1,625 results
Search Results
2. Non-timber forest products: evolution, development and research.
- Author
-
Magry, Muneer Ahmad, Cahill, David, Rookes, James, and Narula, Sapna A.
- Subjects
NON-timber forest products ,RESEARCH & development ,VALUE chains ,CONFERENCE papers ,COMMUNITY forests - Abstract
A comprehensive review of the non-timber forest product (NTFP) sector from 1980 to 2022 was undertaken. The study employed a Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) methodology, incorporating explicit keywords. The results indicate that NTFPs underwent significant evolution, including research and development changes, particularly following the Rio de Janeiro summit. Most published research originated from the United States, accounting for 24% of the total; Brazil and India each contributed 10% of the published research. We included 316 potential research items: 262 articles, 19 book chapters, 27 review articles, and eight conference papers. The review analysis highlighted that NTFPs are crucial in meeting food requirements, obtaining specific medicinal resources, and acquiring material inputs for rural households, serving as a safety net during agrarian distress. NTFPs play a crucial role in promoting the development of the bio-economy. In low- and high-income nations with abundant bio-resources, NTFP value chains are increasingly pertinent for generating revenue, enhancing livelihoods, and reducing poverty in forest dependent communities. Further, the analysis emphasized that NTFP consumption, utilization, and sales occur at the household level, and its comprehensive assessment is challenging, leading to the need for a reevaluation of approaches that include value chain analysis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. How art market actors experience market emergence in an unequal field: placing Brazilian contemporary art in the global art market.
- Author
-
Brandellero, Amanda
- Subjects
ART industry ,RELATIONSHIP marketing ,EXPORT marketing ,PAPER arts ,MARKETING literature - Abstract
This paper contributes to art marketing and consumption literature by studying how art market participants from Brazil – a market considered "emergent" – position themselves in the global art market. Drawing on qualitative interviews with 60 art market participants and participant observation in Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, the paper shows how position and validation gains are understood as entailing practices of (ex)change (or troca in Portuguese) at the individual and field level. Beyond the extension of their social networks and circulation in art market circuits outside Brazil, art market participants understood their positioning gains as dependent on changes to (the perceptions of) art market practices and operating context, and the negotiation of alternative valuations of Brazilian contemporary art in the global art market, addressing power inequalities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. A pena e o papel. Viajantes no Rio Grande do Sul- século XIX.
- Author
-
Conforto, Marflia
- Subjects
GERMAN watercolor painting ,TRAVELERS' writings ,HISTORY of Rio Grande do Sul state, Brazil ,BRAZIL description & travel ,HISTORY of travel ,WOMEN travelers ,HISTORICAL source material ,NINETEENTH century ,HISTORY - Abstract
The article discusses the watercolor paintings of German painter Hermann Rudolf Wendroth and travel narratives written by travelers on visits to the Rio Grande do Sul region of Brazil during the 19th century. Topics discussed include the history of travelers and travel narratives in the region beginning in the 17th century, collected women's travel narratives relating to the city of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, in the 19th century, and the literature of travel narratives as a source of information on the geography, culture, and history of the Rio Grande do Sul region in Brazil.
- Published
- 2009
5. Asymmetric "partners": work and health of app drivers in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
- Author
-
Pessoa Masson, Letícia, Alvarez, Denise, Oliveira, Simone, Teixeira, Márcia, Leal, Samara, Siqueira Salomão, Gabriela, de Paulo do Amaral, Sarah, and de Souza Christo, Cirlene
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,PAPER products ,GOVERNMENT agencies ,SEMI-structured interviews ,EMPLOYEE rights ,HUMAN activity recognition ,MOBILE apps - Abstract
This paper is the product of an ongoing research's preliminary results with app drivers and aims to discuss how the game of forces has occurred in the relationships established between companies, workers, regulatory bodies, and society. This exploratory qualitative study employed document analysis, a questionnaire, and semi-structured interviews with drivers linked to associations in Rio de Janeiro (RJ), Brazil. The analysis was conducted from a tripolar perspective based on the theoretical-methodological framework of Ergology and social life's micro and macroscopic spaces, encompassing the poles referring to human activity, the market, and politics. The results show a background of norms built on this work about the relationship with companies, passengers, and the drivers themselves, besides issues raised from the COVID-19 pandemic. We can conclude that it is necessary not to counteract technological evolution to achieve workers' rights and health. We should recall that no action aimed at ensuring the reconciliation of health, work, and rights will advance without relying on a fruitful and balanced trend between the three poles mentioned. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Alexandre de Gusmão (1695–1753): O Estadista que desenhou o mapa do Brasil: By Synesio Sampaio Goes Filho. Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo: Editora Record, 2021. Pp. 223, illus. R $44.93 (paper).
- Author
-
Alves de Oliveira, Antonio José
- Subjects
- *
INDIGENOUS peoples of South America , *JESUIT missions ,SPANISH colonies ,PORTUGUESE colonies - Abstract
Alexandre de Gusmão (1695-1753): O Estadista que desenhou o mapa do Brasil: By Synesio Sampaio Goes Filho. The second myth suggested that the territories that today make up Brazil formerly belonged to an immense indigenous Tupi-Guarani group and that the whole area from the confluence of the Paraguay River and the Guaporé River to the Amazon was their ancestral territory: I Pindorama i . The new Treaty of Madrid (1750) was instrumental for the legitimization of territories that had up until then been part of the Spanish Empire in South America. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Selected papers from the Air Transport Research Society World Conference, Bergamo (Italy) and World Conference on Transport Research, Rio de Janeiro (Brazil), 2013.
- Author
-
Yu, Chunyan, Hooper, Paul, and Paleari, Stefano
- Subjects
COMMERCIAL aeronautics ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,SIXTEENTH century - Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Special issue of papers selected by the air transport research society – Selected topics on applied air transport economics.
- Author
-
Hooper, Paul, Yu, Chunyan, and Martini, Gianmaria
- Subjects
- *
COMMERCIAL aeronautics research , *CONFERENCES & conventions , *TRANSPORTATION policy ,UNIVERSITY of Bergamo (Bergamo, Italy) - Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Memorial agency, heritage dissonance, and the politics of memory in the preservation of Rio de Janeiro's Valongo slave wharf.
- Author
-
Broudehoux, Anne-Marie
- Subjects
COLLECTIVE memory ,OLYMPIC Games ,COLLECTIVE consciousness ,IDENTITY politics ,MEMORIALS ,MEMORY - Abstract
The article aims to understand the tensions inherent to the commemoration of a difficult and conflicted past and the conservation of dissonant heritage. It explores the politics of memory and identity, and the power struggles that underscore the heritagisation process through a study of the transformation of Rio de Janeiro's port in preparation to host the 2014 World Cup and 2016 Summer Olympics. The paper uses the notion of heritage dissonance to shed light upon contemporary struggles over the interpretation of the port's contested history and explores the debates that have surrounded the 'discovery' of archeological remains, which exposed a controversial past marked by collective amnesia. The paper identifies various actions, instruments, and strategies used by various actors to either support or undermine the project, from inertia and obstructionism to memorialisation and ritual agency. The analysis of these findings reveals the transformative potential of heritage, as an instrument of empowerment in the ideological battle over collective memory, and a tool of resistance against historical denial. It discusses the way debates over heritage have stimulated public debate, inflected the official historical narrative, and allowed the legacies of slavery to infiltrate collective consciousness. The paper concludes with a discussion of how heritage dissonance can engender actions leading to conflict mediation, thereby promoting reconciliation and dialogue, and, ultimately, societal change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. COVID-19 Pandemical Period: Issues and Strategies to Make Sustainable Socialization and Recreation for Elderly People in Long-Term Care Institutions.
- Author
-
Dias, Ana, Scavarda, Annibal, da Cunha Reis, Augusto, Santos, Isabel, and Fonseca, Andre
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,SOCIALIZATION ,RECREATION ,HEALTH of older people ,LONG-term health care - Abstract
The usual lives have been changed since the COVID-19 Outbreak took place. Elderly people suffer as much as others and their lives have been impacted a lot. This paper aims to analyze the social network use and the recreation and socialization activity participation before and after the COVID-19 pandemical appearance in long-term care institutions. In the empirical side of this research, the authors of this paper sent an email questionnaire to long-term care institutions located in Rio de Janeiro city, Brazil. In the theoretical side of this research, an investigation was carried out through the scientific databases. Data were analyzed using the programming languages Python, Excel, and IBM SPSS Statistics. As a result, this paper shows an apparent increase in social network use and a drop in recreation and socialization activity participation after the COVID-19 pandemical appearance in long-term care institutions. The presented findings are the first step, which can be part of future studies analyzing the potential growth in social network use among elderly people by comparing elderly residents with non-residents in the long-term care institutions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. The Brazilian Santos basin underwater soundscape monitoring project (PMPAS-BS).
- Author
-
Moreira Lima, José Antonio, Soares Filho, William, Xavier, Fabio C., Pires de Paula, Thiago, Spengler, Angela, Gonçalves de Almeida, Fernando, Correa Pereira, Diogo Peregrino, Souza Rego, Valéria, Galotta, Cátia, Corrêa Junior, Carlos, and Bazyl, Alexandre
- Subjects
UNDERWATER noise ,NOISE ,SEDIMENTARY basins ,ACOUSTIC measurements ,UNDERWATER acoustics ,EMISSION control ,ACOUSTIC emission testing - Abstract
This paper describes the Santos Basin Underwater Soundscape Monitoring Project (PMPAS-BS), a Brazilian ocean soundscape monitoring initiative. The main objective of the project is to quantify and assess hydroacoustic noise of anthropogenic origin in a large sedimentary basin extending from 23° S to 28° S on the southeastern Brazilian continental margin of the South Atlantic Ocean. Noise associated with oil and gas (O&G) exploration and production activities is the primary target, but this oceanic region also has busy shipping lanes for commercial, military, and fishing vessels. The two main hubs of Brazil’s export and import of goods by sea are located in this region: Santos and Rio de Janeiro ports. The project has three measurement components: mobile monitoring based on gliders and drifting acoustic profilers, fixed shallow-water monitoring based on acoustic measurements at coastal stations near shipping lanes associated with exploration and production activities in the Santos Basin, and fixed oceanic monitoring based on deep-water mooring lines equipped with passive autonomous acoustic recorders near production units, shipping lanes, and areas with lower intensity of O&G activities (pristine or reference sites). Numerical modeling of anthropogenic underwater acoustic noise has also been included as a fourth project component. The PMPAS-BS covers an area of more than 251,000 km² and uses several instruments with different methods and sensors for acoustic measurements. Its results provide current sound levels over a very large region of the western South Atlantic, both in areas more and less affected by anthropogenic activities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Contested Terrains: Mega-Event Securities and Everyday Practices of Governance.
- Author
-
De Lisio, Amanda, Silk, Michael, and Hubbard, Philip
- Subjects
COMMUNITY-based participatory research ,CITIES & towns ,SEX work ,SEX workers ,SMALL business - Abstract
Sport mega-events (SMEs) remake cities as global brandscapes of leisured consumption; reliant in part upon securitization designed to create an atmosphere free from disturbance and render invisible those "abject" populations who might puncture the tourist bubble that surrounds stadia and fan-zones. Yet, such "shiny" cityspaces are not devoid of complexity, contestation, and compunction. In this paper, we draw on extensive ethnographic- and community-based participatory research in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (prior to, during, and after two SMEs) collected in collaboration with sex workers, working in areas of SME intervention. Our focus is on the contingent nature of securitization amidst the contested terrains and trajectories of SME urbanism. Our analysis resonates with observations from other host cities, challenging dominant myths that the sport mega-event creates impermeable securitized cityscapes by revealing the fluid topography of formality and informality, contestation and negotiation, and oppression and power. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Surviving and dying through the urban frontier: Everyday life, social brokerage and living with militias in Rio de Janeiro's West Zone.
- Author
-
Pope, Nicholas
- Subjects
MILITIAS ,EVERYDAY life ,CONTROL (Psychology) ,URBAN growth ,COMMUNITIES ,PUBLIC spaces ,JUVENILE delinquency - Abstract
Copyright of Urban Studies (Sage Publications, Ltd.) is the property of Sage Publications, Ltd. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Measuring the impact of donations at the Bottom of the Pyramid (BoP) amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
- Author
-
Cunha, Luiza Ribeiro Alves, Antunes, Bianca B. P., Rodrigues, Vinícius Picanço, Ceryno, Paula Santos, and Leiras, Adriana
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,INFECTIOUS disease transmission ,RESOURCE-limited settings ,NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations ,SYSTEM dynamics - Abstract
The governments' isolation measures to contain the transmission of COVID-19 imposed a dilemma for the people at the bottom of the pyramid. Since these people have very unreliable sources of income, a dilemma arises: they must either work under risky conditions or refrain from work and suffer from income cuts. Emergency donations of food and cleaning supplies in a pandemic context might be overlooked by government and civil society actors. This paper aims to model the effects of donations on mitigating the negative effects of COVID-19 on vulnerable communities. Applying the system dynamics method, we simulated the behaviour of the pandemic in Rio de Janeiro (Brazil) communities and the impacts that donations of food and cleaning supplies have in these settings. We administered surveys to the beneficiaries and local organisations responsible for the final distribution of donations to gather information from the field operations. The results show that increasing access to cleaning supplies in communities through donations can significantly reduce coronavirus transmission, particularly in high-density and low-resource areas, such as slums in urban settings. In addition, we also show that food donations can increase the vulnerable population's ability to afford necessities, alleviating the stress caused by the pandemic on this portion of the population. Therefore, this work helps decision-makers (such as government and non-governmental organisations) understand the impacts of donations on controlling outbreaks, especially under COVID-19 conditions, in a low-resource environment and, thus, aid these hard-to-reach populations in a pandemic setting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Phytostabilization alternatives for an abandoned mine tailing deposit in northwestern Mexico.
- Author
-
Borbón-Palomares, Dalia Berenice, González-Méndez, Blanca, Loredo-Portales, Rene, Tinoco-Ojanguren, Clara, and Molina-Freaner, Francisco
- Subjects
ABANDONED mines ,PHYTOREMEDIATION ,METAL tailings ,AGRICULTURE ,CASTOR oil plant ,PLANT species - Abstract
Purpose: Past mining activities in northwestern Mexico have left a large number of abandoned mine tailings deposits, such as in San Felipe de Jesus, Sonora, that is known to be transferring metal(oid)s to nearby agricultural fields. Given the risk and the need to implement mitigation measures, in this paper, we describe the results of two experiments evaluating the phytostabilization potential of five plant species collected in the area. Methods: We evaluated the assisted phytostabilization approach using compost and nutrients and the soil capping approach using combinations of soil, gravel, clay, and tailings layers. Results: The assisted experiment revealed that seedlings were unable to establish under unamended treatments and only Ricinus communis showed potential under this approach. Compost and nutrients reduced the accumulation of As, Pb, Mn, and Zn in leaves of R. communis, but some were above the maximum tolerable levels for domestic animals. Under the capping approach, R. communis also showed better performance under some combinations of soil, gravel, and tailings layers than the other species. The accumulation of As, Pb, and Mn in leaves was below the maximum tolerable levels for domestic animals, indicating that soil capping has greater potential in this abandoned tailing deposit. Conclusion: The capping approach has more phytostabilization potential than the use of amendments, reducing the risk of incorporating metal(oid)s in the trophic web. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Comparison of structured residuals design techniques for actuator and sensor fault detection and isolation in a permanent magnet DC motor.
- Author
-
Antic, Sanja, Rosic, Marko, Djurovic, Zeljko, and Bozic, Milos
- Subjects
DESIGN techniques ,MECHATRONICS ,ACTUATORS ,PERMANENT magnet motors ,MOTOR drives (Electric motors) ,TRANSFER matrix ,PERMANENT magnets - Abstract
Sensors and actuators frequently encounter unexpected deviations from their optimal operating conditions, making their reliability an essential topic in many electric motor drives. In this paper, a comparison of structured residual synthesis methods for actuator and sensor additive fault detection and isolation (FDI) in a permanent magnet (PM) DC motor, applying two different approaches to the design of primary residuals, is presented. The first method involves a standard approach and is based on system transfer matrix synthesis. The second, more convenient approach involves the synthesis of primary residuals based on the analysis of subsystems that describe the observed system. Both methods are applicable for linear and time-invariant (LTI) systems but were successfully applied to a laboratory system that shows nonlinear behavior, time-variant properties, and is affected by a constant disturbance, thanks to the proposed technique of residual translation with the previous design of internal residuals. With the proposed method, all important performance characteristics of the residual generators such as fault sensitivity, reaction speed, and robustness are achieved. The technique can be applied to all mechatronic systems in general, whose behavior can be with satisfactory accuracy described by an LTI model. Given the transfer functions and state-space model of the system in the presence of faults in the Z domain with reduced order, presented technique is computationally efficient for embedded systems. Also, in addition to fault detection and isolation, the system can identify faults by analyzing fault sensitivities, nominal faults, and stationary residual values, making it superior for most FDI applications. A real-time experiment performed on a laboratory setup, which consists of a DC motor, an amplifier designed in the form of a linear electronic circuit, and a Compact RIO 9075 real-time processor is used to develop the FDI system, to generate residuals and confirm advantages of the proposed FDI technique. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Cândido Baptista de Oliveira and the "Forgotten Memoir": The First Plan of a National Astronomical Observatory After Brazilian Independence (1822-1831).
- Author
-
Farias, Millena Souza
- Subjects
ASTRONOMICAL observatories ,SCIENTIFIC knowledge ,HISTORY of astronomy ,MATHEMATICIANS - Abstract
On February 1, 1828, the newspaper Diario Fluminense published in full the Plan for the establishment of an astronomical observatory in the city of Rio de Janeiro. The document was written by the Brazilian mathematician Cândido Baptista de Oliveira and substantiated the approval of the law determining the creation of the future Imperial Astronomical Observatory of Rio de Janeiro (IORJ). This paper discusses the influences embedded within Oliveira's project, by analyzing the appropriation of different scientific traditions gained during his training as a mathematician at the Observatory of the University of Coimbra and during his studies at French scientific institutions, such as the Polytechnic School and Paris Observatory. I argue that this project had a nationalistic ideal, imbued with the notions of progress and modernity, both effects of the ongoing circulation of people and scientific knowledge during the beginning of the nineteenth century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Mapping the Accidents and Unsafe Conditions of Workers in the Automotive Sector.
- Author
-
Silva, Ana C. P. da, Pasini, Virgínia D., Aguilera, Maria V. C., Fonseca, Bernardo B. da, de Souza Sampaio, Nilo A., Reis, José S. da Motta, Santos, Gilberto, and Barbosa, Luis C. F. M.
- Subjects
AUTOMOBILE industry ,WORK-related injuries ,JOB analysis ,MUSCULOSKELETAL system diseases ,MANUFACTURING processes ,INDUSTRIAL safety - Abstract
Purpose: Their production processes involve several risks and repetitive tasks and adoption of penalizing postures, which can cause musculoskeletal disorders and occupational accidents. The objective of this paper is to elucidate the situation of Occupational Health and Safety in the automotive sector in the Agulhas Negras region and in Brazil. Methodology/Approach: For this bibliographic research was carried out to characterize and define the processes and concepts pertinent to the economic activities of the sector; collect and treat the most frequently registered data and elaborate a comparative study for better visualization of the scenarios. Findings: The result was the identification of different behaviours of the curves, which showed the national scenario being linear and constant, while the regional one proved to be unstable, with many variations over the years. Research Limitation/Implication: The research was developed in a region of the State of Rio de Janeiro, and it is recommended to conduct a global survey. Originality/Value of paper: The analysis of the characteristics of occupational accidents, with the most frequent type of injury, the most affected body parts, the groups of causative agents, and the most notified occupations in accidents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Racial geographies of the Anthropocene: Memory and erasure in Rio de Janeiro.
- Author
-
Reyes-Carranza, Mariana
- Subjects
EFFECT of human beings on climate change ,GENOCIDE ,PORT cities ,VIOLENCE against Black people ,COMMUNITIES ,GEOGRAPHY ,MEMORY - Abstract
This paper interrogates the extent to which imaginaries of climate and ecological breakdown attend to the memories, knowledges, and experiences of communities already impacted by histories of racism, colonialism, and poverty. Drawing on insights from Black studies and decolonial thinking, the article reflects on how the causes and effects of anthropogenic climate change can be mapped onto geographies of racialised violence and social dispossession. Specific emphasis is given to Rio de Janeiro, notably its port area, a geographical space where future-oriented narratives remain oblivious to the city's history of anti-Black violence and Indigenous genocide. In parallel, the paper looks at the recently built Museum of Tomorrow and its public representations of the Anthropocene. Overall, the article contends that pluralising accounts of the Anthropocene might offer alternative epistemic entry points for understanding and interrupting the mounting ecological catastrophe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. A QUE PONTO CHEGAMOS? BREVE ANÁLISE DOS PROJETOS DE MOBILIDADE URBANA NA REGIÃO METROPOLITANA DO RIO DE JANEIRO ENTRE 2010 E 2016.
- Author
-
de Carvalho Giannella, Letícia, dos Santos Seabra, Rogério, and Silva Ferreira, Ulisses Carlos
- Subjects
CENSUS ,COMMUTERS - Abstract
Copyright of Direito da Cidade is the property of Editora da Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro (EdUERJ) and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Building emotional-political communities to address gendered violence against women and girls during COVID-19 in the favelas of Maré, Rio de Janeiro.
- Author
-
McIlwaine, Cathy, Krenzinger, Miriam, Rizzini Ansari, Moniza, Resende, Noelle Coelho, Gonçalves Leal, Julia, and Vieira, Fernanda
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,VIOLENCE against women ,GRASSROOTS movements ,POLITICAL participation ,COMMUNITIES - Abstract
Although the intensification of direct and indirect gendered violence against women during the COVID-19 pandemic has been extensively reported globally, there is limited research on women's responses to it. Addressing calls to explore the relationships between emotional-affective atmospheres and politics during the pandemic as well as to centre analyses of gendered violence within geography, this paper explores how women in the favelas of Maré, in Rio de Janeiro have developed mutual support, (self)-care and activism in the face of the crisis. Engaging with nascent debates on responses to COVID-19, together with feminist geographical work on resistance to gendered violence, the article adapts the notion of 'emotional communities' developed by Colombian anthropologist, Myriam Jimeno, to examine how emotional bonds created among survivors of violence are reconfigured into political action. Drawing on qualitative research with 32 women residents and 9 community actors involved in two core community initiatives in Maré, the paper develops the idea of building reactive and transformative 'emotional-political communities' at individual and collective levels to mitigate gendered violence and wider intersectional structural violence. Emotional-political community building is premised on grassroots activism among women and organisations that develops as part of compassionate (self)-care and the quiet rather than spectacular politics of change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Assessing the ecological status of plankton in Anjos Bay: a flow cytometry approach.
- Author
-
Pereira, G. C., de Figuiredo, A. R., Jabor, P. M., and Ebecken, N. F. F.
- Subjects
PLANKTON ,FLOW cytometry ,CYANOBACTERIA - Abstract
This aim of this paper is to assess the use of the heterotrophic/autotrophic ratio as an early indicator of trophic status as a part of development of a real time monitoring program at Anjos Bay, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. An in-situ flow cytometer was used to quantify the abundances of phytoplankton and cyanobacteria, which were identified by chlorophyll and phycoerythrin autofluorescence, respectively. Heterotrophic prokaryotes and viruses were quantified by DNA-binding fluorochromes; merozooplankton larvae were collected by plankton net and quantified by stereomicroscopy. The temporal and spatial distributions of these variables were evaluated on the basis of weekly observations from August 2006 to September 2007. The eterotrophic/autotrophic ratio and the viral abundance were correlated with upwelling events and assume an apparently seasonal pattern. A possible control mechanism and influential factors are discussed, and it is concluded that this ecosystem is bottom-up controlled under eutrophic conditions and top-down controlled under oligotrophic conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. The First Announcement and Call for Papers.
- Subjects
- *
CONFERENCES & conventions , *INVERSE problems , *MATHEMATICAL optimization - Abstract
Provides information on the inverse problem, design and optimization symposium to be held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil from March 17 to 19, 2004. Motivation and objectives; Symposium topics; Symposium fees.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Towards an insurgent urbanism: collaborative counter-hegemonic practices of inhabiting and transforming the cities.
- Author
-
Canedo, Juliana and Andrade, Luciana da Silva
- Subjects
CITIES & towns ,PRAXIS (Process) ,SOCIAL learning ,CRITICAL thinking ,SOCIAL movements - Abstract
This article proposes a debate anchored in a dialogue between concepts of insurgent planning and humane urbanism and the idea of a subaltern urbanism through the lens of a critical reflection on the role of city-building professionals. The paper explores the idea of an insurgent urbanism as a collaborative praxis of city design and development that arises from the protagonism of marginalised communities and the accumulative knowledge of social movements, activists and scholars. It focuses on three different learning dimensions based on the experience of teaching/research actions developed at a self-organised squat in the metropolitan region of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil between 2018 and 2022. Dialoguing with ideas of social learning, it shows that these practices have created a relevant exchange of different types of knowledge and have contributed to the development of other solutions that challenge the hegemonic and neoliberal city production and can therefore be seen as alternatives for the development of more egalitarian and imaginative futures that expand beyond the context of squats in Brazil. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. “Futuros da Baía de Guanabara”: uma exposição sobre inovação e democracia climática.
- Author
-
Ruta, Christine, Contins, Mariana, Mariano Rodrigues, Bruna, and dos Santos Paula, Meriane
- Subjects
SUSTAINABILITY ,SUSTAINABLE development ,EXHIBITION space ,CIVICS education ,CLIMATE change - Abstract
Copyright of Em Extensao is the property of Em Extensao and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Academic dishonesty: motivations of accounting students.
- Author
-
dos Santos Neto, Aloísio Ventura, Pereira Bonfim, Mariana, and Tibúrcio Silva, César Augusto
- Subjects
ACADEMIC fraud ,ACADEMIC motivation ,ACCOUNTING students ,STUDENT cheating ,HONESTY ,PROFESSIONAL employees - Abstract
Copyright of Revista Ambiente Contábil is the property of Revista Ambiente Contabil and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. THE 2016 OLYMPIC GAMES URBAN LEGACY REVISITED: A FOCUS ON RIO DE JANEIRO’S NON-FAVELA YOUTHS.
- Author
-
GOHARIPOUR, Hamed and ISKIN, Amanda
- Subjects
OLYMPIC Games ,URBAN youth ,SPECIAL events ,SOCIAL justice ,FOCUS groups - Abstract
Since being selected to host the 2016 Olympic Games, numerous studies have addressed the legacy of the event in Rio de Janeiro. The significance and sensitivity of the issues raised, namely the displacement of favela residents, has raised serious questions during and immediately after the Games about whether mega-events are fundamentally worthwhile. This paper revisits the topic and shares the findings of four focus groups reflecting non-favela youths’ thoughts about the Games after years. The findings show that while many still have positive attitude to few aspects of the Olympic Games, social justice issues significantly adversely affected respondents’ views of the event’s legacy. Some believe that discrimination continues a long-standing trend in the city, exacerbated by the Games. We believe that the International Olympic Committee always needs a Plan B if things do not work correctly in the host city. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
28. An indigenous horticultural project in Rio de Janeiro as a gap in formal urban space: the case of the Dja Guata Porã Garden.
- Author
-
Afonso, Camila Bevilaqua and Martins de Melo, Priscila
- Subjects
PUBLIC housing ,HOUSING policy ,GARDENS ,ARCHITECTURAL design ,PUBLIC spaces ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
This paper proposes the problematization of generic and mass-produced forms of architecture through the oppositional relationship with indigenous self-constructed spaces. Starting from an ethnographic study about an unique indigenous horticulture project in the center of Rio de Janeiro, The Dja Guata Porã Garden, we demonstrate the effort to build a territory that organizes itself based on multispecies relationships. The project is contrasted with the formal urban space where it takes place, within a housing complex "Minha Casa, Minha Vida", the largest public housing policy in Brazil, where the architecture is designed with generic spaces that cannot be modified according to the residents. From this spatial contrast, we propose that this indigenous horticulture project, with pedagogical purposes, is a gap in the formal urban space. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Providing Consumer Credit to Low-Income Populations in Brazil—The Case of Complexo da Penha.
- Author
-
Santanna, Danielle
- Subjects
CONSUMER credit ,LOW-income consumers ,RURAL poor ,FINANCIALIZATION ,DEBT ,URBAN poor ,POVERTY ,EVERYDAY life - Abstract
The financial inclusion (FI) literature claims that expanding access of the poor to consumer credit in the formal financial system is an instrument to alleviate poverty. This view has been increasingly challenged by the financialization literature, which highlights unsustainable indebtedness of low-income borrowers following the introduction of FI policies. While a welcome contribution and antidote to mainstream assessments, much of the financialization literature on Brazil has, to date, focused on a macro-oriented analysis. As a major testing ground for FI, a better understanding of these dynamics in Latin America's largest country deepens our understanding of the socio-economic consequences of inserting poor populations into the financial system. This paper contributes to the financialization literature by drawing on interviews conducted in a Rio de Janeiro slum to understand how debt dynamics operate in everyday life, along with its structural conditioners. It shows that FI policies provide limited consumption smoothing and instead increase the structural vulnerability of low-income households. Wage and welfare support along with greater oversight and control of financial products supplied to low-income borrowers are warranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. INTEGRAL EDUCATION IN ELEMENTARY SCHOOL IN NITERÓI: GENESIS OF THE IMPLEMENTATION PROCESS (2013-2014).
- Author
-
MONTEIRO, Silvia and CARNEIRO, Waldeck
- Subjects
ELEMENTARY education ,CITIES & towns ,ELEMENTARY schools ,RESEARCH implementation ,SCHOOL integration ,EDUCATION research ,INTEGRALS ,URBAN education ,WAGES - Abstract
Copyright of Revista @mbienteeducação is the property of Nucleo de Publicacoes Institucionais and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Countermapping SDG 5 to address violence against women and girls in the favelas of Maré, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
- Author
-
McIlwaine, Cathy, Ansari, Moniza Rizzini, Leal, Julia Gonçalves, Vieira, Fernanda, and dos Santos, Joelma Sousa
- Subjects
VIOLENCE against women ,GENDER inequality ,GIRLS - Abstract
Violence Against Women and Girls (VAWG) remains one of the most significant problems affecting women globally with its elimination being central to achieving SDG 5 on gender equality. While information on its prevalence is increasing globally, this is often at the national scale with limited local-level data. Responding to feminist critiques of SDG 5 and target 5.2 in terms of the importance of capturing more nuanced data on grassroots women’s experiences as agents rather than victims, this paper reflects on countermapping VAWG in the favelas of Maré in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Drawing on countermapping methodologies, it analyses a series of countermaps highlighting the prevalence of VAWG, but also the need to report and resist it locally. Only by revealing the complexity of VAWG and women’s practices to deal with it can such violence be truly eliminated in order to meet SDG 5 and target 5.2. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Weaponizing Urban Development: Critical Geographies of Militarism in Rio de Janeiro.
- Author
-
Müller, Frank I.
- Subjects
- *
URBAN growth , *NON-state actors (International relations) , *HOUSING development , *MILITIAS , *MILITARISM - Abstract
Access to land and to adequate housing—a constitutionally granted right in Brazil—is currently under attack by non-state armed actors, the so-called militias, in Rio de Janeiro. In their attempts to widen territorial control, "militias" weaponize urban development. To understand such form of militarization, I argue that we need to add a geographical perspective to literatures on criminal governance: Terrain and its political materiality is the basis and not only the outcome of spatial claims to power. To sustain this contribution, I turn to local scales and add insights from ethnographic studies on how paramilitary groups affect the lives of residents. I trace the paramilitary influence along their terrain-shaping and urban development activities. The empirical basis of my argument is drawn from the northern periphery of Rio de Janeiro, looking at how "militias"—emerging as armed developers out of a past as Death Squads—expand their influence by investing in urban development. In this paper, "militia" is conceived as a floating signifier. As such, the meaning of militia is contested, as it encompasses a wide range of practices including civil construction, laying infrastructure, and landscaping. This way, the term "militia" becomes a cornerstone of a militarized urban development discourse and practice. "Militia," as the encompassing center of a narrative cluster, bolsters bellicose forms of governing urban expansion, thereby further militarizing the everyday life of a large part of the marginalized urban society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Investigating factors affecting global environmental sustainability: evidence from nonlinear ARDL bounds test.
- Author
-
Sowah Jr, James Karmoh and Kirikkaleli, Dervis
- Subjects
SUSTAINABILITY ,PARIS Agreement (2016) ,MONETARY incentives ,ECONOMICS literature ,ENERGY consumption ,SUSTAINABLE development - Abstract
The concept of environmental sustainability formed the basis of the Paris Agreement and the United Nations conference in Rio de Janeiro. Empirically, without environmental sustainability, everything else could fall apart or be aimless. This study investigates factors affecting global environmental sustainability spanning 1966Q1 to 2019Q4. However, there are many micro-/macroeconomic factors engendering the environment, and the absence of robust clarity on whether factors such as economic growth, urbanization, trade openness, and energy consumption matter for global environmental sustainability remains a global academic dilemma in the economics literature. This paper utilized the unrestricted nonlinear autoregressive distributed lag (NARDL) bounds test techniques to model their relationship. Furthermore, the study adopted fully modified ordinary least squares (FMOLS), dynamic ordinary least squares (DOLS), and canonical cointegrating regression (CCR) methods to test the research hypothesis, catering to the problem of endogeneity and serial correlation. Up-to-date of this study, no empirical study has examined the nexus of these variables within the global framework. The outcomes suggested that (i) NARDL bounds test of cointegration confirmed evidence of long-run and short-run relationships among the variables; (ii) long-run asymmetric relationship was affirmed among the variables; and (iii) DOLS, FMOLS, and CCR models demonstrate that economic growth, energy consumption, and trade openness are positively significantly correlated with environmental sustainability except for economic growth which shows negative and insignificant correlation. These findings validate the protracted argument in literature that these estimated variables are significant for global environmental sustainability. This study recommends that environmental policymakers integrate global economic incentives with favorable regulatory changes for achieving the goals of a global sustainable environment in the long-run equilibrium. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Necropolitics Beyond the Exception: Parapolicing, Milícia Urbanism, and the Assassination of Marielle Franco in Rio de Janeiro.
- Subjects
CITIES & towns ,CAPITAL gains ,CITY council members ,ASSASSINATION ,SUBALTERN ,VIOLENCE - Abstract
Copyright of Antipode is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Hybrid insurgent citizenship: intertwined pathways to urban equality in Rio de Janeiro.
- Author
-
Comelli, Thaisa
- Subjects
EQUALITY ,CITIZENSHIP ,COMMUNITY organization ,JUSTICE ,URBAN studies - Abstract
This paper contributes to critical and Southern urban studies by discussing how the notion of hybridity is useful to understand contemporary modes of politics rooted in equality pursuits and crafted by peripheral subjects. It analyses the birth, discourses and tactics of three grassroots groups in Rocinha, an immense peripheral settlement in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, to show how modern insurgent claims – based on material urban rights – are intertwined with other grammars of justice, such as the politics of intersectional difference, critical pedagogies, solidarity and care. These cases suggest that contemporary insurgency builds on rights-based citizenship claims to create unique pathways that somehow articulate the universality and relationality of justice. I suggest that hybrid insurgent citizenship operates like a braid in which different strategies are uniquely and interdependently linked over time. Whilst in Rocinha the central thread is insurgency, the same logics could apply to other context-situated political traditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. The Main Benefits of Application of Six Sigma for Productive Excellence.
- Author
-
da Silva Gomes, Fabricia, Camargo, Paulo R., da Motta Reis, José S., Diogo, Gabriel M. M., Cardoso, Ronald P., Medeiros de Barros, José G., de Souza Sampaio, Nilo A., Barbosa, Luís C. F. M., and Santos, Gilberto
- Subjects
SIX Sigma ,CONTINUOUS improvement process ,CONSUMER complaints ,MANUFACTURING processes ,TOTAL quality management - Abstract
Purpose: The present paper addressed the application of the Six Sigma method for process management to reduce the variability and scrap of packages manufactured at a company located in the city of Rio de Janeiro. Methodology/Approach: Exploratory research was conducted to understand the context, analyse, and create familiarity with the problems identified in the company, making them more explicit. Findings: Through Define, Measure, Analyze, Improve, Control (DMAIC) the company was able to identify the main causes of customer complaints and the factors that led to these complaints. Using management tools, it was possible to solve the problems with packaging outside the specifications, which was the reason for complaints from customers. The benefits of this research were the identification and analysis of the quality management tools. Research Limitation/Implication: The present research had as a limitation the application of the method is only one company, so it is proposed as a future study of the application in different production processes of different organizations. Originality/Value of paper: It was evidenced that there is a positive relationship between the application of Quality management methods and company billing, as there was an increase of 1.7% in company billing. In past surveys, new possibilities for improvement to be addressed emerged, making the team aware of the need to continue the process of continuous improvement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. What's the Value of a House: Wait, Struggle, and Improvement in a Militia-Controlled(?) Area in Rio de Janeiro.
- Author
-
ARAUJO, MARCELLA and PETTI, DANIELA
- Subjects
ROAD construction ,CITIES & towns ,HOUSING ,RESIDENTS - Abstract
This paper discusses valuation regimes of houses in a militia area in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Drawing on fieldwork undertaken during the construction of a highway between 2012 and 2016, we propose considering removal processes as sociological objects relevant to the analysis of informal real estate markets. We show how waiting for the construction challenged residents and community leaders to fill the gaps between memories of the past, an uncertain present, and multiple future possibilities. Offered only three forms of compensation for removing their houses, residents established equivalences between past struggles and prospects for improvement. By exploring the multiple meanings of these categories and different forms of active waiting for the removal, we differentiate the logic and scale of the self-construction of houses from the militia urbanism in the region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. The long-term effects of housing policy instrumentation: Rio de Janeiro's case from an actor–network theory perspective.
- Author
-
Becerril, Hector
- Subjects
SLUMS ,HOUSING ,SOCIOLOGY ,COMMUNITIES - Abstract
This paper explores the long-term effects of Rio de Janeiro's slum upgrading, a key policy instrument of municipal housing since the 1990s, and an essential reference for housing initiatives worldwide. From a theoretical stance, this paper builds on the Political Sociology of Public Policy Instruments (PPI) and actor–network theory (ANT). The paper argues that Rio's slum upgrading instrumentation, that is, its constitution and use, has been key to the various housing policy oscillations over the past three decades. It also contends that this instrumentation contributed to the depoliticization of the municipal housing policy through the fostering of a 'community of practice' centred on slum upgrading, formed by a wide range of state and non-sate actors, and based on a technical rationality. This community and its practices have weakened the political control over Rio's housing policy in the past decades. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Legitimizing discourses within favela tourism.
- Author
-
Altamirano, M. Eugenia
- Subjects
TOURISM websites ,TOURISM ,LANDSCAPE assessment ,TOURIST attractions ,PLACE attachment (Psychology) ,CULTURAL capital ,CULTURAL landscapes - Abstract
Urban slums, especially in the Global South, have become popular attractions for tourists interested in sites off the beaten track and more authentic encounters with local culture. This practice has drawn attention from the media and extensive academic research, pointing out its controversial character due to the uneven power relations between hosts and guests and the commodification of poverty to turn it into a tourist attraction. Though acknowledging this pitfall, this work takes a different approach. We argue that tourism has agency in co-producing meanings and values in the process of making and consuming slums as tourist places. Within this process, the cultural capital of slums may find new avenues of legitimization. We critically analyze how discursive practices may valorize and legitimize slums as spaces for cultural production and consumption and the role of tourism in ordering, valuing, and visualizing vernacular cultural landscapes. The paper examines the case of favelas in Rio de Janeiro open to tourist visitation. Using as sources 79 articles from virtual media outlets (a mainstream, hegemonic newspaper, and a popular grassroots publication), official social media accounts, and tourism policies, we leverage Foucauldian discourse analysis and scrutinized the data, drawing insights on three categories of legitimization: authorization, rationalization, and moral evaluation. Our main findings show that tourism is often portrayed as a justification for securitization policies, as well as for fiscalization and formalization processes. Tourists were perceived to have authority in evaluating and valorizing slums' cacophonic landscape beyond the evaluations of hegemonic social and political elites, which makes for a potential avenue of legitimization. However, in employing a more critical scope, two questions resonate: (1) who benefits from the valorization of slums' cultural capital and, (2) who decides on the social validity of emergent cultural elements? [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Effects of reliquiae layer and excavation procedure on the behaviour of anchored structures.
- Author
-
Moura, M. V. S., Ehrlich, M., and Mirmoradi, S. H.
- Subjects
EXCAVATION ,SOIL profiles ,CLAY minerals ,GNEISS - Abstract
There is a fault in the region of Niteroi city, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and weathering has formed different soil layers in terms of granulometry, resistance, and stiffness, which are regularly spread throughout the soil mass. These reasonably continuous reliquiae soil layers showed thicknesses varying from a few millimetres to few centimetres. For the weak soil layers, laboratory tests indicated the presence of high activity clay minerals and low shear resistance parameters. The present paper numerically assesses the impact of those relatively weak layers and the excavation execution procedure on the performance of anchored walls. The direction of those layers was orthogonal to the wall face, and the dip was unfavourable to the excavation. The numerical modelling was firstly validated against data from an instrumented structure excavated in gneiss residual soil located in Niteroi city, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The results of the parametric study show that the weak layers plastify during the excavation with low lateral movements and the presence of those weak layers leads to an increase of the uphill settlements (about six times), lateral facing displacements (about four times), distortions (about 12 times), and anchor loads (about 1.4 times). This research calls attention to the importance of reliable site investigation for determination of the soil profile and its correct modelling in order to have a safe and cost-effective project. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Deconstruct, Don't Demolish: An Overview of Rio de Janeiro in 2016 and London in 2012 as Olympic Host Cities †.
- Author
-
Korde, Neha and Jaglan, Amit Kumar
- Subjects
CONSTRUCTION materials ,CONSTRUCTION industry ,RAW materials ,CIRCULAR economy - Abstract
The buildings that house the events, which serve as icons of this most famous sporting event, must now be sustainable as well. Stadiums, arenas, gathering places, and athlete communities are all changing from expressions of architectural brilliance to instances of sustainable environments, built to last long after concluding the event and to aid in the redevelopment of the metropolitan areas that host them. The building business is one of the most environmentally destructive in the world since it directly affects how raw materials are used, and how they are determined to be used during their entire existence. This sector, however, is still in the early stages of transition from a linear to a circular economy. To minimize total resource use and landfill trash, business models must be updated to incorporate novel concepts and cutting-edge services. According to this approach, "deconstruction" plays a crucial role in the circularity of structures. It serves as a sustainable substitute for traditional demolition, which is generally an arbitrary and destructive process that, although being quicker and less expensive, typically produces a substantial amount of garbage. On this line, the goal of this research is to revisit the Olympic Games hosting cities, mainly London and Rio de Janeiro, and examine the possibility of the demolition of built infrastructure in the Olympics and to provide methods for minimizing its effects on the urban environment. The research paper aims to make it easier to implement circular economy strategies for buildings by outlining the key principles that must be followed throughout the design and planning process regardless of the kind of construction system or material employed and by recommending deconstruction as a sustainable alternative to demolition. By collaborating with the corporate, academic, and research sectors, we can further emphasize the sharing of information. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Cardiovascular adverse effects associated with the use of anti-HER2 in breast cancer treatment.
- Author
-
Soares Valente, Patricia Marques, Nogueira da Silva, Paula, Esmeraldo da Silva, Licínio, de Andrade Martins, Wolney, and Rodrigues de Castilho, Selma
- Subjects
BREAST cancer ,HEALTH facilities ,CANCER treatment ,TRASTUZUMAB ,MONOCLONAL antibodies ,BLOOD pressure - Abstract
Background: Cancer represents an important public health problem with increasing incidence, prevalence, and mortality, affecting the entire Western population, especially in developed and developing countries. The use of monoclonal antibodies has revolutionized the treatment of cancer, but this treatment can cause adverse cardiovascular effects (AE). Objective: The objective of this paper is to identify and classify AE in breast cancer patients in the use of Trastuzumab in two health institutions. Methods: Retrospective study of medical records of patients with breast cancer Her 2+ submitted the therapy with trastuzumab in early and advanced stage of the disease. Review conducted in a university hospital and a private clinic, both located in Rio de Janeiro State, Brazil. Results: Cardiovascular events were late for trastuzumab, with predominance of moderate reactions. There was a predominance of dyspnea, increased blood pressure, fatigue and reduced left ventricular ejection. Conclusion: The results resemble similarities in the pattern of the institutions’ reactions. Identify possible AE and know the toxicity profile of trastuzumab can contribute to a safer therapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Men's and Women's Basketball Coverage in the Spanish Digital Press During the 2016 Rio Olympics.
- Author
-
Salido-Fernandez, Juana and Muñoz-Muñoz, Ana Maria
- Subjects
WOMEN'S basketball ,STEREOTYPES ,OLYMPIC Games ,GENDER stereotypes ,BASKETBALL fans ,WOMEN athletes - Abstract
This paper analyzes the differences in the representation of women and men in basketball news in the Spanish digital sports press during 2016 Olympic Games from a gender perspective with the aim of investigating whether media coverage was unequal. The sample comprises 679 news articles published in Marca.com and MundoDeportivo.com from 1 July to 30 September 2016. The study analyzed 15 variables: date, sport, sex of main subject, nationality, number of photographs, authorship, external sources of information, direct and indirect speech, news about medals, main topic, representation of the main subjects, gender marking, and presence of gender stereotypes and their typology in the text and photographs. Results show a clear inequality in the representation of women and men both (i) quantitatively and (ii) qualitatively: (i) female teams were underrepresented in the information and the photographs and (ii) the nature of the content. Finally, it is argued that greater coverage of female athletes by itself is insufficient to achieve equality unless it is accompanied by a qualitative change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Biosocial borders: Affective debilitation and resilience among women living in a violently bordered favela.
- Author
-
Brigstocke, Julian, Fróes, Maira, Cabral, Cristina, Malanquini, Lidiane, and Baptista, Gabriela
- Subjects
AFFECTIVE neuroscience ,AFFECT (Psychology) ,GALVANIC skin response ,WOMEN'S roles ,BORDERLANDS ,PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience ,COMMUNITIES - Abstract
Within emerging fields of research focusing on neuro‐urbanism, neuro‐geographies, and biosociality, which experiment with using emerging mobile biosensor methods, few if any have used them to research socio‐spatial life in communities that suffer high levels of violence and other socio‐spatial injustices. Extending non‐representational accounts of the body, emotions, and affect, this paper discusses an experimental geography–neuroscience collaboration, working in a favela of Rio de Janeiro to explore the embodied urban emotions and affects of violently bordered urban communities. Emphasising non‐representational, corporeal spatial practices in a study of women living in Brazil's favelas, we use electrodermal activity biosensors to propose a novel methodological and analytical approach that focuses on forms of affective debilitation and resilience. Theoretically, we draw on biopolitical theory and border theory to propose a method that avoids oppositions between biopolitical and necropolitical accounts of borders. The aim of the research, conducted in June 2016, is to understand levels of affective debilitation or resilience among women living in the Maré Complex of favelas in Rio de Janeiro. Using a wearable biosensor, we took measures of electrodermal activity of eight women as they undertook one of their routine, everyday journeys within the favela. We also conducted an hour‐long qualitative interview with each participant. We find that for all our participants, navigating the favela's violent border spaces subjects their bodies to very high levels of affective and cognitive demand. While some women responded to this with stress reactions that created acute levels of affective debilitation, others responded very strongly, showing exceptionally high levels of affective resilience. Our research highlights the affective labour required of women to co‐construct urban borders, and emphasizes their agency and forms of everyday resistance in shaping the favela's affective atmospheres. Combined biosensing (electrodermal activity/galvanic skin response) data and interview data reveal that women living in the favela experience high levels of stress and fear. For one resident this results in affective debilitation (a wounding of the capacity to affect and to be affected). However, other women showed exceptionally high levels of affective resilience and resistance. The research points to the important role of women in co‐constructing the embodied borders of the favela. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Affective registers of favela infrastructure in Rio de Janeiro.
- Author
-
Prouse, Carolyn
- Subjects
AFFECT (Psychology) ,PARTICIPANT observation ,ANTI-imperialist movements ,EMOTIONS - Abstract
Copyright of Social & Cultural Geography is the property of Routledge and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Optimistic Scenario of 0.50 m Mean Sea Level Rise and Possible Environmental Impacts, Resulting from Tidal Variations, in the City of Niterói, Rio de Janeiro—Brazil.
- Author
-
Dias Ferreira, Vilmar Leandro, Santos Pereira, Elizabeth, Souza de Mello, Lucas Pluvie, Garcia Silva, Rodrigo Amado, and Dias, Fábio Ferreira
- Subjects
ABSOLUTE sea level change ,ENVIRONMENTAL impact analysis ,SOCIOECONOMICS ,DIGITAL elevation models - Abstract
As several researches indicate, since the 1950s one observed unprecedented warming of the atmosphere and oceans, resulting from greenhouse gas emissions and changes in land use and occupation, leading to sea level rise and impacts on coastal areas. In the municipality of Niterói—Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, where a large urban concentration in coastal areas is observed, a Climate Change Adaptation System was developed, through which mitigation and adaptation strategies are combined, in order to: reduce vulnerabilities; avoid losses and damages; build instruments to allow adaptation of natural, human, productive and infrastructure systems. In this context, this paper aims to measure possible impacts, in the biophysical and socioeconomic spheres, resulting from an eventual 0.50 m rise in mean sea level, which represents an optimistic scenario according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. In contrast to similar studies, this work also considered daily and occasional water level variations, represented by the highest astronomical tide and the highest storm surge observed in the studied region. The following data were applied: digital elevation model, 2010 population census data, and real estate information. With the altimetry data, by means of GIS, the census sectors inserted in the affected areas were selected, to obtain data regarding population, number of households, and income. Specialized websites were applied to collect average property values. The simulations revealed that approximately 2950 households and more than 9000 residents could be directly affected, with losses that could exceed R$ 3.60 billion. The Oceanic Region is configured as the most exposed region, susceptible to losses of several ecosystems, economic losses in residential areas and possible destruction of urban infrastructure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Informal science learning experiences for gender equity, inclusion and belonging in STEM through a feminist intersectional lens.
- Author
-
Reznik, Gabriela, Massarani, Luisa, and Calabrese Barton, Angela
- Subjects
YOUNG women ,GENDER inequality ,NONFORMAL education ,FEMINISM ,SCIENTIFIC communication ,WOMEN in science ,SIX Sigma ,PARASOCIAL relationships - Abstract
In this paper, the authors seek to analyze the perceptions, motivations and experiences of young women in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) education projects aiming to incentivize gender equity, based on the theoretical framework of feminist studies on science and intersectionality, as well as academic literature on equity and inclusion in science communication. The following question was considered: How does experience in these projects influence young women's perceptions of belonging in the STEM fields? Working from a qualitative, content analysis approach, the authors conducted 73 questionnaires, 20 interviews, and 4 focus groups with 25 young women who participated in 4 projects developed in public schools in low-income settings in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The authors categorized the experience of these young women in their individual dimension–regarding motivations, interests, science identity and future career prospects; family dimension–encouragement and recognition from family members and parents' beliefs and expectations; educational dimension–recognition by the school community, improvement in school performance, and intervention in school spaces; project dimension–representativeness of gender, race, class, and location, development of self-esteem and self-confidence, building of a sense of belonging, and active learning methodologies; and social dimension–domestic work in their daily lives and experiences of discrimination based on gender, race, class and location. The authors argue that such projects become "counter-spaces" in which marginalized young women find spaces of resistance and possibility, based on the unique position they occupy and, through feeling included and belonging, can claim their rightful presence from an intersectional perspective. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Standby urbanization: Dwelling and organized crime in Rio de Janeiro.
- Author
-
Müller, Frank
- Subjects
URBANIZATION ,EMERGENCY management ,POLITICAL violence ,DWELLINGS ,SEMI-structured interviews - Abstract
This paper conceptualizes dwelling as an analytical lens to study the effects of combined human-made and environmental threats on the governing of peripheral urbanization. I call this grounded and phenomenological-analytical approach to dwelling dwelling in limbo to highlight the improvised and always uncertain nature of low-income populations' forms of residence. As such, dwelling will be explored as a temporal, political, and more-than-human process: as residents' exposure to, endurance while, and ways of navigating towards urbanization. Combining three data sources - semi-structured interviews with residents, politicians, state attorneys; own observations/ fieldwork notes, and local media reports - the paper situates this approach in the northern periphery of Rio de Janeiro. I present cases of once promised, yet suspended resettlement and highlight the role of organized criminal actors in the partial implementation of the Project Iguaçu - a disaster prevention program financed by Brazil's Federal Growth Acceleration Programme (PAC). The paper identifies such dwelling in limbo, that is, residents' exposure to criminal actors' dominion, enduring (non)resettlement, and navigating amidst uncertainty, to illustrate the effects of standby urbanization. Standby urbanization, I argue, is characterized by an active passivity of marginalized residents: To secure future dwelling, low-income populations are forced into supporting structures that perpetuate their marginality. In other words, dwelling in limbo is not an accidental side-effect of urbanization, but a form of political violence inherent to the governing of urban peripheries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
49. Replicated or homegrown planning model? The mutual constitution of ideas, interests and institutions in the delivery of a megaproject in Rio de Janeiro.
- Author
-
Silvestre, Gabriel
- Subjects
WATERFRONTS ,PUBLIC spaces ,BUSINESS forms ,CONSTITUTIONS ,SPACE ,CHARGE carrier mobility - Abstract
On the surface, contemporary urban megaprojects suggest a convergence in form: office towers, hotels, museums, shopping and renewed public spaces often involving transnational firms and renowned architectsHowever, framing local policiesas instances of a 'serial reproduction' of iconic landscapes obscures more than reveals how circulating planning models are reproduced and institutionalized. To this effect, this paper suggests a complementary approach between the literature of policy mobilities and new institutionalism focusing on how policies are 'arrived at' and the role of ideas in the policy process. An analytical framework is applied to the case study of a large-scale waterfront regeneration programme in Rio de Janeiro to examine the mutual evolvement between ideas, interests and institutions. The paper concludes by stressing the importance ofpaying attention to how policy knowledge is assembled, institutionalized and interests identified. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Listening to Beethoven's Ninth as communicational production.
- Author
-
Lucas, Cássio de Borba
- Subjects
LISTENING ,MUSICOLOGY ,MUSICAL analysis ,PHENOMENOLOGY - Abstract
This paper (1) discusses the communicability of musical listening, (2) proposes a semanalytical perspective to approach it in terms of communicational production, and (3) summarizes an analysis of the production of musical listenings in the case of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony. Instead of assuming that verbal talk on music banalizes listening (Barthes), or that musical arrangers are the privileged authorities when it comes to transmitting a personal listening (Szendy), our suggestion is that communication produces – in the post-structuralist sense of the word – musical listenings even when it seems to simply try and account for it. In a transmissive, "phenotextual" (Kristeva) comprehension, listening may be understood as a phenomenological, receptive act that pre-exists its communication. Instead, our communicational research on musical listening turns to the listening-accounts in order to grasp the "listenabilities" as they emerge (are permitted or interdicted) within specific listening-territories that "genotextually" produce their regulations and habits (modes of listening). This semiotic production is methodologically investigated, here, in terms of interpretant signs, especially as Normal Interpretants (Peirce), within a particular listening-territory (Brazilian newspapers' repercussion around the Ninth Symphony's 1918 debut in Rio). Three remarks are made on the genotextual operations that produce "insufficiency," "monumentality," and "distinção" as listening normalities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.