12 research outputs found

    The Impact of Psychological Violence on Social Cohesion and Political Stability

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    Psychological violence, particularly against women, has detrimental effects on mental health. Political leaders must prioritize initiatives to address this issue and empower survivors of gender equality and social justice. By integrating the principles of justice and equality into political agendas, societies can foster gender equity and protect the rights and dignity of individuals. This study examines the impact of psychological violence on social cohesion and its ramifications on political stability. Using a comprehensive mixed-methods approach, this study explored gender dynamics, the impact of psychological violence, and political involvement. Conflict theory is used to understand how psychological violence exacerbates social and political tension. This study found that political intimidation threatens democratic norms and social cohesion. Recognizing these distinctions is crucial for crafting targeted interventions and policies to mitigate the belongings of psychological strength, foster social consistency, and safeguard administrative stability in an interconnected world

    The Impact of Foreign Aid on Income Inequality: Evidence from Developing Countries. Application of the FMOLS Approach

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    The present study aims to evaluate the impact of foreign assistance on income inequality of selected developing economies. Panel co-integration technique is applied for the purpose of estimation. After confirming the pre-conditions for cointegration, we have applied the Fully Modified-OLS method to estimate the association between foreign aid and income inequality. Controlling for other variables, we find a positive and significant association between foreign aid and inequality. The empirical results are robust concerning the sub-samples of developing economies selected according to the income classification of the World Bank. The empirical results are also robust concerning the alternative measure of income inequality

    The Impact of Foreign Aid on Income Inequality: Evidence from Developing Countries. Application of the FMOLS Approach

    No full text
    The present study aims to evaluate the impact of foreign assistance on income inequality of selected developing economies. Panel co-integration technique is applied for the purpose of estimation. After confirming the pre-conditions for cointegration, we have applied the Fully Modified-OLS method to estimate the association between foreign aid and income inequality. Controlling for other variables, we find a positive and significant association between foreign aid and inequality. The empirical results are robust concerning the sub-samples of developing economies selected according to the income classification of the World Bank. The empirical results are also robust concerning the alternative measure of income inequality

    Statically Checking Transaction Ordering Dependency in Ethereum Smart Contracts

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    Smart contracts are programs with mutable state. Transactions submitted to these contracts trigger functions that often modify state. Nodes of the Ethereum blockchain schedule such transactions in a nondeterministic order, potentially leading to races between transactions and concurrency issues. When the outcome of a smart contract varies depending on the order in which transactions are processed, we have a Transaction Ordering Dependency (TOD). TOD enables malicious actors to profit from a smart contract, similar to the well-known frontrunning vulnerability. Existing approaches for detecting TOD in Ethereum smart contracts yield a high rate of false positives and false negatives. To help contract developers and testers detect TOD vulnerabilities with enhanced precision, we propose and evaluate an analysis based on information flow in our tool TODChecker1 . We evaluate our approach using a benchmark comprising 513 vulnerable transactions involving 235 real-world Ethereum smart contracts susceptible to frontrunning attacks. Our evaluation finds that our approach outperforms existing approaches, including Oyente, Securify, SAILFISH, TODler, and Nyx, in precision, runtime, and in identifying novel TOD vulnerabilities. © 2024 Copyright held by the owner/author(s)</p

    New and significant bird records for Solor, Adonara, and Lembata (Lomblen) islands, Lesser Sundas

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    The birds of the island of Solor were last investigated about 150 years ago when Charles Allen, an assistant of Lord Alfred Wallace, collected four species. During a one-day visit in 2005 the first author recorded an additional 47 species, including 33 resident land birds. A total of 37 species, including ten new island records, were observed on Adonara over a 2-day period in January 2005 and a brief visit in 2009. The second author recorded 33 species over four days on Lembata, including seven new island records. Few of the new island records for these three islands involved resident forest birds. A notable exception was the Oriental Dwarf Kingfisher Ceyx erythacus on Lembata, extending its easterly limits. The avifaunas of Solor, Adonara and Lembata are species-poor subsets of the Flores mainland avifauna; only three species - Olive-headed Lorikeet Trichoglossus euteles (Adonara, Lembata), Common Cicadabird Coracina tenuirostris (Lembata) and Broad-billed Flycatcher Myiagra ruficollis (Lembata) &ndash; are absent from Flores. The forest avifauna of these islands remains poorly known and deserves further attention

    The Breeding Seasons of Birds on Timor

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    The breeding seasons of land birds on Timor, the largest island of the Lesser Sundas (Nusa Tenggara) is hitherto undocumented. This preliminary report draws upon historic data from the early 20'h century and opportunistic observations made by the author on Timor during the 1990s, and compares these data with those available for other islands in the region (including Roti and Sumba), as well as western Indonesia and Papua. Evidence is presented that nesting occurs throughout the wet season (November to April), possibly peaking in November. This pattern contrasts strongly with that for western Flores (Verheijen 1964), where breeding is concentrated in the three months from April to June. Interpretation of these patterns must be cautious, however, given the hiatus of data from Timor for the period from late August to November, as well as the opportunistic or approximate nature of the data presented here. lt is hoped that this report stimulates a more comprehensive study of avian reproduction in the region

    Marlowe as Colonialist: A Postcolonial Study of 'Heart of Darkness'

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    Post-colonialism focuses on understanding invasion and systematic occupation by the colonizers. This theory analyzes depiction of the native peoples’ culture and descriptions of their living experiences, and explores the notion of resistance against the culture and system that have been invaded. The Heart of Darkness (1902), which is author Joseph Conrad’s masterpiece, presents the living experiences of Africans in a post-colonial context. The present study has as its major objective an in-depth study of the novel through the experiences faced by the protagonist of the novel, Charles Marlow, in terms of the perspectives of The Post-Colonial Theory by Edward Said (1978) and Subaltern Theory by Spivak (1993). The study is qualitative in nature because the novel is examined in terms of the elements provided by the theories specified. The result of the study indicates that the novel represents a specimen of post-colonialism in which the observed experiences of African people are fully described. This description depicts the ways in which the natives of Africa had to face systematic marginalization, violation of their culture, passivity, and participation in cultural practices only through snatched freedom. The inhabitants were forced to live in a hybrid culture where their own identity was largely abandoned

    Three’s Company: discovery of a third syntype of Stegonotus lividus, a species of colubrid snake from Pulau Semau, Lesser Sunda Islands, Indonesia, with comments on an unpublished 19th Century manuscript by the naturalist Salomon Müller

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    We report on the discovery of a third, male specimen of Stegonotus lividus in the collection of the Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle in Paris, France, and demonstrate that it is not only a member of the original type series but the only one of the three syntypes, whose morphology was detailed in the original description. We herein identify it as a paralectotype. In their description of S. lividus, Duméril et al. (1854) attributed authorship of the name to the German zoologist Salomon Müller, whose work was never published. By the rules of zoological nomenclature, author attribution solely via an unpublished manuscript is inadmissible, and the species is therefore properly listed as Stegonotus lividus (Duméril et al., 1854). The recent discovery of Müller’s handwritten manuscript, along with an unpublished drawing of one of these snakes by the Dutch artist Pieter van Oort, allows a better assessment of color and pattern for a species that remains known from only three preserved vouchers, as well as improved differentiation from other taxa occurring in the Lesser Sundas and Moluccas.Published onlin

    Collected Papers (on Neutrosophic Theory and Applications), Volume VII

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    This seventh volume of Collected Papers includes 70 papers comprising 974 pages on (theoretic and applied) neutrosophics, written between 2013-2021 by the author alone or in collaboration with the following 122 co-authors from 22 countries: Mohamed Abdel-Basset, Abdel-Nasser Hussian, C. Alexander, Mumtaz Ali, Yaman Akbulut, Amir Abdullah, Amira S. Ashour, Assia Bakali, Kousik Bhattacharya, Kainat Bibi, R. N. Boyd, Ümit Budak, Lulu Cai, Cenap Özel, Chang Su Kim, Victor Christianto, Chunlai Du, Chunxin Bo, Rituparna Chutia, Cu Nguyen Giap, Dao The Son, Vinayak Devvrat, Arindam Dey, Partha Pratim Dey, Fahad Alsharari, Feng Yongfei, S. Ganesan, Shivam Ghildiyal, Bibhas C. Giri, Masooma Raza Hashmi, Ahmed Refaat Hawas, Hoang Viet Long, Le Hoang Son, Hongbo Wang, Hongnian Yu, Mihaiela Iliescu, Saeid Jafari, Temitope Gbolahan Jaiyeola, Naeem Jan, R. Jeevitha, Jun Ye, Anup Khan, Madad Khan, Salma Khan, Ilanthenral Kandasamy, W.B. Vasantha Kandasamy, Darjan Karabašević, Kifayat Ullah, Kishore Kumar P.K., Sujit Kumar De, Prasun Kumar Nayak, Malayalan Lathamaheswari, Luong Thi Hong Lan, Anam Luqman, Luu Quoc Dat, Tahir Mahmood, Hafsa M. Malik, Nivetha Martin, Mai Mohamed, Parimala Mani, Mingcong Deng, Mohammed A. Al Shumrani, Mohammad Hamidi, Mohamed Talea, Kalyan Mondal, Muhammad Akram, Muhammad Gulistan, Farshid Mofidnakhaei, Muhammad Shoaib, Muhammad Riaz, Karthika Muthusamy, Nabeela Ishfaq, Deivanayagampillai Nagarajan, Sumera Naz, Nguyen Dinh Hoa, Nguyen Tho Thong, Nguyen Xuan Thao, Noor ul Amin, Dragan Pamučar, Gabrijela Popović, S. Krishna Prabha, Surapati Pramanik, Priya R, Qiaoyan Li, Yaser Saber, Said Broumi, Saima Anis, Saleem Abdullah, Ganeshsree Selvachandran, Abdulkadir Sengür, Seyed Ahmad Edalatpanah, Shahbaz Ali, Shahzaib Ashraf, Shouzhen Zeng, Shio Gai Quek, Shuangwu Zhu, Shumaiza, Sidra Sayed, Sohail Iqbal, Songtao Shao, Sundas Shahzadi, Dragiša Stanujkić, Željko Stević, Udhayakumar Ramalingam, Zunaira Rashid, Hossein Rashmanlou, Rajkumar Verma, Luige Vlădăreanu, Victor Vlădăreanu, Desmond Jun Yi Tey, Selçuk Topal, Naveed Yaqoob, Yanhui Guo, Yee Fei Gan, Yingcang Ma, Young Bae Jun, Yuping Lai, Hafiz Abdul Wahab, Wei Yang, Xiaohong Zhang, Edmundas Kazimieras Zavadskas, Lemnaouar Zedam

    The language of malaria in Abui: An interdisciplinary investigation of healthcare practices in Alor, Eastern Indonesia

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    We report on an interdisciplinary collaboration between public health experts, linguists, and botanists which seeks to better understand indigenous perspectives on malaria among the Abui [abz] speaking communities of Alor Island, Eastern Indonesia. Malaria is endemic in Alor and is highly resistant to common conventional treatment regimens (Sutanto et al. 2009). There is a low rate of compliance with modern malaria treatments, and a correspondingly high reliance on traditional treatment methods (Krentel 2008). Our research attempts to understand traditional knowledge of malaria in Abui and its relevance to modern healthcare. We analyze a corpus of unstructured interviews concerning health-related problems in Abui in order to better understand the conceptualization of disease (Forster 1976). This includes the systematic study of metaphor (Author 2016), sequencing of symptom descriptions (Author 2016), symptom-based indigenous classification of malaria, an inventory of traditional health-protecting practices, and an inventory of medical plants. The plant terminology reveals a syncretism between terms referring to diseases and the plants which either treat or cause those diseases. For example, the term takaya denotes both the ti plant (Cordyline fruticosa) and a severe form of malaria (Plasmodium falciparum). The leaves of the ti plant takaya are tied onto valuable trees such as candlenut, areca palm, and jackfruit to create a protective spell which wards off theft of the fruits or nuts of that tree. Transgressing this protection by taking the fruits or nuts without permission will cause the transgressor to suffer the takaya disease. The existence of supernatural causes may go unnoticed when interviews are conducted in Indonesian, the national language closely associated with modernity. However, the pervasiveness of plant-disease syncretism within Abui belies the continuing significance of traditional beliefs regarding disease. The collaborative methodology described here shows great promise for improving our understanding of the conceptualization of malaria in Abui and thus increasing treatment efficacy for this disease. Moreover, this approach provides a platform for documentary linguistics which includes a high level of community engagement. The healthcare interviews yield a culturally significant corpus of spontaneous speech which also serves as an independent knowledge base to evaluate the reliability and accuracy of ethnobotanical research. Finally, we suggest several ways in which our approach can be applied to future healthcare research in other domains and with other communities. References Author. 2016. The Pragmatics Behind the Medical and Health Knowledge in Alor: An Understanding of how disease is conceptualized in the Abui language. Honors thesis. Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. Du Bois, Cora. 1944. The People of Alor: a social-psychological study of an East Indian island. Minnesota: The University of Minnesota Press Forster, George M. 1976. Disease Etiologies in Non-Western Medical Systems. American Anthropologist 78(4): 773-782. Krentel, Alison. 2008. Why do individuals comply with mass drug administration for lymphatic filariasis? A case study from Alor District, Indonesia. PhD dissertation. London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine. Sutanto, I. Nurhayati, S. S., Manoempil, P., Baird, J.K. 2009. Resistance to Choloroquine by Plasmodium vivax at Alor in the Lesser Sundas Archipelago in Eastern Indonesia. The American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 81(2), 338-342. Author. 2016. The Semantics of Complex Sentences in the Discourse of Health and Diseases: A Case Study in Abui. Honors thesis. Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
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