26 results
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2. Issue Info ‐ Call for papers (Theme 2).
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DEMOCRACY , *EVANGELICALISM - Abstract
In the article, the authors offer information on the papers/articles to be submitted for the special issue on topics like American evangelicalism, White Evangelical America, and representative democracy.
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- 2023
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3. Issue Info ‐ Call for papers (Theme 1).
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CHRISTMAS , *RITES & ceremonies - Abstract
In the article, the author offers information on the articles/papers for the theme issue about American Christmas like religious rituals of the American Christmas, Christmas costumes, and the holiday season.
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- 2023
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4. Eviction and the Rental Housing Crisis in Rural America☆.
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Gershenson, Carl and Desmond, Matthew
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HOUSING , *RURAL housing , *RENTAL housing , *EVICTION , *CITIES & towns - Abstract
Evictions are commonplace in the United States, and their negative consequences are broad and severe. However, research on evictions to date has focused primarily on urban areas, and thus has not addressed the impact evictions have on rural renters. This paper offers the first comprehensive analysis of evictions in rural communities, where the number of renters has been increasing in recent decades. We use Eviction Lab's national eviction database to study the approximately 220,000 evictions filed in rural counties each year. While the majority of rural evictions affect families with a white head of household (57 percent in 2010), eviction filing rates are four times higher among rural Black renters than among rural white renters. Eviction filing rates are highest in heavily Black counties in the rural southeast. While eviction filings are somewhat lower in rural majority‐Hispanic counties, these communities experience low‐quality informal housing and overcrowding. Eviction rates are also higher in rural counties with higher rent burdens and where more households include children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Place‐based subsidies and employment growth in rural America: Evidence from the broadband initiatives programme.
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Rupasingha, Anil, Pender, John, Williams, Ryan, Goldstein, Joshua, and Nair, Devika
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RURAL Americans , *PROPENSITY score matching , *SUBSIDIES ,AMERICAN Recovery & Reinvestment Act of 2009 - Abstract
This paper studies the labour market effects of the Broadband Initiatives Program (BIP), a programme authorized by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 to promote broadband deployment, mainly in rural areas. The BIP is one of the largest USDA broadband programmes implemented to date, providing more than $3.4 billion in grants and loans in FY 2010. We investigate the impacts of BIP investments on employment outcomes in BIP‐recipient Census tracts compared to similar tracts outside of BIP project service areas between the inception of the programme in 2010 and 2019. We use a quasi‐experimental research design that combines difference‐in‐difference regression with propensity score matching estimation to identify the causal effect of the BIP investments on employment outcomes. We find that the BIP investments had a positive overall effect on employment growth that increased over time. The subsidized investments had a greater effect on employment in startups than in incumbent businesses, in the goods‐producing sector and the information and communications technology sector than other sectors, and a greater effect in micropolitan census tracts than tracts located in metropolitan areas or in small town and remote rural locations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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6. Seismic Evidence for Metamorphic Densification of the Lower Continental Crust in Eastern North America.
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Li, Cong, Hibbard, Leon, Gao, Haiying, and Williams, Michael L.
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SEISMIC wave velocity , *CRATONS , *CONTINENTAL crust , *ISOSTASY , *MOHOROVICIC discontinuity , *GARNET , *OROGENY - Abstract
The composition of the lower continental crust, as well as its formation, growth, and evolution, remains a fundamental subject to be understood. In this study, we carry out a comparative and integrative analysis of seismic tomographic models, teleseismic receiver function results, and Airy isostasy in order to investigate the properties of the lower continental crust in eastern North America. We extract the depths for Vs of 4.0 km/s, 4.2 km/s, and 4.5 km/s from three selected tomographic models and calculate the differences between the Vs depth contours and the Moho depth defined by receiver functions. We then calculate the Airy isostatic Moho depth and its misfit with the receiver‐function‐defined Moho. Our analysis reveals three key features: (a) the deepening of the Vs depth contours and the strong negative Airy misfit within the U.S. Grenville Province; (b) a seismically faster‐than‐average and compositionally denser‐than‐average lowermost crust in the eastern North American Craton and the Grenville Province; and (c) the thickest, seismically fastest, and densest lowermost crust beneath the southern Grenville Front, the southern Grenville‐Appalachian boundary, and the U.S.‐Canada national border. We suggest that the lower crust of the craton and the Grenville Province has densified through garnet‐forming metamorphic reactions during and after orogenesis, contributing to the widely distributed fast‐velocity layer. The lower crust beneath the tectonic boundaries could have experienced more extensive garnet growth during orogenesis and emplacement of mafic magma. This study provides new constraints on the seismic and compositional properties of the lower crust in eastern North America. Plain Language Summary: The continental crust provides important clues about the formation and evolution of the Earth. However, the dominant composition of the lower part of the continental crust remains enigmatic, especially in the regions where the seismic velocities are significantly faster than the global average. In this paper, we investigate the properties of the lower continental crust in eastern North America by comparatively analyzing two types of data sets: (a) the variations of seismic velocity within the crust and (b) the variations of the crustal thickness. Our comparative and quantitative analysis reveals that the lower crust of the eastern North American Craton and the Grenville Province is seismically faster and compositionally denser than the global average. The thickest, seismically fastest, and compositionally densest lower crust is roughly along the orogenic fronts and the U.S.‐Canada national border. We suggest that garnet growth within the lower crust is a viable mechanism for forming the widely distributed fast‐velocity layer in eastern North America. The lower crust may have been further densified through extensive garnet growth and emplacement of mafic magma at a regional scale. Key Points: A high‐velocity lower continental crust distributes widely in eastern North AmericaThe seismically fastest and densest lower crust is roughly along the orogenic frontsThe lower crust densifies through the metamorphic growth of dense minerals [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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7. Onset and demise dates of the rainy season in the South American monsoon region: A cluster analysis result.
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Rodrigues, Maria A. M., Garcia, Sâmia R., Kayano, Mary T., Calheiros, Alan J. P., and Andreoli, Rita V.
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CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) , *MONSOONS , *HIERARCHICAL clustering (Cluster analysis) , *SEASONS , *TIME series analysis - Abstract
This work proposes an adaptation of the method developed in previous papers to determine the onset and demise of the rainy season (ONR and DER) dates in the areas of the South American monsoon system (SAMS) based on the pentad antisymmetric outgoing long‐wave radiation (AOLR). In those papers, the sign change of the mean AOLR in the central Amazon Basin (CAM) and western central Brazil (WCB) from positive to negative defined the ONR, from negative to positive, the DER dates. Since the monsoon convection presents a northwest–southeast oriented progression, the antisymmetric area to the WCB was selected subjectively. Thus, here we propose to use the Ward hierarchical clustering method to select areas in the SAMS and in the northern tropical America (NTA) for the regionalized AOLR calculation. The significant (at the 95% confidence level) negative correlations with the largest magnitude among the clusters in the SAMS and NTA and the outgoing long‐wave radiation (OLR) and precipitation annual cycles in each group define the pairs to calculate the AOLR. Then, the AOLR time series is calculated and subjected to a 5‐pentad running mean filter. This method keeps the climatological features of the convection annual cycle such that the closer (farther) the pair is to the equator the longer (shorter) the rainy season. The ONR and DER dates found with this new method are remarkably close to those found previously. Therefore, the new method proposed here highlights regional aspects of rainy season and can easily be automatized for its routine application at the operational climate monitoring centres, for instance at INPE. This is the most important advantage of the method and might be relevant to the SAMS rainy season monitoring. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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8. Geographic earnings inequality by race, 1960–2016.
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Nutting, Andrew W.
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INCOME inequality , *RACIAL inequality , *STANDARD metropolitan statistical areas , *RACE , *INTERNAL auditing - Abstract
Geographic inequality and racial disharmony are considered major factors in America's political divergence. This paper calculates geographic earnings inequality from 1960 to 2016 separately by race. From 2000 to 2016, White geographic inequality was significantly higher, and Hispanic geographic inequality was significantly lower, than Black and Asian geographic inequality. White geographic inequality rose from 1980 to 2008. Black and Hispanic geographic inequality fell from 1960 to 1980. Rural controls explain substantial shares of White geographic inequality in all years. Region and rural controls account for large shares of Black geographic inequality, especially from 1960 to 1990. Post‐1990, geographic inequality changes are largely explained by changes in overall earnings inequality, but 1960–1990 changes are not. Between‐race differences in geographic inequality translate into high‐income metropolitan statistical areas having had, since 1980, significantly smaller shares of Whites among their low‐income residents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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9. What is the Place for Megachurches? A Comparison of 22 American Cities Based on the Causes of Effects Approach1.
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Pruisken, Insa
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STANDARD metropolitan statistical areas , *COMMUNITIES , *SOCIAL history , *RELIGIOUS groups , *VALUE orientations , *SOCIAL comparison , *MARKETPLACES , *SUCCESS - Abstract
The success of megachurches in America is often traced back to their strategic ability of mobilizing new members in a competitive, religious marketplace. This paper shifts the attention to the push factors of megachurch success. It develops a causes of effects approach, in which local place‐based conditions in 22 metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs) are compared and related to megachurches. First, correspondence analysis (CA) is used to take into account a large set of explanatory conditions such as religious and ethnic group affiliations, social structural conditions as well as value orientations. CA reveals that megachurches are typically successful in MSAs characterized by an evangelical hegemony. Second, qualitative comparative analysis shows that population growth and suburbanization are necessary conditions for a high share of megachurches. An analysis of sufficient conditions leads to three propositions: Megachurches grow in cities (1) where a large closed evangelical community exists; (2) where a large upward oriented Christian immigrant community exists; (3) and in tolerant (and educated) areas—in conjuncture with the presence of a larger community of Protestants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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10. Liberal nationalism and Central American refugees: What is America's national responsibility?
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Herr, Ranjoo Seodu
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CULTURAL nationalism , *REFUGEES , *NATIONALISM , *IMMIGRATION policy , *FORCED migration , *EUGENICS ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
In an era of unprecedented numbers of migrants from the global south to the global north, nationalism has become synonymous with liberal states' ethnocentric, xenophobic, and racist immigration policies. The Trump administration's treatment of Central American refugees has been taken as a prime example. By focusing on liberal cultural nationalism, this paper demonstrates that these prevailing perceptions about nationalism are unfounded. Although liberal cultural nationalism has been accused of endorsing restrictive immigration policies, the degree to which liberal cultural nationalism's immigration policies are restrictive is context dependent; under certain circumstances, liberal nationalism may call for relaxing immigration policies to admit certain types of immigrants by invoking the idea of national responsibility. Consequently, liberal cultural nationalism offers one of the strongest liberal arguments for admitting certain kinds of migrants from the global south. The Central American refugee crisis at the U.S. southern border is analysed as a case study to illustrate this. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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11. Culture and dreaming: A story of co‐creation.
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PHOTOGRAPHY exhibitions , *CULTURAL history , *JEWISH children , *CULTURE , *INDIGENOUS peoples - Abstract
We are haunted by "ghosts" derived from the cultural history in which we are immersed. Many of these ghosts are deeply unconscious in a psychodynamic sense―repressed, disavowed, or denied. Experiences of triangulation, via prolonged emotional exposure to a different culture, may assist in gaining awareness of the presence of these ghosts. Cultural beliefs such as the nature of reality, causality, and time are fundamental for the developing child. These beliefs develop in a child through the very earliest identifications with primary caretakers. Hence, they form the fabric of reality for the child. Loewald makes a very similar point about the development of reality sense. Evidence for the child's primary identification with the mother as subject is presented in Trigant Burrow's writing nearly a century ago, and in contemporary writing about gender development in women and in men. Further support for the very early role of culture in promoting "learning from experience" is provided by Mark Solms who demonstrates the crucial role of "precision"―that is, the ability to assess the significance of each perception. Studies of the relationship between dream reality and waking reality for an indigenous people in the Amazon rainforest show that the very fabric of reality depends upon culture. In this paper, the author discusses ghosts from his own childhood and from recent American cultural history. As a Jewish child in America, he absorbed resonances of Eastern European pogroms, Holocaust history, and ancient Jewish slavery in Egypt, commemorated in the Passover Seder. As an American boy, he grew up with the legacies of racism, the enslavement of African–Americans, and genocidal attacks on indigenous peoples. These ghosts (and others) were simultaneously displayed, hidden in plain sight, and deeply repressed in cultural artifacts such as Edward Steichen's Family of Man photographic exhibition. Discussion of that exhibition illustrates the multiple ways that culture is constitutive of conscious, preconscious, and deeply unconscious mental life. In a variety of ways, psychoanalysis both helps and hinders exploration of cultural influences. To shed light on what is culturally repressed, and to triangulate the culture one grows up in, it's helpful to live in another culture for a while. Experiences with the Achuar people in the Amazon rainforest provide a lens for examining culture, reality, and dreaming. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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12. Chapter 1 Confronting America's Archaeological Legacies.
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Beisaw, April M., Kirakosian, Katie, Witt, David E., and Wheeler, Ryan J.
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ARCHAEOLOGY , *INDIGENOUS peoples , *ARCHAEOLOGISTS , *BLACK men , *EDUCATION costs , *INTERNSHIP programs , *METOO movement - Abstract
American archaeology is rooted in the behaviors of our predecessors, yet our criticism of those forbearers is often disconnected from the issues of today's practice. Contributors to this volume seek to bridge that gap with a healthy dose of reflection. First, this introduction touches on some issues that are not more fully covered in the chapters that follow, specifically the #MeToo movement and field/conference safety, race, and class inequalities especially the costs of field schools and unpaid internships, and the need for inclusive practices for those who are differently abled. Then we summarize those issues that this volume does focus on, pointing out connections and interrelationships. Three major themes are explored: (1) how the identity of an archaeologist can impact their legacy; (2) how the careers of celebrated "big men" and "big projects" are often misrepresented; and (3) the relationship of archaeology to Black and Indigenous peoples, women, and other marginalized groups, including those who are archaeologists. To conclude, each editor presents a reflection of their own relationship to American archaeology and how that inspired this volume. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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13. Market Concentration and Natural Resource Development in Rural America.
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Mueller, J. Tom, Shircliff, Jesse E., and Steinbaum, Marshall
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INDUSTRIAL concentration , *NATURAL resources , *RURAL Americans , *RURAL development , *ECONOMIC specialization - Abstract
Natural resource development, both extractive (oil, gas, mining, and timber) and non‐extractive (tourism, real estate, outdoor recreation), has been found to negatively impact economic prosperity in rural America. One mechanism recently proposed for why this occurs is high levels of labor market concentration, or oligopsony. Oligopsony occurs when there are few employers within a labor market and can lead to suppressed wages and a power imbalance between employers and workers. In this paper, we test the moderating effect of labor market concentration on the relationship between natural resource development and per capita income and poverty in rural America from 2010 to 2016. By comparing results between extractive and non‐extractive development, as well as manufacturing, we show that labor market concentration attenuates the beneficial relationship observed at low levels of specialization in natural resources—particularly for extractive forms of development. Further, by finding no significant relationship between manufacturing specialization and economic prosperity, nor any moderating effect of labor market concentration in the case of manufacturing, we demonstrate that natural resource development and labor market concentration have a unique relationship with rural American economic prosperity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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14. Making America great (the first time): U.S. economic nationalism in historical perspective.
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ECONOMIC policy , *ECONOMIC history , *RIGHT-wing populism , *BETRAYAL , *NINETEENTH century , *UNITED States history - Abstract
Supporters of Donald Trump often frame his protectionist policies as part of a venerable economic nationalist tradition. This paper examines the process which allowed this historical narrative to form. Examining the history of U.S. economic nationalism, it argues that during the nineteenth century, that tradition became increasingly defined by 'tariff fixation', an emphasis on high tariffs to the exclusion of other more effective means for supporting national development. This led the reduction of high tariffs after the 1930s to be viewed as a 'great betrayal' of the United States, a narrative that has been of great use to contemporary right‐wing populists. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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15. "As is" America: Subcontracting freedom.
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CONTRACT theory , *SUBCONTRACTING , *JUSTICE administration , *SOCIAL contract , *EXTRAJUDICIAL executions , *PUNISHMENT , *CRIMINAL behavior - Abstract
Objective: This study examines the nature and uses of the Constitution as a social contract. America's original agreement with its Black citizens, under the three—fifths clause of the Constitution, is one of commodification. The Constitution constructs the Black body as expendable property in a subcontract. Police protect and serve in maintaining this status quo. Methods: This research analyzes the literature on the social contract theory. This paper compares classical theorists such as Locke, Rawls, and Nozick with opposing literature from Rousseau, Mills, and Pateman. This comparison highlights what many consider "just" as a thinly veiled attempt to justify the legality of the state's actions. Also, there is a review of Graham v. Oconnor to determine how case law upholds the subjugation of Black bodies as part of the subcontract. Results: My research suggests that Black citizens are only entitled to the rights and privileges of a subcontract. This subcontract allows for the harassment, unequal treatment, and in some instances, the death of marginalized groups by police at any time. Conclusion: From the extrajudicial killing of Amadou Diallo to that of Breonna Taylor, it is evident from the past two decades that Black lives are expendable; police officers continue to enforce the fugitive slave clause, which allows for punishment by death for the assumption of criminal behavior. My research helps illuminate the relationship between the Black experience and police encounters as a proxy of a subcontract within the Constitution. These events—the lawless actions of police officers, and a political and legal system that supports these actions—fuel recent waves of the BLM movement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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16. Does the Alt‐Right still matter? An examination of Alt‐Right influence between 2016 and 2018.
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Thompson, Jack and Hawley, George
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ALT-Right (Political science) , *UNITED States presidential election, 2020 , *ELECTIONS , *PANEL analysis , *RIGHT & left (Political science) - Abstract
In this paper, we use panel data from the 2016 and 2017 waves of the Voter Study and the 2018 American National Election Studies (ANES) Pilot, to better understand the relative influence of the Alt‐Right on mainstream US politics in the Trump era. Given the degree of formal alignment between Trump and a number of key voices within the movement, we first examine the strength of the association between affect for the Alt‐Right and support for Republican Party between 2016 and 2018. We also examine relative levels of affect for the Alt‐Right among Whites between this period, tracking a number of important changes. We find that, while affect for the Alt‐Right was strongly associated with support for Republican candidates such as Trump in the 2016 election cycle, we find a somewhat weaker relationship between affect for the Alt‐Right and White support for Trump and down ballot Republican candidates in 2018. We also find that, after rising between 2016 and 2017, levels of affect for Alt‐Right appear to have declined by 2018. The results are therefore reflective of exponential rise of the Alt‐Right during the 2016 election and the movement's subsequent implosion after the 2017 'United the Right', rally in Charlottesville, VA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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17. Nanopore sequencing for the detection and identification of Xylella fastidiosa subspecies and sequence types from naturally infected plant material.
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Faino, Luigi, Scala, Valeria, Albanese, Alessio, Modesti, Vanessa, Grottoli, Alessandro, Pucci, Nicoletta, Doddi, Andrea, L'Aurora, Alessia, Tatulli, Giuseppe, Reverberi, Massimo, and Loreti, Stefania
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XYLELLA fastidiosa , *DNA sequencing , *SUBSPECIES , *PHYTOPATHOGENIC microorganisms , *PLANT species , *BACTERIAL diseases - Abstract
Xylella fastidiosa (Xf) is a gram‐negative bacterial plant pathogen that can infect over 500 plant species. While it is endemic in America, X. fastidiosa subsp. pauca was reported for the first time in Europe in 2013 on olive trees in southern Italy. The availability of fast, sensitive, and reliable diagnostic tools is indispensable for managing current and future outbreaks of Xf. In this paper, we use the OXford Nanopore Technologies (ONT) MinION platform for detecting and identifying Xf at species, subspecies, and sequence type (ST) level. Two workflows were developed: the first one provided a "shotgun" strategy, that is, exploring the possibility of detecting Xf within DNA extracted from plant samples. This allowed detection of Xf by direct DNA sequencing and identifying the subspecies only in samples with high bacterial levels. Nanopore amplicon sequencing was pursued as a second workflow. This consists of PCR amplification of a set of seven multilocus sequence typing (MLST) fragments, officially adopted for identifying Xf at type strain level, followed by Nanopore‐sequencing of the amplicons and an ad hoc pipeline to generate MLST consensus calls. This combined approach, which takes only a few hours, allowed the detection and identification of Xf at ST level in plant material with low bacterial infection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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18. HLA‐G in Mayas from Yucatan: An evolutionary approach.
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Arnaiz‐Villena, Antonio, Suárez‐Trujillo, Fabio, Palacio‐Gruber, José, Rodríguez‐Sainz, Carmen, Fernández‐Cruz, Eduardo, Martín‐Villa, José Manuel, and Fragoso, José Manuel
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DNA sequencing , *HAPLOTYPES , *ALLELES , *INDIGENOUS peoples of the Americas , *GENE frequency , *PATHOLOGICAL physiology - Abstract
HLA‐G allele frequencies were studied in Yucatán (Mexico) Maya Amerindians by a direct exon DNA sequencing technique. It is described that Mayas are probably one of the first populations together with Olmecs that populated Meso America and that important HLA genetic differences between Mexican and Guatemalan Mayas support that Maya languages were imposed to several neighbouring Amerindian groups. HLA‐G*01:01:02, HLA‐G*01:01:01 and HLA‐G*01:04:01 are the most frequent alleles in this population. It is remarkable that HLA‐G*01:05N allele was not found in the population in accordance with similar results found in another Amerindians. Also, protein allele HLA‐G*01:04 frequency is found not to differ to those found in another far or close living Amerindians in contrast to other World populations. It seems that while high HLA‐G*01:05N frequency is found in Iran and Middle East populations, probably where this allele appeared within an ancestral HLA‐A*19 group of alleles haplotype and it is maintained by unknown evolutionary forces, Amerindians do not have a high frequency because a founder effect or because required natural evolutionary forces do not exist in America. Finally, we believe useful to study HLA‐G evolution for its physiopathology understanding in addition to the many papers on statistics on HLA‐G and in vitro models that are yearly published. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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19. Time for space at the table: an African American - Native American analyst-in-training's first-hand reflections. A call for the IAAP to publicly denounce (but not erase) the White supremacist writings of C.G. Jung.
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Carter, Christopher J.
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NATIVE Americans , *AFRICAN Americans , *SOCIAL order , *JUNGIAN psychology , *HELPLINES - Abstract
This article provides an African American-Native American analyst-in-training's first-hand reflections on Jung's firm depiction of Blacks of African descent and America's First Nations People (the Red man) as inferior, through a theory of primitivity that unveils Jung's belief in and support of White supremacy. With no intended disrespect or neglect intended toward America's First Nations, this article focuses primarily on Jung's apparent disdain for Blacks (the Negro). Utilizing writings from Frederick Douglass, W.E.B. Du Bois and Na'im Akbar, this article highlights ways in which Jung's biases align with the White supremacist perspective of the Negro as a problem, detrimental to social order. The paper concludes with an Appendix which outlines a call to the International Association for Analytical Psychology (IAAP) to take corrective action and to publicly denounce those facets of Jung's writings that diverge from the core of his theory and that promote toxic attitudes of bigotry, perhaps discouraging many people of colour from enrolling in analytic training. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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20. Between Islam and the New Age: The Jerrahi Order and categorical ambiguity in the study of Sufism in North America.
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Xavier, Merin Shobhana and Dickson, William Rory
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SUFISM , *ISLAM , *ISLAMIC theology , *ISLAMIC law , *AMBIGUITY - Abstract
Drawing upon our ethnographic research of the Jerrahi Sufi Order, in this paper we consider an analytical problem in the study of Sufism in North America. In engaging two distinct branches of the Jerrahi Order, we draw attention to the ways in which identities and practices shaped by classical Islamic law and theology cannot be easily parsed from those associated with the New Age movement in North America. We begin by offering a brief overview of Sufism in North America, highlighting reconfigurations of authority, organization, and practice. Following this, we consider the two major North American branches of the Jerrahi Sufi order: The Jerrahi Order of America, and the Nur Ashki Jerrahi Order, drawing out the conceptual problems of categorizing these branches by distinguishing between the "Islamic" and the "New Age" within these movements. We conclude with a summary of the utility and drawbacks these categories offer the study of Sufism, while considering some directions for future scholarship on the subject. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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21. Effect of breastfeeding promotion interventions on child growth: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Giugliani, Elsa R.J., Horta, Bernardo L., Loret de Mola, Christian, Lisboa, Bernardo O., and Victora, Cesar G.
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BREASTFEEDING , *GROWTH of children , *META-analysis , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *BODY mass index , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *HETEROGENEITY , *BODY weight , *CHILD development , *CLINICAL trials , *STATURE - Abstract
Aim: To update a previous systematic review and meta-analyses about the effect of breastfeeding promotion interventions on child growth.Methods: Studies evaluating the effect of any type of breastfeeding promotion intervention on child weight, length (or height) and weight/height (or BMI) were screened. Papers published between 2006 and 2014 were checked using the following databases: PubMed/MEDLINE, Embase, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, Lilacs and SciELO.Results: Sixteen studies were added to 19 other studies identified in the previous review, resulting in 35 studies. Meta-analyses of studies reporting on mean weight, length, weight/length or BMI showed that the interventions had no impact on weight or length/height z scores [pooled effect: 0.03 (95% confidence interval: -0.06;0.12) and 0.03 (95% confidence interval: -0.02;0.08), respectively] and had a modest, but significant, reduction in body mass index/weight-for-height z scores [z score mean difference: -0.06 (95% confidence interval: -0.12;0.00)], which was limited to studies from low- and high-incomes settings. For all three outcomes, there was important heterogeneity among studies, which should be taken into account when interpreting the results.Conclusion: Breastfeeding promotion interventions were not associated with significant changes in weight or length, but led to a modest, albeit significant, reduction in body mass index/weight-for-height z scores. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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22. New World Pouzolzia and Boehmeria (Urticaceae): a new species and new generic record for Paraguay, Pouzolzia amambaiensis, and additional observations on already described species of both genera.
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Wilmot-Dear, Christine Melanie and Friis, Ib
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BOEHMERIA , *URTICACEAE , *HERBARIA - Abstract
The paper supplements a revision of the New World species of Boehmeria and Pouzozia published by the authors in 1996. Pouzolzia amambaiensis sp. nov. is described from recent material from Paraguay near the border with Brazil and represents a new generic record for Paraguay. Also recorded is a number of extensions of geographical ranges and the range of variation of Pouzolzia guatemalana, P. occidentalis, P. laevis, P. zeylanica, Boehmeria burgeriana and B. bullata subsp. coriacea. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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23. Weapon Usage in Attempted and Completed Parricides in Nineteenth-Century America: An Archival Exploration of the Physical Strength Hypothesis.
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Shon, Phillip C. H.
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WEAPONS , *CRIMINALS , *CONFLICT management , *JUSTICE administration - Abstract
The “physical strength hypothesis” (PSH) predicts that where there is the greatest discrepancy in size and strength between offenders and victims, the former will use superior weaponry (e.g., firearms) to overcome structural imbalances against the latter. Using archival data from the New York Times and the Chicago Tribune, 1851–1899, this paper examines the weapons used in attempted and completed parricides in nineteenth-century America. Findings indicate that parricide offenders used firearms most frequently against their fathers while intimate contact methods were used against mothers. When gun usage was combined with level of intent in male offender patricides, where the greatest discrepancy in strength was expected, results indicate that spontaneous gun usage outnumbered premeditated gun usage, thus challenging the assumptions of the PSH. The data suggest that cultural factors such as methods of dispute resolution, weapon carrying, and alcohol consumption may be important factors in understanding parricides. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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24. Disparities in Patterns of Alcohol Use Among Reservation-based and Geographically Dispersed American Indian Populations.
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O'Connell, Joan M., Novins, Douglas K., Beals, Janette, and Spicer, Paul
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ALCOHOL drinking , *ETHNOLOGY , *DEATH rate , *REPORTING of diseases , *COMPLICATIONS of alcoholism , *ALCOHOLIC beverages , *HEALTH surveys , *DRINKING behavior - Abstract
Background: High rates of alcohol use and alcohol-related morbidity and mortality among American Indians (Al) are major public health concerns. The purpose of this paper is to describe patterns of alcohol consumption among three distinct samples of American Indians (AIs) compared to a U.S reference population. Methods: Data were drawn from two epidemiologic studies: 1) a study of 2,927 AIs living on or near reservations from two culturally distinct tribes in the Southwest (SW-Al) and Northern Plains (NP-Al); and 2) the National Longitudinal Alcohol Epidemiologic Study (NLAES), which included data from a geo- graphically dispersed sample of Ms (n = 780) as well as the US reference population (all-race excluding AIs, n = 30,063). Multivariate analyses were used to assess drinking patterns. Results: After controlling for demographic characteristics, the prevalence of drinking during the past year was similar among males in the NP-Al, NLAES-AI, and the US populations. SW-Al males and females were significantly less likely to drink during the past year (Odds Ratios of 0.74 and 0.41, respectively), while the odds of NP-Al females being current drinkers were twice that of US females. Among those who drank during the past year, the AIs consumed a larger quantity of alcohol per drinking day than the US reference population. However, the reservation-based Ms consumed alcohol less frequently (Odds Ratios between 0.18-0.40,p < 0.01) than the NLAES-Al and US populations. Conclusions: Patterns of alcohol consumption varied substantially between the two reservation-based Al populations, the geographically dispersed sample of AIs, and the US reference population. Careful consideration of these variations may improve the effectiveness of alcohol prevention and treatment programs as they may reflect important underlying differences in the cultures of alcohol consumption across these populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Trade Dependence and Fertility in Hispanic America, 1950-1990.
- Author
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Khan, Mokbul A.
- Subjects
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HUMAN fertility , *REPRODUCTION , *HISPANIC Americans , *THEORY of knowledge , *BUSINESS , *COLONIES - Abstract
-This paper explores Hout's (1980) conceptual model of the development--fertility relationship under trade dependency of Hispanic America, 1950-1990. The results of this study are that the effects of development and dependency on fertility are consistent with Hout's (1980) theory and his findings and that his positive development × dependency interaction term is not replicated. Thus, the well-known long-term negative effect of development might have been misspecified in Hout's model. In contrast to Hout's findings, our results based on all models support that as dependency increased, the long-term negative effect of development on fertility increased in magnitude for Hispanic America. Hence, the findings of this study suggest that the fertility transition for Hispanic America can occur based on an explanation that is alternative to what world system theorists' have so far offered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Ply, Markedness, and Redundancy: New Evidence for How Andean Khipus Encoded Information.
- Author
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Hyland, Sabine
- Subjects
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AYMARA (South American people) , *ETHNOLOGY , *WRITING materials & instruments , *QUIPU , *SOCIAL history - Abstract
Khipus are knotted-cord devices once used in the Andes for communication and recording information. Although numbers can be read on many khipus, it is unknown how other forms of data may have been recorded on the strings. Scholars currently debate whether elements of cord construction, such as the direction of ply, signified meaning on khipus and, if so, how. Testimony from an Aymara-speaking khipu maker, collected in 1895 by Max Uhle and recovered from Uhle's unpublished field notes, combined with the analysis of his actual khipu provides the first direct evidence that ply was a signifying element in khipus. Moreover, the evidence suggests that ply signified through a principle of markedness in which S ply corresponded to the unmarked (more valued) category while Z ply corresponded to the marked (less valued) category. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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