1,233 results on '"Resource scarcity"'
Search Results
2. The Effects of Growing Groups and Scarcity on the Use of a Common Pool Resource – a Lab-in-the-Field Experiment with Lake Victoria Fishers.
- Author
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Dannenberg, Astrid, Klatt, Charlotte, and Pico, Pia
- Subjects
INTERNAL migration ,SCARCITY ,FISHERS ,LAKES ,COOPERATION - Abstract
Using a lab-in-the-field experiment with Ugandan fishers, we study if and how the use of a common pool resource changes when the resource is either scarce or abundant and when the number of users increases over time. Both resource scarcity and a growing group require users to be more constrained, that is, more cooperative, in order to maintain the resource. However, the results show that fishers do not curtail their harvesting behavior under increased pressure, leading to rapid overexploitation when scarce resources are used by a growing group. This implies a particular need for sustainable management when scarce resources are exposed to in-migration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Externe Pflegequalitätsprüfung in den Einrichtungen der stationären Altenhilfe: Ethische Herausforderungen und Klärungsbedarfe im Fokus der Ethikberatung.
- Author
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Giese, Constanze and Bergmann, Dorothea
- Abstract
Copyright of Ethik in der Medizin is the property of Springer Nature 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
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- View/download PDF
4. Interstate Resource Conflicts: A Network-Centric Resource Access Security Perspective.
- Author
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Bareis, Luka
- Subjects
- *
NATURAL resources , *INTERNATIONAL trade , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *DEPENDENT variables , *ENDOWMENTS - Abstract
This paper introduces the theoretical concept of perceived resource access security in order to assess the link between natural resource scarcity and interstate conflict. It develops the hypothesis that resource access through international trade is an important determinant for conflict behaviour of states arising from resource concerns, implying a shift in focus away from endowments and towards competition for access. The main analysis is conducted in the form of a unit fixed effects logistic regression covering country-dyads of the period 1962–2010 with military interstate dispute (MID) initiation as dependent variable. The empirical findings consistently demonstrate that a diversified position in resource supply networks mitigates the conflict propensity of states characterized by outside dependence for access to natural resources, and thereby help to determine conditions under which trade reduces conflict. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. How do resource scarcity reminders influence consumers' CSR engagement?
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Ye, Tian and Mattila, Anna S.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Environmental Mentality
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van Genuchten, Erlijn and van Genuchten, Erlijn
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- 2024
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7. Living in Oceania
- Author
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Singh, Amit, Lal, Atishma, Susnik, Janez, Dansie, Andrew, editor, Alleway, Heidi K., editor, and Böer, Benno, editor
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- 2024
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8. A Survey of Low-Resource Named Entity Recognition
- Author
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Tang, Xiangyan, Xia, Dongwan, Li, Yajing, Xu, Taixing, Xiong, Neal N., Howlett, Robert J., Series Editor, Jain, Lakhmi C., Series Editor, Qiu, Xuesong, editor, Xiao, Yang, editor, Wu, Zhiqiang, editor, Zhang, Yudong, editor, Tian, Yuan, editor, and Liu, Bo, editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Climate-change-driven conflict: Insights from North Wollo, Northeast Ethiopia
- Author
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Amare Sewnet Minale, Zelalem Yekoye Alemayehu, and Achamyeleh Gashu Adam
- Subjects
Climate change ,conflict ,drought ,North Wollo ,resource scarcity ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
Climate change is one of the most pressing issues among the current environmental problems and it affects the livelihood of the community by creating scarcity of renewable resources. Ethiopia is one of the countries in Sub-Saharan Africa extremely vulnerable to climate change. This study was aimed to investigate climate-change-driven conflict by taking case from Northeast Ethiopia. A cross-sectional survey study was employed and data was collected from the primary and secondary sources. The structured household survey, key informant interviews and focus group discussions were used to collect data from selected samples. About 100 survey respondents, 10 KII and 3 FGD participants were involved in generating data which was analyzed by employing descriptive and qualitative analysis techniques. The finding revealed that climate change is occurring through increasing temperature and decreasing rainfall and frequent drought caused by deforestation, degradation of natural resources and urbanization. Consequently, the participants have experienced critical shortage of water, animal fed and most of them were food insecure. Similarly, a considerable number of residents were exposed to climate-change-induced conflict. The conflict in North Wollo was climate driven and interethnic whereby Amhara ethnic are conflicting with Afar ethnic over the resources around their border. It is recommended that employing the customary law and religious institutions are the most trusted and leading agents to resolve conflict. Area-specific and local-based climate change adaptation techniques including drought-resistant plant species and reducing the number of livestock were suggested as the solutions to solve the problems.
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- 2024
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10. 考虑资源稀缺性的路面养护措施综合效益 全寿命周期费用评估.
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董侨, 姚康, 黄梦雨, and 倪富健
- Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Beijing University of Technology is the property of Journal of Beijing University of Technology, Editorial Department 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
11. Rural Urban Nutrient Partnership (RUN): Life Cycle Assessment of Multi Nutrient Recovery from Kitchen Waste and Blackwater.
- Author
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Stichnothe, Heinz, Joseph, Ben, Preyl, Volker, and Meyer, Carsten
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PRODUCT life cycle assessment ,PHOSPHATE fertilizers ,MARINE eutrophication ,CLIMATE change - Abstract
Newly developed and innovative RUN technology aims to recover nutrients from urban wastewater (blackwater) and biowaste (kitchen waste). The development of RUN technology has been supported by the life cycle assessment (LCA) in order to identify hotspots and trade-offs. While the performance of the process at a laboratory scale did not show any environmental benefits from P recovery, the LCA results have helped to improve the environmental performance at the following scale-up step. The recovery of P on a technical scale was environmentally beneficial, especially in terms of the global warming potential (GWP). However, there were still some trade-offs, e.g., freshwater and marine eutrophication were slightly higher compared to conventional P fertilizer production. Given that P is considered a critical raw material and that climate change is probably the most pressing environmental issue, RUN technology has the potential to deliver on both domains. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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12. 国外重大科技基础设施 开放共享模式比较及对我国的启示.
- Author
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宋大成, 肖帅, 李天鸣, 温珂, 游玎怡, 张辰, 魏强, and 郭润桐
- Abstract
The open sharing of large-scale scientific facilities plays a pivotal role in the ecosystem of open science. This is of great significance for promoting the development of science and technology, enhancing innovation cooperation, and boosting the overall competitive strength of nations. Starting from two dimensions of resource scarcity and sustainability, this study systematically sorts out four open sharing modes of large-scale scientific facilities: the public and inclusive sharing mode, the market response sharing mode, the intensive guarantee sharing mode, and the Strategic Cooperation Sharing Mode. Through the comparison analysis of four foreign large-scale scientific facilities, the study further elaborates the basic characteristics and applicable conditions of different open sharing modes. Finally, based on the in-depth analysis of the above modes, the implications for promoting the open sharing of large-scale scientific facilities in China are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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13. Does scarcity increase or decrease donation behaviors? An investigation considering resource-specific scarcity and individual person-thing orientation.
- Author
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Malika, Malika, Ghoshal, Tanuka, Mathur, Pragya, and Maheswaran, Durairaj
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SCARCITY ,CHARITIES ,ALTRUISM ,SOCIAL services ,VOLUNTEER service ,LEAD time (Supply chain management) - Abstract
Extant research remains equivocal with respect to whether scarcity increases or decreases charitable behaviors. This research suggests a reconciliation by considering a donor's resource-specific scarcity, and their person-thing orientation (PTO), a novel personality variable that determines whether individuals are naturally attuned towards people versus things in their environment. Person-orientation predisposes preferences towards donating time, while thing-orientation predisposes preferences towards donating money. Time scarcity leads person-oriented individuals to prefer donating money, but does not affect thing-oriented individuals. Financial scarcity leads thing-oriented individuals to prefer donating time, but does not affect person-oriented individuals. Person-oriented individuals' attention towards other people and thing-oriented individuals' focus on resource evaluation form the basis for the observed relative donation preferences. Finally, PTO can also be situationally induced. Using donation intentions and real click-through behavior for diverse charitable organizations, we show in five studies that the combined effect of consumers' perceived resource-specific scarcity and PTO determines the relative preference for donating time vs. donating money. Our results have important implications for charities soliciting specific kinds of resources, as well as real-world government and social welfare initiatives critically dependent on volunteerism. Theoretically, we examine scarcity from an individual-difference perspective that has not been well understood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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14. Landfill Scarcity and the Cost of Waste Disposal.
- Author
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Ichinose, Daisuke
- Subjects
WASTE management ,LANDFILLS ,COST control ,SCARCITY ,SOLID waste ,LANDFILL management - Abstract
This study examines the effect of landfill scarcity on the cost of municipal solid waste (MSW) disposal. We find the evidence that a decrease in the remaining capacity of landfill sites increases the unit cost of waste disposal. We also find that landfill scarcity impacts intermediate disposal costs (the cost of MSW disposal methods other than landfill disposal) more than landfill disposal costs. Based on the results of previous studies that estimated the external costs of landfills, the cost reduction effect of having a landfill site may overwhelm the external costs. Our results demonstrate that having its own landfill site not only provides the final recipient of MSW but also reduces the cost of MSW disposal. The latter type of benefit has been overlooked in previous studies on MSW disposal. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Service system resilience under resource scarcity: from vulnerability to balanced centricity
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Leino, Henna M., Davey, Janet, and Johns, Raechel
- Published
- 2024
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16. PSYCHOLOGICAL MECHANISMS DRIVING THE EFFECT OF FINANCIAL SCARCITY ON CONSUMER BEHAVIOR: AN INTEGRATED FRAMEWORK.
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Saikia, Arnab Akash and Rahman, Zillur
- Subjects
CONSUMER behavior ,CONSUMER psychology - Published
- 2024
17. How Resource Scarcity Influences the Preference for Counterhedonic Consumption.
- Author
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Yang, Haiyang and Zhang, Kuangjie
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RESOURCE allocation ,SCARCITY ,HEDONISTIC consumption ,CONSUMER preferences ,BIG data ,HORROR films - Abstract
Eight studies show that resource scarcity can influence consumers' preference for counterhedonic consumption and that the sense of control is an underlying driver of this effect. Using a large-scale field dataset covering 82 countries over a 10-year period, study 1 showed that individuals from countries with greater resources consumed horror movies to a greater extent, but this pattern was not found for other movie genres such as romance or documentary. The remaining studies used diverse experimental approaches and counterhedonic consumption contexts (e.g. movie, novel, haunted house attraction, game) to provide causal and process evidence. Specifically, inducing perceived resource scarcity lowered participants' preference for counterhedonic consumption (studies 2A–2C). Consistent with the sense-of-control-based mechanism, experimentally lowering participants' sense of control or boosting it moderated the effect of perceived resource scarcity on their preference for counterhedonic consumption (studies 3A and 3B). The degradation of the sense of control due to perceived resource scarcity mediated the effect (studies 4 and 5). These results add to the literature on conterhedonic consumption as well as resource scarcity and have important managerial implications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Scarcity mindset among schoolteachers: how resource scarcity negatively impacts teachers' cognition and behaviors.
- Author
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Denti, Leif, Sturén, Erik, and Johansson, Lars-Olof
- Subjects
SCARCITY ,TEACHERS ,STRUCTURAL equation modeling ,SCHOOL environment - Abstract
A recent line of research investigates the negative cognitive effects - known as the scarcity mindset - that arise when people face a lack of resources. We expand on this research and show that these cognitive effects are present among Swedish schoolteachers facing a scarcity of time and social resources at work. From an initial interview study we developed novel survey scales to measure teachers' subjective assessments of available resources and the extent of their scarcity mindset. We then related resource scarcity of time and social resources to the scarcity mindset using structural equation modeling (SEM) analysis in a survey study with a sample of Swedish schoolteachers. This research provides valuable insights for addressing resource constrained work environments in schools and contributes to the broader psychological research on cognitive effects resulting from resource scarcity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Life cycle assessment of a 33.7 MW solar photovoltaic power plant in the context of a developing country
- Author
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Kodami Badza, Y. M. Soro, and Marie Sawadogo
- Subjects
Photovoltaic power plant ,Life cycle assessment ,Energy payback time ,Climate change ,Resource scarcity ,Sub-saharan Africa ,Environmental technology. Sanitary engineering ,TD1-1066 - Abstract
Abstract This work aims to determine the Energy Payback Time (EPBT) of a 33.7 MWp grid-connected photovoltaic (PV) power plant in Zagtouli (Burkina Faso) and assess its environmental impacts using the life cycle assessment tool according to ISO 14040 and 14044 standards. A “cradle to grave” approach was used, considering 1 kWh of electricity produced and injected into the national grid over 25 years as a functional unit. In addition to the baseline scenario, the other simulated scenarios combining three variables, module technology (mono c-Si, poly c-Si, and CdTe), type of mounting structure (aluminum and steel), and end-of-life treatments (landfill and recycling) were considered. SimaPro 9.4 software and the ReCiPe 2016 Midpoint (H) evaluation method were used for the calculations considering four environmental indicators. A sensitivity analysis of the change in the electricity mix was also performed. Results showed that the EPBT of the scenarios varies between 1.47 and 1.95 years, with the shortest and longest corresponding to scenarios 4 (CdTe modules, steel mounting structure, and recycling as end-of-life treatment) and scenario 3 (mono c-Si modules, aluminum mounting structure, and recycling as end-of-life treatment), respectively. All the EPBT scenarios studied can be considered acceptable given the long lifetime of PV systems (25 years). The following environmental impact results were obtained: climate change 37–48 CO2-eq kWh-1, freshwater ecotoxicity 4–11 g 1,4-DCB kWh-1, mineral resource scarcity 0.4–0.7 g Cu-eq kWh-1 and 11–13 g oil-eq kWh-1 for fossil resource scarcity. Scenario 3 (mono c-Si modules, aluminum mounting structure, and recycling as end-of-life treatment) dominates all environmental indicators studied except freshwater ecotoxicity, which is dominated by scenario 4 (CdTe modules, steel mounting structure, and recycling as end-of-life treatment). The sensitivity analysis showed that the change in the electricity mix could reduce around 30% the EPBT, climate change, and fossil resource scarcity. Considering the environmental indicators studied, using CdTe modules manufactured in a country with a less carbon-intensive electricity mix, using galvanized steel as the mounting structure, and completely recycling components at the end of their lifetime is the most environmentally friendly scenario. However, particular attention needs to be paid to the land occupation that this plant could generate.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Surveying the Landscape: The Oil Industry and Alternative Energy in the 1970s
- Author
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Mody, Cyrus C. M., Buchwald, Jed Z., Series Editor, Feingold, Mordechai, Advisory Editor, Franklin, Allan D., Advisory Editor, Shapiro, Alan E, Advisory Editor, Hoyningen-Huene, Paul, Advisory Editor, Levere, Trevor, Advisory Editor, Lützen, Jesper, Advisory Editor, Newman, William R., Advisory Editor, Renn, Jürgen, Advisory Editor, Roland, Alex, Advisory Editor, Carlson, W. Bernard, editor, and Conway, Erik M, editor
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Transforming Value Chains for Sustainability : Closing the Loop in the Age of Electromobility
- Author
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Voigt, Kai-Ingo, Czaja, Lothar, Zipse, Oliver, Zipse, Oliver, editor, Hornegger, Joachim, editor, Becker, Thomas, editor, Beckmann, Markus, editor, Bengsch, Michael, editor, Feige, Irene, editor, and Schober, Markus, editor
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Medical Rules of Eligibility – Can Preferential Medical Treatment Provisions Be Ethically Justified?
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Messelken, Daniel, Messelken, Daniel, Series Editor, Winkler, David, Series Editor, Gross, Michael, Editorial Board Member, Fischer, Dirk, Editorial Board Member, Eagan, Sheena, Editorial Board Member, Hunt, Matthew, Editorial Board Member, Rubenstein, Leonard, Editorial Board Member, Stettbacher, Andreas, Editorial Board Member, Xenakis, Stephen N, Editorial Board Member, Koch, Bernhard, Editorial Board Member, and Eagan, Sheena M., editor
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Cicero and the Problem of Triage: Why There Is No Moral Algorithm in Distributing Scarce Resources
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Koch, Bernhard, Messelken, Daniel, Series Editor, Winkler, David, Series Editor, Gross, Michael, Editorial Board Member, Fischer, Dirk, Editorial Board Member, Eagan, Sheena, Editorial Board Member, Hunt, Matthew, Editorial Board Member, Rubenstein, Leonard, Editorial Board Member, Stettbacher, Andreas, Editorial Board Member, Xenakis, Stephen N, Editorial Board Member, Koch, Bernhard, Editorial Board Member, and Eagan, Sheena M., editor
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. A Call for Research on Climate Adaptive Products
- Author
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Dana L. Alden
- Subjects
climate adaptive products ,frugal innovation ,resource scarcity ,Marketing. Distribution of products ,HF5410-5417.5 - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Scarcity mindset among schoolteachers: how resource scarcity negatively impacts teachers’ cognition and behaviors
- Author
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Leif Denti, Erik Sturén, and Lars-Olof Johansson
- Subjects
scarcity mindset ,resource scarcity ,schoolteachers ,work environment ,structural equation modeling ,cognitive effects ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
A recent line of research investigates the negative cognitive effects – known as the scarcity mindset – that arise when people face a lack of resources. We expand on this research and show that these cognitive effects are present among Swedish schoolteachers facing a scarcity of time and social resources at work. From an initial interview study we developed novel survey scales to measure teachers’ subjective assessments of available resources and the extent of their scarcity mindset. We then related resource scarcity of time and social resources to the scarcity mindset using structural equation modeling (SEM) analysis in a survey study with a sample of Swedish schoolteachers. This research provides valuable insights for addressing resource constrained work environments in schools and contributes to the broader psychological research on cognitive effects resulting from resource scarcity.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Life cycle assessment of a 33.7 MW solar photovoltaic power plant in the context of a developing country.
- Author
-
Badza, Kodami, Soro, Y. M., and Sawadogo, Marie
- Abstract
This work aims to determine the Energy Payback Time (EPBT) of a 33.7 MWp grid-connected photovoltaic (PV) power plant in Zagtouli (Burkina Faso) and assess its environmental impacts using the life cycle assessment tool according to ISO 14040 and 14044 standards. A "cradle to grave" approach was used, considering 1 kWh of electricity produced and injected into the national grid over 25 years as a functional unit. In addition to the baseline scenario, the other simulated scenarios combining three variables, module technology (mono c-Si, poly c-Si, and CdTe), type of mounting structure (aluminum and steel), and end-of-life treatments (landfill and recycling) were considered. SimaPro 9.4 software and the ReCiPe 2016 Midpoint (H) evaluation method were used for the calculations considering four environmental indicators. A sensitivity analysis of the change in the electricity mix was also performed. Results showed that the EPBT of the scenarios varies between 1.47 and 1.95 years, with the shortest and longest corresponding to scenarios 4 (CdTe modules, steel mounting structure, and recycling as end-of-life treatment) and scenario 3 (mono c-Si modules, aluminum mounting structure, and recycling as end-of-life treatment), respectively. All the EPBT scenarios studied can be considered acceptable given the long lifetime of PV systems (25 years). The following environmental impact results were obtained: climate change 37–48 CO
2 -eq kWh-1 , freshwater ecotoxicity 4–11 g 1,4-DCB kWh-1 , mineral resource scarcity 0.4–0.7 g Cu-eq kWh-1 and 11–13 g oil-eq kWh-1 for fossil resource scarcity. Scenario 3 (mono c-Si modules, aluminum mounting structure, and recycling as end-of-life treatment) dominates all environmental indicators studied except freshwater ecotoxicity, which is dominated by scenario 4 (CdTe modules, steel mounting structure, and recycling as end-of-life treatment). The sensitivity analysis showed that the change in the electricity mix could reduce around 30% the EPBT, climate change, and fossil resource scarcity. Considering the environmental indicators studied, using CdTe modules manufactured in a country with a less carbon-intensive electricity mix, using galvanized steel as the mounting structure, and completely recycling components at the end of their lifetime is the most environmentally friendly scenario. However, particular attention needs to be paid to the land occupation that this plant could generate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Resource scarcity aggravates ingroup bias: Neural mechanisms and cross‐scenario validation.
- Author
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Cui, Fang, Deng, Kexin, Liu, Jie, Huang, Xiaoxuan, Yang, Jiamiao, Luo, Yue‐jia, Feng, Chunliang, and Gu, Ruolei
- Subjects
- *
IMPLICIT bias , *SENSES , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *PREFRONTAL cortex , *NEURAL pathways , *ANALYSIS of variance , *LIMBIC system , *AUDITORY perception , *INTERNET , *SOCIAL media , *NOISE , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *BRAIN mapping , *MEDICAL care , *MEMBERSHIP , *COMPARATIVE studies , *T-test (Statistics) , *RESOURCE allocation , *RESEARCH funding , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *LOUDNESS , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *NEURORADIOLOGY , *AUDITORY cortex ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
Previous studies examining the relationship between ingroup bias and resource scarcity have produced heterogeneous findings, possibly due to their focus on the allocation of positive resources (e.g. money). This study aims to investigate whether ingroup bias would be amplified or eliminated when perceived survival resources for counteracting negative stimuli are scarce. For this purpose, we exposed the participants and another confederate of the experimenters (ingroup/outgroup member) to a potential threat of unpleasant noise. Participants received some 'relieving resources' to counteract noise administration, the amount of which may or may not be enough for them and the confederate in different conditions (i.e. abundance vs. scarcity). First, a behavioural experiment demonstrated that intergroup discrimination manifested only in the scarcity condition; in contrast, the participants allocated similar amounts of resource to ingroup and outgroup members in the abundance condition, indicating a context‐dependent allocation strategy. This behavioural pattern was replicated in a follow‐up neuroimaging experiment, which further revealed that when contrasting scarcity with abundance, there was higher activation in the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) as well as stronger functional connectivity of the ACC with the empathy network (including the temporoparietal junction and medial prefrontal cortex) for ingroup compared to outgroup members. We suggest that ACC activation reflects the mentalizing process toward ingroup over outgroup members in the scarcity condition. Finally, the ACC activation level significantly predicted the influence of resource scarcity on ingroup bias in hypothetical real‐life situations according to a follow‐up examination. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Family responses to resource scarcity.
- Author
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Hosany, A. R. Shaheen and Hamilton, Rebecca W.
- Subjects
CAREER changes ,SCARCITY ,SOCIAL networks ,CONSUMPTION (Economics) ,OCCUPATIONAL mobility ,FAMILIES - Abstract
Resource scarcity, manifested through limited time, money or space, is a prevalent aspect of family life. Drawing on depth interviews with 30 families from diverse demographic backgrounds, this study develops a framework to demonstrate how families respond to resource scarcity. Our research examines how multi-dimensional, concurrent and/or consecutive life events, such as job changes, house moves, or childbirth, create a mismatch between available and required resources to trigger situational resource scarcity. We identify different patterns of adjustments in consumption and resource investment over time, based on families' chronic resources and reliance on support networks. Notably, the greater flexibility afforded by multiple family members is constrained by collective goals, domains of control, tensions and negotiations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Jugaad in organizational settings: exploring the Jugaad leadership competencies.
- Author
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Balasundaram, Sathiyaseelan, Sathiyaseelan, Anuradha, and Zirkler, Michael
- Subjects
LEADERSHIP ,JUDGMENT sampling ,LEADERSHIP training - Abstract
The Hindi term 'jugaad' is closely linked to frugal innovation. In resource-scarce environments, organizations can thrive by developing jugaad-related leadership abilities. Previous research on jugaad has focused primarily on individual problem-solving and overlooked the leadership skills necessary to implement it in organizational settings. This study employs a theoretical lens of leadership competency models, interpretive phenomenology, purposive sampling, and an inductive data-driven coding approach to explore the jugaad leadership competencies of 28 Indian business leaders and managers. The study presents the Jugaad Leadership Competency (JLC) model, identifying ten competency clusters exhibited by jugaad leaders. This is the first study to develop a model for jugaad leadership in organizational settings. In environments characterized by scarcity and intense competition, the JLC model can aid individuals and organizations in acquiring the necessary competencies for frugal innovation. The study evaluates the theoretical and practical implications of the findings, their transferability, and limitations and offers suggestions for future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Trust in entrepreneurial teams: The role of team narratives.
- Author
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Kakatkar, Aishwarya, Patzelt, Holger, and Breugst, Nicola
- Abstract
Although trust within the entrepreneurial team is critical for its success, we have limited insights into the antecedents of a founder's trust in the team. Taking a social information processing perspective, we theorize how entrepreneurial team narratives can play an important role in building a founder's cognition‐based trust in the team. We hypothesize that the team‐level structural dimensions of diversity and distinctiveness of topics in entrepreneurial team narratives are positively related to a founder's cognition‐based trust in the team and that these relationships are less positive when the founder perceives higher levels of resource scarcity. To test our hypotheses, we apply an automated topic modeling approach to quantitatively analyze interview and survey data from 102 founders across 43 complete entrepreneurial teams. Our study has implications for research on trust in entrepreneurial teams and entrepreneurial narratives, as well as methodological implications for using topic modeling to analyze other texts in entrepreneurship research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Opposing Responses to Scarcity Emerge from Functionally Unique Sociality Drivers.
- Author
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Kao, Albert B., Hund, Amanda K., Santos, Fernando P., Young, Jean-Gabriel, Bhat, Deepak, Garland, Joshua, Oomen, Rebekah A., and McCreery, Helen F.
- Subjects
- *
LITERATURE reviews , *SCARCITY , *SURVIVAL analysis (Biometry) - Abstract
From biofilms to whale pods, organisms across taxa live in groups, thereby accruing numerous diverse benefits of sociality. All social organisms, however, pay the inherent cost of increased resource competition. One expects that when resources become scarce, this cost will increase, causing group sizes to decrease. Indeed, this occurs in some species, but there are also species for which group sizes remain stable or even increase under scarcity. What accounts for these opposing responses? We present a conceptual framework, literature review, and theoretical model demonstrating that differing responses to sudden resource shifts can be explained by which sociality benefit exerts the strongest selection pressure on a particular species. We categorize resource-related benefits of sociality into six functionally distinct classes and model their effect on the survival of individuals foraging in groups under different resource conditions. We find that whether, and to what degree, the optimal group size (or correlates thereof) increases, decreases, or remains constant when resource abundance declines depends strongly on the dominant sociality mechanism. Existing data, although limited, support our model predictions. Overall, we show that across a wide diversity of taxa, differences in how group size shifts in response to resource declines can be driven by differences in the primary benefits of sociality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. COVID-19 and Rapid Response in Healthcare: Enacting Bricolage to Overcome Resource Constraints.
- Author
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Sarkar, Soumodip and Mateus, Sara
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,CRISIS management ,EMERGING markets ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
In resource-poor emerging economies, the COVID-19 pandemic has inspired governments and various organisations to develop innovative solutions to help combat the pandemic. We conducted a qualitative evidence synthesis of 19 cases drawn from a sample of emerging countries to understand how varied actors rapidly forged healthcare solutions. We uncover the entrepreneurial agency of bricolage as an intrinsic, unconscious and cooperative process of entrepreneurial action in crisis management. Our study contributes to the theory of bricolage as we propose the concept of 'crisis-driven bricolage' in healthcare. By highlighting the capacity of multiple actors to collaborate and create effective healthcare solutions within a very short timeframe, our study holds strong practical implications for regional responses. It encourages bricolage as a viable solution when resources are tight and responses need to be rapid. Our study proposes greater consideration of bricolage as a way to provide low-cost and efficacious solutions, and as a complement to society's innovation repertoire. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Disentangling the performance implications of new venture status: competitive vulnerability, resource scarcity or strategic flexibility?
- Author
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Wang, Lucas Liang, Dai, Qing, and Gao, Yan
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. The Impact of Weak Marine Debris Governance on the Increased Environmental Insecurity in Southeast Asia
- Author
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Arfin Sudirman, Idris Idris, Achmad Gusman Siswandi, Huala Adolf, Edta Muhammad Fadilah, Mursal Maulana, and Falhan Hakiki
- Subjects
marine debris ,southeast asia ,environmental security ,policy harmonization ,resource scarcity ,human insecurities ,Political science - Abstract
The Southeast Asian region is home to five countries that are included in the list of the top 10 countries that produce marine debris in the world. Although there are a lot of efforts to handle the situation through the creation of marine debris governance in the region such as the ASEAN Regional Action Plan, not much has changed. This article aims to determine what Is the cause of weak marine debris governance and how it is impacted the increasing environmental insecurity In Southeast Asia based on the concept of policy harmonization and environmental security according to John Barnett's thinking which divides its meaning into three forms, namely changes in the environment, threats to national security, human security, and triggers for conflict. The research method used is descriptive qualitative research. Researchers found that weak marine debris governance formed as the result of a lack of policy harmonization between countries in the region regarding marine debris pollution and that environmental degradation that ensued had implications for the scarcity of marine resources, which is one of the main economic driving sectors for countries in the region and the possibility to contribute to fisheries conflicts that often occur in the South China Sea, which poses a threat to the national security of the surrounding countries. In addition, this environmental issue also creates human insecurity in the form of economic losses for coastal communities as well as health hazards for the human body.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Farmer-pastoralist conflicts in the Kilosa district of Tanzania : a qualitative study of stakeholder perspectives on causes, impacts and responses
- Author
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Ntumva, Mabebe E.
- Subjects
Climate change ,Conflict analysis ,Conflict management ,Environmental ,Farmer-pastoralist ,Land conflict ,Resource scarcity ,Tanzania ,Conflict - Abstract
This study applies a qualitative approach in examining the stakeholder perspectives on the causes and impacts of, and responses to, the farmer-pastoralist conflicts. The study is primarily a response to the broader stakeholder concerns surrounding the farmer-pastoralist conflicts in the Kilosa district of Tanzania. The interdisciplinary approach and, more importantly, the environmental security and political ecology theories, were used for conflict analysis in a bid to determine the gaps in the existing body of the literature. Specifically, the study aimed at determining: first, the causes of the conflicts in question driven by the growing concern around the increasing land conflicts between farmers and pastoralists in the district; second, the impacts of the conflicts and respective implications to the causes and conflict management mechanisms; third, the relevance of the conflict management mechanisms in place. The study adopted a case study design drawing from a range of qualitative methods involving semi-structured interviews and thematic analysis for collecting and analysing the stakeholder perspectives obtained from the field. The study then reveals that farmer-pastoralist conflicts in Kilosa district are mainly grounded in the broader domestic and external socio-political forces. The escalation into violence, however, depends mostly on resource scarcity driven by climate change manifesting as drought. In this regard, the lone environmental scarcity-conflict nexus is found to be less significant in causing farmer-pastoralist conflicts in Kilosa, a finding underpinning the political ecology's structural influence. The study finds that the use of multistakeholder bricolage institutions is more relevant for addressing these conflicts in Kilosa district.
- Published
- 2020
36. Rural Urban Nutrient Partnership (RUN): Life Cycle Assessment of Multi Nutrient Recovery from Kitchen Waste and Blackwater
- Author
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Heinz Stichnothe, Ben Joseph, Volker Preyl, and Carsten Meyer
- Subjects
P recovery ,struvite ,global warming potential ,wastewater treatment ,resource scarcity ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
Newly developed and innovative RUN technology aims to recover nutrients from urban wastewater (blackwater) and biowaste (kitchen waste). The development of RUN technology has been supported by the life cycle assessment (LCA) in order to identify hotspots and trade-offs. While the performance of the process at a laboratory scale did not show any environmental benefits from P recovery, the LCA results have helped to improve the environmental performance at the following scale-up step. The recovery of P on a technical scale was environmentally beneficial, especially in terms of the global warming potential (GWP). However, there were still some trade-offs, e.g., freshwater and marine eutrophication were slightly higher compared to conventional P fertilizer production. Given that P is considered a critical raw material and that climate change is probably the most pressing environmental issue, RUN technology has the potential to deliver on both domains.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. The perilous promise of productivity: Affective politics of farming media and its consequences for the future of agriculture.
- Author
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Carolan, Michael
- Subjects
- *
AGRICULTURE , *AFFECT (Psychology) , *MILKING machines , *FARMS , *FARMERS' attitudes , *PROMISES , *RURAL sociology - Abstract
This article brings together historically disparate literatures, including rural sociology, critical food studies, new media studies, and affect theory to think critically, and productively, about digital agriculture—for example, robotic milking machines, precision techniques, data-intensive and algorithm-enabled predictive software. To make this argument, the article triangulates multiple forms of data, including that collected through recurring interviews with 25 farmers in Colorado, Kansas, and Nebraska who employed agricultural digital platforms. When taken together, these data tell a story about how new farm media enact worlds by affording networked affective subjectivities. They do this not because they tell users things—as suggested by their "smart" moniker. Perhaps most importantly, they animate what farmers feel through affordances tied to expressions of desire, risk, and promise; anticipatory-affects with immense political potential. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Rethinking scarcity and poverty: Building bridges for shared insight and impact.
- Author
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Blocker, Chris, Zhang, Jonathan Z., Hill, Ronald Paul, Roux, Caroline, Corus, Canan, Hutton, Martina, Dorsey, Joshua, and Minton, Elizabeth
- Subjects
- *
SCARCITY , *POVERTY , *CULTURAL property , *URBAN poor , *WELL-being - Abstract
Resource scarcity is a powerful construct in social sciences. However, explanations about how resources influence overall wellbeing are difficult to generalize since much of the research on scarcity focuses on relatively affluent marketplace conditions, limiting its usefulness to large segments of the global population living in poverty. Conversely, poverty research provides cultural insights into resource deprivation, yet it stops short of explaining the systematic variation of scarce resources among impoverished individuals. To bridge these intellectual silos and advance a deeper understanding of scarcity, we integrate resource scarcity research, which builds upon a psychological tradition to understand various forms of everyday deprivation, with poverty research, which builds upon a sociological tradition to understand extreme and enduring deprivation. We propose a novel framework that integrates the concept of consumption adequacy and clarifies resource scarcity's forms, intensity, duration, and dynamic trajectories. We leverage this framework to generate a research agenda, and we propose ways to stimulate dialog among scarcity and poverty scholars, policymakers, and organizations to help inform impoverished life circumstances and generate effective solutions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Does Resource Scarcity Increase Self-Serving Dishonesty? Most People Wrongly Believe So.
- Author
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Lilleholt, Lau, S'cigała, Karolina Aleksandra, and Zettler, Ingo
- Abstract
Does resource scarcity increase people's inclination to engage in self-serving dishonesty? Whereas some theories suggest so, we found no evidence for this across four studies, but a fifth study revealed that most people (wrongly) believe that it does. More precisely, based on three well-powered preregistered online experiments (overall N= 4,193), complemented by two pilot studies (N= 51 and N = 49, respectively) and one manipulation check study (N =424), we provide evidence that neither exogenously induced resource scarcity nor priming people into a scarcity mindset influences people's inclination to engage in self-serving dishonesty. Furthermore, by linking country-level poverty data to a country-level indicator of self-serving dishonesty based on a recent meta-analysis comprising 47 countries and more than 44,000 participants, we found that people living in poorer countries are no more inclined to engage in self-serving dishonesty than people living in richer countries. Finally, we found that most people--and especially men and people low in Agreeableness versus Anger--wrongly believe that people living in poorer countries are more willing to engage in self-serving dishonesty (N= 658). Overall, our investigation adds new evidence to the burgeoning literature on the link between resource scarcity (in the form of poverty) and unethical behavior (in the form of self-serving dishonesty). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Women's Preferences for Masculinity in Male Faces Are Predicted by Material Scarcity, But Not Time or Psychological Scarcity.
- Author
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Lee, Anthony J. and McGuire, Nikita K. J.
- Subjects
- *
SCARCITY , *SEXUAL attraction , *MASCULINITY , *SEXUAL dimorphism , *FEMININITY - Abstract
Facial femininity in men is purportedly used as a cue by women as a signal of parental quality and willingness to provide resources. Accordingly, in contexts where choosing a partner that will provide resources is more beneficial (e.g., when resources are scarce), women have shown an increase preference for facial femininity in male faces. However, domains of scarcity often covary, and it is, therefore, unclear whether these contextual shifts in facial masculinity/femininity preferences are specific to material scarcity (as implied by previous theory), or due to an unrelated domain of scarcity (e.g., time or psychological scarcity). Here, a sample of 823 women completed the Perceived Scarcity Scale, which measures three separate domains of scarcity: material scarcity, time scarcity, and psychological scarcity. Participants also rated the attractiveness of 42 male faces, which were measured on objective sexual dimorphism and perceived masculinity. Consistent with theory, material scarcity, and not time or psychological scarcity, was associated with a decreased preference for objective sexual dimorphism (i.e., an increased preference for facial femininity). This study provides evidence that women use sexual dimorphism as a cue to material resource provisioning potential when assessing men as a mate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. PHYSICIANS' MORAL DUTIES DURING PANDEMICS.
- Author
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Iserson, Kenneth V., Derse, Arthur R., Moskop, John C., and Geiderman, Joel M.
- Subjects
- *
PANDEMICS , *SARS-CoV-2 , *MORAL norms , *PHYSICIANS , *ETHICAL problems , *EMERGENCY physicians - Abstract
Pandemics with devastating morbidity and mortality have occurred repeatedly throughout recorded history. Each new scourge seems to surprise governments, medical experts, and the public. The SARS CoV-2 (COVID-19) pandemic, for example, arrived as an unwelcome surprise to an unprepared world. Despite humanity's extensive experience with pandemics and their associated ethical dilemmas, no consensus has emerged on preferred normative standards to deal with them. In this article, we consider the ethical dilemmas faced by physicians who work in these risk-prone situations and propose a set of ethical norms for current and future pandemics. As front-line clinicians for critically ill patients during pandemics, emergency physicians will play a substantial role in making and implementing treatment allocation decisions. Our proposed ethical norms should help future physicians make morally challenging choices during pandemics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. „Triagegesetz" – Regelung mit fatalen Folgen.
- Author
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Heller, A. R., Bartenschlager, C., Brunner, J. O., and Marckmann, G.
- Subjects
- *
MEDICAL triage , *GOVERNMENT regulation , *SURVEYS , *ADVERSE health care events , *PHYSICIANS - Abstract
With the coming into force of § 5c of the Infection Protection Act (IfSG), the so-called Triage Act, on 14 December 2022, a protracted discussion has come to a provisional conclusion, the result of which physicians and social associations but also lawyers and ethicists are equally dissatisfied. The explicit exclusion of the discontinuation of treatment that has already begun in favor of new patients with better chances of success (so-called tertiary or ex-post triage) prevents allocation decisions with the aim of enabling as many patients as possible to beneficially participate in medical care under crisis conditions. The result of the new regulation is de facto a first come first served allocation, which is associated with the highest mortality even among individuals with limitations or disabilities and was rejected by a large margin as unfair in a population survey. Mandating allocation decisions based on the likelihood of success but which are not permitted to be consistently implemented and prohibiting, for example the use of age and frailty as prioritization criteria, although both factors most strongly determine the short-term probability of survival according to evident data, shows the contradictory and dogmatic nature of the regulation. The only remaining possibility is the consistent termination of treatment that is no longer indicated or desired by the patient, regardless of the current resource situation; however, if a different decision is made in a crisis situation than in a situation without a lack of resources, this practice would not be justified and would be punishable. Accordingly, the highest efforts must be set on legally compliant documentation, especially in the stage of decompensated crisis care in a region. The goal of enabling as many patients as possible to beneficially participate in medical care under crisis conditions is in any case thwarted by the new German Triage Act. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. CLIMATE CHANGE MIGRATIONS – SECURITY AND LEGAL ASPECTS
- Author
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Edita Hasković and Dina Bajraktarević Pajević
- Subjects
climate change ,migration ,resource scarcity ,conflict ,internally displaced persons ,Social Sciences - Abstract
Climate change has been undoubtedly profiled as a very significant factor in migratory movements in recent times. This is conditioned with the gradual but continuous aggravation of climatic circumstances, which has occurred especially since the 1950s, when significant changes in average weather conditions were observed, such as continuous growth in global temperature, more frequent and intense droughts, storms and warm periods, rise of the sea levels etc. In the early 1990s, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) indicated that the greatest particular impact of climate change could be human migration, with all subsequent consecutive reports from relevant international institutions insisting that environmental degradation, and especially climate change, have tendency to become the leading trigger for population displacement in the future. Given the all above mentioned, authors intend to examine the security aspects of migration caused by climate change, as well as the thesis that climate change is a ‘threat multiplier’, especially in the countries of the Global South. The authors also consider the need to review the international and national legal framework, which is necessary due to noticeably inadequate treatment and protection of people forced to leave their home due to hostile climate change.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. UNDERSTANDING TURKEY'S ENVIRONMENTAL PROBLEMS FROM A SECURITY PERSPECTIVE.
- Author
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Cora, Hakan, Demir, Sertif, Gürson, Ali Poyraz, Mikail, Elnur Hasan, and Cora, Nazmi
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Climate Change and Armed Conflict
- Author
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Smith, Tara, Sayapin, Sergey, editor, Atadjanov, Rustam, editor, Kadam, Umesh, editor, Kemp, Gerhard, editor, Zambrana-Tévar, Nicolás, editor, and Quénivet, Noëlle, editor
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Resource Optimisation Problems in Cognitive Radio Networks
- Author
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Maharaj, Bodhaswar TJ, Awoyemi, Babatunde Seun, Maharaj, Bodhaswar TJ, and Awoyemi, Babatunde Seun
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. New energy utilization in environmental design and realization
- Author
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Li Yao
- Subjects
Environmental design ,Energy crisis ,New energy utilization ,Non-renewable resources ,Resource scarcity ,New energy utilization index ,Electrical engineering. Electronics. Nuclear engineering ,TK1-9971 - Abstract
Energy is an important resource for human society and plays an important role in the development of society. However, due to the growing demand for energy in many countries around the world, the consumption of traditional fossil fuels such as coal is accelerating lead to problems such as resource scarcity, environmental pollution, and energy crisis are becoming increasingly prominent, which greatly restricts the sustainable development of the economy and human society, especially in areas where the utilization rate of new and renewable energy is not high. In order to realize environmental design and reduce pollution and solve problems such as resource shortages, this paper studies the utilization of new energy based on environmental design and realization. The experimental results show that the research on new energy based on environmental design and implementation can improve the utilization efficiency of new energy by 5.31%. This eases the future energy crisis and enables new energy to gradually replace solid resources such as fossil fuels as the main energy consumption. It can also solve the problem of energy shortage, reduce the waste and pollution of old energy in the environment, and improve the protection of the environment.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Franchisor support and brand value empowerment of micro-franchisees: a Brazilian market perspective
- Author
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Melo, Pedro Lucas de Resende, Carneiro-da-Cunha, Julio Araújo, and Telles, Renato
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. "自我" 还是" 他人" --绿色广告诉求有效性研究.
- Author
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孙 瑾 and 陈 晨
- Abstract
Copyright of Nankai Business Review is the property of Nankai Business Review Editorial Office 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
50. Temporary Self-Deprivation Can Impair Cognitive Control: Evidence From the Ramadan Fast.
- Author
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Rad, Mostafa Salari, Ansarinia, Morteza, and Shafir, Eldar
- Abstract
During Ramadan, people of Muslim faith fast by not eating or drinking between sunrise and sunset. This is likely to have physiological and psychological consequences for fasters, and societal and economic impacts on the wider population. We investigate whether, during this voluntary and temporally limited fast, reminders of food can impair the fasters' reaction time and accuracy on a non-food-related test of cognitive control. Using a repeated measures design in a sample of Ramadan fasters (N = 190), we find that when food is made salient, fasters are slower and less accurate during Ramadan compared with after Ramadan. Control participants perform similarly across time. Furthermore, during Ramadan performances vary by how recently people had their last meal. Potential mechanisms are suggested, grounded in research on resource scarcity, commitment, and thought suppression, as well as the psychology of rituals and self-regulation, and implications for people who fast for religious or health reasons are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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