology – sustaining the original insight that in ethnography, research materials have been co‐produced before they become commoditised into ‘data’. Finally, in moving beyond such a position, the Forum broadens the issue to the point where other methodologies and forms of ownership of research materials will also need consideration.
- Published
- 2018
6. Universality Without Uniformity: A Culturally Inclusive Approach to Sensitive Responsiveness in Infant Caregiving
- Author
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Judi Mesman, Andrei Angnged, Andrea Bamberg Migliano, Gul Deniz Salali, Tessa Minter, and Ibrahima A. H. Cissé
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Child rearing ,05 social sciences ,Universality (philosophy) ,050109 social psychology ,The Republic ,Education ,Developmental psychology ,Family relations ,Multidisciplinary approach ,Salient ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
Do caregivers in non‐Western communities adapt their behaviors to the needs of infants? This question reflects one of the most long‐standing debates on the universality versus culture‐specificity of caregiver–infant interactions in general and sensitive responsiveness to infants in particular. In this article, an integration of both points of view is presented, based on the theoretical origins of the sensitive responsiveness construct combined with the ethnographic literature on caregivers and infants in different parts of the world. This integration advocates universality without uniformity, and calls for multidisciplinary collaborations to investigate the complexities and nuances of caregiver–infant interactions in different cultures. Salient issues are illustrated with observations of infants (ages 7–31 months) in Mali, the Republic of Congo, and the Philippines.
- Published
- 2017
7. Limits to Indigenous Participation: The Agta and the Northern Sierra Madre Natural Park, the Philippines
- Author
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Jan van der Ploeg, Gerard A. Persoon, Tessa Minter, Terry Sunderland, and Maria Pedrablanca
- Subjects
Economic growth ,Sociology and Political Science ,Ecology ,Philippines ,Legislation ,Environmental Science (miscellaneous) ,Indigenous rights ,Agta ,Natural resource ,Article ,Indigenous ,Indigenous participation ,Power (social and political) ,Politics ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Environmental protection ,Anthropology ,Hunter-gatherers ,Position (finance) ,Protected area management ,Sociology ,Protected area - Abstract
Increased attention for indigenous rights in relation to nature conservation has in the Philippines resulted in legislation formalizing indigenous peoples' participation in protected area management. We discuss the implementation of this legislation, based on the case of the Agta inhabiting the Northern Sierra Madre Natural Park. The Agta are hunter-gatherers who settle along the coasts and rivers of northeast Luzon. Being indigenous to the park, they hold one third of the seats in its management board. However, our content analysis of this management board's meetings, combined with qualitative observations of the Agta's position in the park, show that their participation in its management is hampered by socio-cultural, practical, financial and political barriers. We demonstrate that formalizing indigenous participation in protected area management is not enough to break through existing power structures that inhibit marginalized stakeholders to defense of their interests in natural resources against those of more powerful actors.
- Published
- 2014
8. The governance of risk arising from the use of spreadsheets in organisations
- Author
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Tessa Minter and Carlos Correia
- Subjects
Spreadsheet Risk ,Economics and Econometrics ,Spreadsheet Lifecycle ,business.industry ,Strategy and Management ,Corporate governance ,lcsh:Finance ,lcsh:HG1-9999 ,Spreadsheet Governance ,Accounting ,Business ,Finance - Abstract
The key to maximising the effectiveness of spreadsheet models for critical decision making is appropriate risk governance. Those responsible for governance need, at a macro level, to identify the specific spreadsheet risks, determine the reasons for such exposures and establish where and when risk exposures occur from point of initiation to usage and storage. It is essential to identify which parties could create the exposure taking cognisance of the entire supply chain of the organisation. If management’s risk strategy is to control the risks then the question reverts to how these risks can be prevented and/or detected and corrected? This paper attempts to address each of these critical issues and to offer guidance in the governance of spreadsheet risk. The paper identifies the the risk exposures and sets out the responsibilities of directors in relation to spreadsheets and the spreadsheet cycle. Spreadsheet risk exposure can be managed in terms of setting the control environment, undertaking risk assessment, providing the requisite information and communicating with internal and external parties as well as implementing spreadsheet lifecycle application controls and monitoring activities.
- Published
- 2014
9. Received Sensitivity: Adapting Ainsworth's Scale to Capture Sensitivity in a Multiple-Caregiver Context
- Author
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Judi Mesman, Tessa Minter, and Andrei Angnged
- Subjects
Cross-Cultural Comparison ,observation ,Psychometrics ,Philippines ,050109 social psychology ,Context (language use) ,Test validity ,Developmental psychology ,Sensitivity, infancy, culture, alloparenting, observation ,Sensitivity ,Photography ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Sensitivity (control systems) ,infancy ,Infant Care ,05 social sciences ,Infant ,Object Attachment ,Cross-cultural studies ,culture ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,alloparenting ,Caregivers ,Ethnopsychology ,Infant Behavior ,Observational study ,Psychology ,Construct (philosophy) ,Ethnology ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
A network of multiple caregivers contributing to the care of an infant is the norm in many non-Western cultural contexts. Current observational measures of caregiver sensitive responsiveness to infant signals focus on single caregivers, failing to capture the total experience of the infant when it comes to the sensitive responsiveness received from multiple sources. The current paper aims to introduce the construct of received sensitivity that captures the sensitivity that an infant experiences from multiple sources in cultural contexts where simultaneous multiple caregiving is common. The paper further presents an adaptation of Ainsworth’s Sensitivity versus Insensitivity observation scale to allow for the assessment of sensitivity as received by the infant regardless of who is providing the sensitive responses to its signals. The potential usefulness of the Received Sensitivity scale is illustrated by two case studies of infants from an Agta forager community in the Philippines where infants are routinely taken care of by multiple caregivers. The case studies show that the infants’ total experience of being responded to sensitively cannot be simply derived from the sum of individual caregiver sensitivity scores, demonstrating the potential added value of the new Received Sensitivity observation measure.
- Published
- 2016
10. Recognising Land Rights For Conservation? Tenure Reforms In The Northern Sierra Madre, The Philippines
- Author
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M. van Weerd, Tessa Minter, D.M. Aquino, and J. van der Ploeg
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Economic growth ,territorialisation ,Philippines ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,land tenure ,02 engineering and technology ,010501 environmental sciences ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,01 natural sciences ,lcsh:QH540-549.5 ,Political science ,tenure reforms ,Resource management ,Natural resource management ,Land tenure ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Nature and Landscape Conservation ,Ecology ,business.industry ,Environmental resource management ,community-based natural resource management ,021107 urban & regional planning ,legal surrealism ,Natural resource ,Devolution ,Property rights ,lcsh:Ecology ,biodiversity conservation ,Customary land ,business ,Land reform - Abstract
The legalisation of the customary land rights of rural communities is currently actively promoted as a strategy for conserving biodiversity. There is, however, little empirical information on the conservation outcomes of these tenure reforms. In this paper, we describe four conservation projects that specifically aimed to formalise land rights in the Philippines, a country widely seen as a model for the devolution of control over natural resources to rural communities. We demonstrate that these legalistic interventions are based on flawed assumptions, on: 1) the capacity of the state to enforce tenure; 2) the characteristics of customary land rights; and 3) the causal links between legal entitlements and sustainable natural resource management. As a result, these state-led tenure reforms actually aggravate tenure insecurity on the ground, and ultimately fail to improve natural resource management.
- Published
- 2016
11. How do hunter-gatherers learn? The transmission of indigenous knowledge among the Agta of the Philippines
- Author
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J. van der Ploeg, Tessa Minter, and R. Hagen
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Archeology ,education ,Interview ,traditional ecological knowledge ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Social change ,Identity (social science) ,Livelihood ,foragers ,Indigenous ,Geography ,Deforestation ,Anthropology ,Traditional knowledge ,Imitation ,Socioeconomics ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,media_common - Abstract
The Agta of the Philippines depend on extensive knowledge of their naturalenvironment for their livelihoods. However, little is known about the transmissionof this indigenous ecological knowledge. This paper examines the transmission ofknowledge on hunting, fishing and gathering among the Agta in San Mariano, IsabelaProvince. We used observation, interviewing and knowledge tests as methods ofinquiry. Our results show that knowledge transmission happens on-site, is genderspecificand that pathways of knowledge transmission differ per livelihood activity.Learning among the Agta takes place stepwise but less systematically than suggestedby earlier research on knowledge transmission among hunter-gatherers. We found thatobservation, imitation and individual experimentation are important modes of learningin all livelihood activities. Contemporary environmental and social change, particularlydeforestation and formal education, have far-reaching implications for knowledgetransmission and identity in Agta society.
- Published
- 2016
12. Against mining and the need for mining: conundrums of the Agta from the Northeastern Philippines
- Author
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Mayo Buenafe-Ze, Wilma G. Telan, and Tessa Minter
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Compensation (psychology) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Philippines ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Mining compensation ,Development ,hunter-gatherers ,Agta ,Indigenous ,Natural (archaeology) ,indigenous peoples‘ rights ,Mining engineering ,Order (exchange) ,Business ,Prosperity ,Environmental planning ,media_common - Abstract
Extractive industries promise to bring prosperity to indigenous communities in order to obtain their consent to operate. While many of these promises are left unfulfilled, mining operations adversely impact these communities’ natural and social environments. We document how the Philippine Agta resist mining, but also attempt to reclaim the benefits they were promised by the mining company. By elaborating the complexities of implementing compensation mechanisms, we also bring to light their problematic underlying logic. Drawing on the concept of equivalence (Li 2011), this leads us to question the validity of the assumption that long-term environmental and social impacts can be compensated for by short-term material benefits.
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- 2016
13. Whose Consent? Hunter-Gatherers and Extractive Industries in the Northeastern Philippines
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Victor de Brabander, Terry Sunderland, Jan van der Ploeg, Tessa Minter, and Gerard A. Persoon
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Government ,Sociology and Political Science ,Informed consent ,Political science ,Facilitator ,Ethnography ,Agency (sociology) ,Environmental Science (miscellaneous) ,Development ,Public administration ,National commission ,Socioeconomics ,Indigenous - Abstract
There is increasing international recognition of indigenous peoples’ right to influence development activities in their territories. Free, Prior and Informed Consent is the strongest available instrument to assert this right, and this article provides a case study on its implementation in the northeastern Philippines. Under the Indigenous Peoples’ Rights Act of 1997, extractive companies must seek consent from indigenous communities if these inhabit the proposed concession areas. The National Commission on Indigenous Peoples, a government agency, facilitates this process. This article documents how extractive companies have obtained consent from the Agta, a resource-dependent indigenous group. The results, which cover the period 2003–2011, show that the implementation of Free, Prior and Informed Consent fails in terms of the process and its outcome. Consent is manipulated, the role of the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples as facilitator is problematic, and the agreements are culturally inappropria...
- Published
- 2012
14. An Analysis of the Impact of Audit Firm Rotation on Audit Fees: A South African Perspective
- Author
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Rory Grant, Michael Harber, and Tessa Minter
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Competition (economics) ,Discounting ,business.industry ,Stock exchange ,health services administration ,Accounting ,General Medicine ,Audit ,business - Abstract
The study contributes to research on audit fee determinants and the impact of firm rotation on fees. Through an analysis of companies listed on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange over a ten year period, the impact of audit firm rotations on audit fees was analysed considering the first years after rotation, the size of the audit firms involved and the existence of accounting restatements. The findings identify a strong link between client restatements and an increase in audit fees. Restatements issued after a rotation did have an impact on audit fees, suggesting that an increase in audit fees is likely when the newly appointed auditor requires restatement. Evidence was also found of fee discounting, which is more pronounced in smaller audit firms and which is attributed to increased levels of competition. Unexpectedly, it fails to detect solid evidence of a fee increase in the second year of a new auditor-client relationship.
- Published
- 2018
15. Ethnology and Linguistics : Contemporary Relations between Agta and Their Farming Neighbours in the Northern Sierra Madre of Philippines
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Tessa, Minter
- Published
- 2009
16. Decentralisation of Natural Resource Management: Some Themes and Unresolved Issues
- Author
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Diny M. E. van Est, Tessa Minter, and Gerard A. Persoon
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Geography ,General Engineering ,Gender studies ,Humanities - Abstract
Tulisan ini membahas sejumlah aspek yang terkait dengan proses desentralisasi pengelolaan sumber daya alam. Fokusnya pada sejumlah tema dan isu yang menjadi karakteristik proses tersebut yang sering mengarah pada berbagai bentuk pengelolaan bersama ( co-management ). Tema-tema dan isu-isu tersebut ditarik dari pengalaman di sejumlah negara, khususnya dari Filipina di mana desentralisasi telah dimulai lebih dari 10 tahun sebelum diterapkan di Indonesia. Sejumlah tema dan isu yang menjadi fokus adalah perbedaan dalam perspektif waktu, hubungan antara sifat sumber daya ekologi dan batas-batas sosial, konsep komuniti dan pengelolaan, proses melemahnya tanggung jawab negara dalam kaitannya dengan kepentingan lokal, peran pihak ke tiga dalam pengelolaan bersama, sifat kontrak dalam pengelolaan sumber daya, sejumlah aspek yang terkait dengan penduduk lokal, dan gagasan tentang keberhasilan dan kegagalan dalam pengelolaan bersama. Dengan mengedepankan isu-isu ini kami berharap dapat memberikan suatu perspektif antropologis terhadap proses yang amat menarik dari desentralisasi pengelolaan sumber daya alam. Kata kunci: desentralisasi; co-management; pengelolaan sumber daya alam.
- Published
- 2014
17. The Agta of the Northern Sierra Madre. Livelihood strategies and resilience among Philippine hunter-gatherers
- Author
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Tessa Minter, Persoon, G.A., Schefold, R., Duhaylungsod, L., Eder, J., Nas, P., Visser, L., and Leiden Univeristy
- Subjects
Livelihood ,Tropical forests ,Time allocation ,Marine resources ,Philippines ,Hunter-gatherers ,Ethnography ,Natural resource management ,Agta ,Sierra Madre - Abstract
The Agta are a hunter-gatherer people inhabiting the last remaining tropical rain forest on the island of Luzon, in the north-eastern Philippines. Due to commercial logging operations, immigration and conversion of forest into agricultural land, the Agta's resource base has come under increasing pressure over the past century. This ethnography analyses the way the Agta respond to these social and environmental changes. It shows that they face great problems with respect to health, nutrition, control over resources and participation in decisionmaking processes. It also shows, however, that by maintaining economic and residential flexibility and diversification, they succeed in continuing a hunter-gatherer way of life.
- Published
- 2010
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