712 research outputs found
Please free Esha: a participatory communication project
California State University, Northridge (CSUN) graduate student Esha Momeni was arrested by Iranian police in October 2008 while researching her thesis in Tehran. Following that news, Anasa D. Sinegal began planning a candlelight vigil with Esha's classmates in CSUN's Mass Communication program. Sinegal used her news and public relations experience to gamer media coverage of the November 12, 2008 event. Fourteen news agencies reported on the vigil and more than 200 people attended. This thesis project is an archive of the materials Sinegal, and her classmate, Kara Lawton, used to plan the vigil. It can serve as a tool for researchers interested in examining how organizations build media and community awareness of human rights issues.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 152-157). Author Sinegal, Anasa D.'s copy contains extra photos with different pagination (ix, 252 leaves).California State University, Northridge. Department of Journalism
Please free Esha: A participatory communication project
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 152-157). Author Sinegal, Anasa D.'s copy contains extra photos with different pagination (ix, 252 leaves).California State University, Northridge (CSUN) graduate student Esha Momeni was arrested by Iranian police in October 2008 while researching her thesis in Tehran. Following that news, Anasa D. Sinegal began planning a candlelight vigil with Esha's classmates in CSUN's Mass Communication program. Sinegal used her news and public relations experience to gamer media coverage of the November 12, 2008 event. Fourteen news agencies reported on the vigil and more than 200 people attended. This thesis project is an archive of the materials Sinegal, and her classmate, Kara Lawton, used to plan the vigil. It can serve as a tool for researchers interested in examining how organizations build media and community awareness of human rights issues
Parapanteles esha Gupta, n. sp.
Parapanteles esha Gupta n. sp. Plates. VI, VII & XXI. Figs 21 −27, 79. Female. Holotype (Fig. 21). Body length = 2.83 mm. Diagnosis. Propodeum areola 1.19 × longer than wide; vein 1 r and 2 Rs joining smoothly in a curve; anterior diagonal carinae of propodeum shallowly merging anterior margin of propodeum. Hind tibia (0.71) 2.29 × longer than exserted part of ovipositor (0.31). First metasomal tergal wider than long; first tergum length/apical width (0.39 / 0.46) = 0.85, with distinct coarse punctations and rugosity; second tergum rugose like first, wider than long; second tergum median length 1.18 × of third tergum. Ovipositor sheaths curved and hairy in half of exserted portion; gently decurved, projecting beyond apex of gaster. Body colour. Black. Head black. Ocelli light brown, antenna scape brown, flagellum yellow brown; eyes dark brownish black with pale yellow palps, mandible light brown with darker edges. Fore and mid leg with coxa and trochanter brown, femur yellow, tibia yellow, tarsi brown, apex of apical tarsus brown; hind leg with coxa and trochanter concolourous with mesosoma, femur yellow, tibia yellow with brown infuscation, more pronounced at apical 1 / 5 th, tibial spurs pale yellow, tarsus brown, basal 1 / 4 th of basitarsus pale. Mesosoma black. Wings hyaline, veins C+SC+R and metacarpus (R 1) dark brown; pterostigma brown (except extreme pale apex), vein (RS+M)a, m-cu, 1 M and 1 Cua testaceous; veins r, 2 RS light brown and 2 M dark brown; hind wing veins translucent. Tegula brown black with edges yellow. Head. Eyes densely setose. Face rough with shallow closely placed punctations; vertex rough, shallowly punctured, dull, with sparse pilosity; clypeus densely setose. Head wider than long, width (0.75)/height (0.66) = 1.14; compound eye height = 0.43 mm; inter tentorial pit distance = 0.22 mm; width of face at dorsal clypeal edge = 0.41 mm; clypeus height = 0.07 mm; clypeus width = 0.22 mm; length of first flagellomere = 0.17 mm; width of first flagellomere = 0.60 mm; length of second flagellomere = 0.17 mm; width of second flagellomere = 0.07 mm; length of third flagellomere = 0.17 mm; width of third flagellomere = 0.07 mm; terminal flagellomere length = 0.09 mm; terminal flagellomere width = 0.06 mm; penultimate flagellomere length = 0.08 mm; penultimate flagellomere width = 0.06 mm; terminal flagellomere length/width = 1.5; malar space height = 0.075 mm; malar space width (0.16 mm)/basal width of mandible (0.06 mm) = 2.67; ocello-ocular distance = 0.15 mm; inter-ocellar distance = 0.12; face width at upper edge of posterior ocelli = 0.64 mm. Inter toruli = 0.09 mm. Mesosoma (Fig. 22). Mesosoma median length = 1.1 mm; mesosoma length/width (0.94) = 1.17. Mesonotum with coarse punctate sculpture that fades near the scutellar groove; scuto-scutellar groove distinctly crenulate with 11 deep costulae; medium pilosity; pilosity not dense above the scuto-scutellar groove; scutellum with shallow and distantly placed punctations, sparsely placed long white setae; scutellum laterally with costulate sculpture which become narrower and elongated towards posterior edge; posterior band of scutellum polished; metanotum subrectangular. Mesopleuron dull distinctly punctate in diagonal anterior half while the posterior half smooth and shiny. Metapleuron generally smooth anteriorly in the middle except for very shallow punctures posteriorly and at extreme anterior tip. Hind coxa laterally with shallow punctures and setation. Propodeum with clearly defined wide, strong and shiny areola (areola devoid of setae); propodeum rugose in basal half excluding areola, setae on lateral edges. Areola 1.19 × longer than wide; anterior diagonal carinae of propodeum shallowly merging anterior margin of propodeum; areola open near the anterior edge; costulae complete and prominent, anterior diagonal carinae sloping down behind spiracles; spiracles large and oval. PLATES VI. Parapanteles esha n. sp. Figs 21−25. 21 —Habitus. 22 — Mesosoma. 23 —Fore wing. 24 —Metasoma, male. 25 —Propodeum with metasoma, female. PLATES VII. Parapanteles esha n. sp. Figs 26−27. 26 —Host caterpillar, Prosotas dubiosa (Semper). 27 —Adult butterfly of P. dubiosa. Wings (Fig. 23). Pterostigma length (0.30)/height (0.19) = 1.58. 1 RS length = 0.05 mm; 1 r = 0.14 mm; 2 Rs = 0.14 mm; 1 CUa length (0.12)/ 1 CUb length (0.21) = 0.57; RS+Ma length = 0.36 mm; RS+Mb = 0.05 mm; M+CU length = 0.93 mm; Hind wing: 1 M length = 0.43 mm; 1 M length (0.43)/M+CU length (0.34) = 1.26; length r-m (0.17)/length cu-a (0.29) = 0.59; 1 A length = 0.21 mm. Metasoma (Figs 24 & 25). Metasoma median length = 1.1 mm (including exserted ovipositor = 0.31 mm; first tergum length/apical width (0.39 / 0.46) = 0.85; first tergal plate widest pre apically = 0.48 mm; distinctly rugose. Second tergum distinctly rugose. Second tergum wider than long, second tergum median length = 0.20 mm; 1.18 × of third tergum. First tergum basal width = 0.36 mm; second tergum median length = 0.20 mm; second tergum apical width = 0.51 mm; third tergum median length = 0.17 mm; third and subsequent tergites smooth with long sparsely placed setae. Ovipositor = 0.90 mm (Fig. 79). Ovipositor sheaths projecting beyond the apex of gaster. Exserted part of ovipositor = 0.31 mm. Ovipositor sheaths long and slender in lateral view, hairy in exserted portion; gently decurved, projecting beyond apex of gaster. Hind tibia (0.71); 2.29 × longer than exserted part of ovipositor (0.31). Male. Similar to female. Host. Prosotas dubiosa (Semper) (Lepidoptera: Lycaenidae) on the host plant Pithecellobium dulce (Fabaceae) (Figs 26 & 27). Type material. Holotype, one female on card, INDIA, Maharashtra, 10.vii. 13, coll. Paresh V. Churi, ex. Prosotas dubiosa (Semper) (Lepidoptera: Lycaenidae) (Fig. 26) on the host plant Pithecellobium dulce (Fabaceae). Paratype, one female on card, with same data as holotype. Repository. All types & specimens deposited in NBAII, Bangalore, India. Code. NBAII /Bra/Mic/Para/ esha / 060713 -A(Holotype), NBAII /Bra/Mic/Para/ esha / 060713 -B (Paratype). Etymology. This species is named after the Sanskrit word ‘ esha ’ meaning ‘wish’.Published as part of Gupta, Ankita, Churi, Paresh V., Sengupta, Ashok & Mhatre, Sarang, 2014, Lycaenidae parasitoids from peninsular India with description of four new species of microgastrine wasps (Hymenoptera: Braconidae) along with new insights on host relationships, pp. 439-470 in Zootaxa 3827 (4) on pages 448-451, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3827.4.2, http://zenodo.org/record/25237
Please free Esha: a participatory communication project
This joint thesis project details and reflects on the authors' participation in the Nov. 12, 2008 vigil for Esha Momeni, a California State University, Northridge graduate student imprisoned in Iran for researching the Iranian women's movement. It contains a print version of the online archive they created to document the event, along with information about how they organized it, participant interviews, and personal reflections. The authors discuss applying their education in mass communication to a student-led grassroots movement and the impact of what they learned from the experience. The findings highlight the importance of face-to-face interaction, networks, and collaboration to promote civic involvement and enact social change.California State University, Northridge. Department of Journalism.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 152-157
Please free Esha: A participatory communication project
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 152-157)This joint thesis project details and reflects on the authors' participation in the Nov. 12, 2008 vigil for Esha Momeni, a California State University, Northridge graduate student imprisoned in Iran for researching the Iranian women's movement. It contains a print version of the online archive they created to document the event, along with information about how they organized it, participant interviews, and personal reflections. The authors discuss applying their education in mass communication to a student-led grassroots movement and the impact of what they learned from the experience. The findings highlight the importance of face-to-face interaction, networks, and collaboration to promote civic involvement and enact social change
HUBUNGAN ANTARA DUKUNGAN SOSIAL DENGAN STUDENT WELL BEING PADA SISWA MTs PONDOK PESANTREN X DI KABUPATEN PELALAWAN
HUBUNGAN ANTARA DUKUNGAN SOSIAL DENGAN STUDENT WELL
BEING PADA SISWA MTs PONDOK PESANTREN X DI KABUPATEN
PELALAWAN
Oleh:
Dina Qorina Esha
Email: [email protected]
Fakultas Psikologi Universitas Islam Negeri Sultan Syarif Kasim Riau
ABSTRAK
Student well being yang tinggi ataupun rendah akan berpengaruh terhadap sosialiasi
siswa di sekolah. Salah satu faktor yang mempengaruhi student well being ini adalah
dukungan sosial, dengan adanya dukungan sosial itu mampu meningkatkan student
well being pada siswa. Dengan adanya dukungan sosial dari orang terdekat membuat
individu merasa ia dicintai, dihargai, dibutuhkan. Penelitian ini bertujuan unrtuk
melihat apakah terdapat hubungan yang positif antara dukungan sosial dengan student
well being pada siswa. Penelitian ini menggunakan metode penelitian kuantitatif dan
penelitian ini bertujuan untuk mengetahui ada tidaknya hubungan antara dukungan
sosial dengan student well being. Jumlah populasi dalam penelitian ini sebanyak 332
siswa dan jumlah sampel dalam penelitian ini sebanyak 202 siswa dengan
menggunakan cluster random sampling. Instrumen yang digunakan adalah skala
dukungan sosial dengan koefisien reliabilitas sebesar 0,852 dan skala student well
being dengan koefisien realiabilitas sebesar 0,862. Berdasarkan hasil analisis product
moment corelation pearson diperoleh hasil r = 0,479 dan signifikansi sebesar 0,000
(p≤0,01). Artinya ada hubungan antara dukungan sosial terhadap student well being
pada siswa MTs pondok pesantren X di kabupaten pelalawan.
kata kunci: Dukungan, Sosial, student, well-being, siswa
Rainwater Harvesting, Alternative to the Water supply in Indian Urban Areas : the Case of Ahmedabad in Gujarat.
NAgestion de l'eau;développement;récupération de l'eau de pluie;Inde
Rainwater harvesting, alternative to the water supply in Indian urban areas : The case of Ahmedabad in Gujarat
Water scarcity is a characteristic of north-western states of India, such as Gujarat. Over time, the continuous increase of the population as well as the financial, administrative and technical deficiencies of the new supply system have lead to the deterioration of the water service in the city. In the meantime, the water demand has considerably increased due to the improvement of standards of living. This has resulted in an increasing pressure on underground water resources, which has lead to an alarming depletion of aquifers. From this overall situation arises the question of the use of complementary alternative sources of water in Ahmedabad and more particularly of the rehabilitation of the rainwater harvesting structures still existing in its old city area. The objective of the research is to evaluate to what extent this traditional system may constitute an additional source of water within the Old city of Ahmedabad and may locally reduce the pressure on water demand, assuming that the existing supply system does not fulfil the needs of the users. The results of an exploratory field study conducted in the Old city in 2001-02, which combined quantitative and qualitative aspects, give an outlook on people's opinions and behaviors regarding both systems. Finally, the rehabilitation of rainwater harvesting structures in the Old city of Ahmedabad suggests the necessity of empowering local structures of water management (households, non governmental association) in semi-arid urban areas to create the conditions for a sustainable implementation.rainwater harvesting ; water supply ; water scarcity ; water management ; Ahmedabad Old City ; Pol ; Gujarat ; India
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