2,799 research outputs found

    Geologische Specialkarte von Preussen und den Thüringischen Staaten / 4523/B Agronomische Bohrungen zu Blatt Möglin

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    geognost. und agronom. bearbeitet durch F. Wahnschaffe 1891/92 unter Hülfeleistung des Landmessers Reiman

    Parents’ assets and child marriage: are mother’s assets more protective than father’s assets?

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    Child marriage places girls at an increased risk for dropping out of school early, sexually transmitted infections, teenage childbirth, and accompanying childbirth complications, including maternal mortality. The determinants of child marriage are not clearly understood, which hinders efforts to mount effective interventions. This study examined the link between economic resources and child marriage by investigating whether maternal and paternal asset ownership were longitudinally associated with daughters’ child marriage in Ethiopia. Drawing upon household bargaining theory, it was hypothesized that maternal assets would be more protective of daughters’ child marriage than paternal assets. Data for 4,293 girls from the nationally representative Ethiopia Socioeconomic Survey, fielded in 2011 and 2014, were employed. Logistic regression and instrumental variable analyses were used to examine the relationship between transition into child marriage during the study period and maternal and paternal assets, controlling for child-, family-, and community-level characteristics. Results show that a one standard deviation increase in mother’s assets was associated with 37–53% lower odds of daughter’s child marriage whereas a one standard deviation increase in paternal asset holdings was associated with 0–37% higher odds of daughter’s child marriage. Effects were strongest in regions where the dominant mode of marriage payments is bride price. These results suggest that the link between economic resources and child marriage depends on the gender of the parent who owns the resources. This study also highlights the interconnectedness of two targets of the gender equality Sustainable Development Goal—improvement of women’s ownership of assets and the elimination of child marriage—and suggests that the realization of one gender equality target could have implications for other targets.Peer reviewe

    Disability among children of immigrants from India and China: is there excess disability among girls?

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    We investigate whether there is excess morbidity among daughters of Indian or Chinese immigrants in the US by studying the prevalence of disability among children. We use data from the 2012–14 American Community Surveys on approximately 20,000 US-born children of Indian and Chinese immigrants. Children of US natives are used as a comparison group to account for innate differences in disability between the sexes. Results indicate that there is excess disability among daughters compared with sons among children of Chinese immigrants and children of immigrants from northern or western Indian states; this excess disability declines with younger age at arrival or longer exposure to the host country. Analysis using children of Filipino immigrants as an alternative comparison group yields similar excess disability rates for females.Peer reviewe

    Effect of Food Subsidies on Micronutrient Consumption

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    In this article, we study the effect of an exogenous increase in wheat and rice price subsidy to poor families resulting from a targeted food price subsidy program in India called the Targeted Public Distribution System (TPDS) on micronutrient intake in low-income families. Descriptive results show that wheat and rice have one of the lowest micronutrient density scores, suggesting that these are poor suppliers of micronutrients. Empirical analysis suggests that the increase in subsidy amount of Rs. 15-18 resulting from the TPDS expansion lowered calcium intake by 12-14 percent and had negligible to small (often negative) effects on the consumption of most micronutrients.Peer reviewe

    Sex composition of children and spousal sexual violence in sub-Saharan Africa

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    Objective In societies with a cultural preference for sons over daughters, women who do not bear sons may be at increased risk for spousal violence. This study examined whether women with daughters only are at an elevated risk for spousal sexual violence compared to women with sons only in sub-Saharan Africa. The study tested the hypothesis that the association between sex composition of children and spousal sexual violence would be observed only in large families. Methods Data were from the most recent (as at February, 2016) Demographic and Health Surveys conducted in 22 sub-Saharan African countries for 37,915 women. Odds ratios comparing experience of spousal sexual violence of women with sons only to those with daughters only were estimated, separately for women with three or fewer children and those with four or more children, controlling for age, age at first cohabitation, age at first birth, educational attainment, urban residence, and household wealth. Results Having daughters only was associated with a greater likelihood of spousal sexual violence among women with many children (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] = 1.53; 95% CI = 1.02–2.30) but not among those with few children (AOR = 0.92; 95% CI = 0.82–1.04). Conclusions for practice A higher risk of sexual violence for women without sons suggests that son preference may have implications on women’s health and wellbeing. Efforts to further understand and address increased risk of sexual violence for women without sons should consider son preference and intra-couple conflict concerning fertility intentions.Peer reviewe

    Fluorinated click-derived tripodal ligands drive spin crossover in both iron(ii) and cobalt(ii) complexes

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    Control of the spin state of metal complexes is important because it leads to a precise control over the physical properties and the chemical reactivity of the metal complexes. Currently, controlling the spin state in metal complexes is challenging because a precise control of the properties of the secondary coordination sphere is often difficult. It has been shown that non-covalent interactions in the secondary coordination sphere of transition metal complexes can enable spin state control. Here we exploit this strategy for fluorinated triazole ligands and present mononuclear CoII and FeII complexes with “click”-derived tripodal ligands that contain mono-fluorinated benzyl substituents on the backbone. Structural characterization of 1 and 2 at 100 K revealed Co-N bond lengths that are typical of high spin (HS) CoII complexes. In contrast, the Fe-N bond lengths for 3 are characteristic of a low spin (LS) FeII state. All complexes show an intramolecular face-to-face non-covalent interaction between two arms of the ligand. The influence of the substituents and of their geometric structure on the spin state of the metal center was investigated through SQUID magnetometry, which revealed spin crossover occurring in compounds 1 and 3. EPR spectroscopy sheds further light on the electronic structures of 1 and 2 in their low- and high-spin states. Quantum-chemical calculations of the fluorobenzene molecule were performed to obtain insight into the influence of fluorine-specific interactions. Interestingly, this work shows that the same fluorinated tripodal ligands induce SCO behavior in both FeII and CoII complexes.Fil: Nößler, Maite. Freie Universität Berlin; AlemaniaFil: Hunger, David. Universität Stuttgart; AlemaniaFil: Neuman, Nicolás Ignacio. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Santa Fe. Instituto de Desarrollo Tecnológico para la Industria Química. Universidad Nacional del Litoral. Instituto de Desarrollo Tecnológico para la Industria Química; ArgentinaFil: Reimann, Marc. Technishe Universitat Berlin; AlemaniaFil: Reichert, Felix. Universität Stuttgart; AlemaniaFil: Winkler, Mario. Universität Stuttgart; AlemaniaFil: Klein, Johannes. Freie Universität Berlin; AlemaniaFil: Bens, Tobias. Universität Stuttgart; AlemaniaFil: Suntrup, Lisa. Freie Universität Berlin; AlemaniaFil: Demeshko, Serhiy. Universität Göttingen; AlemaniaFil: Stubbe, Jessica. Freie Universität Berlin; AlemaniaFil: Kaupp, Martin. Technishe Universitat Berlin; AlemaniaFil: van Slageren, Joris. Universität Stuttgart; AlemaniaFil: Sarkar, Biprajit. Universität Stuttgart; Alemania. Freie Universität Berlin; Alemani

    Culture, labor supply, and fertility across immigrant generations in the United States

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    Recent immigration to the United States and other developed nations has increasingly been from countries that have relatively traditional gender norms. This study uses data from the Current Population Survey for 2000–14 to investigate how source-country gender norms influence the labor supply and fertility of married women across immigrant generations in the US. It finds that immigrants’ and descendants’ labor supply and fertility are associated with the female-to-male labor force participation ratio and total fertility rate in the source country; importantly, the association declines across successive generations. Husbands’ source-country characteristics are also associated with the labor supply and fertility of immigrant women. These findings indicate evolution and assimilation of traditional gender norms in the long run.Peer reviewe

    The genome and proteome of a virulent Escherichia coli O157:H7 bacteriophage closely resembling Salmonella phage Felix O1

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    Based upon whole genome and proteome analysis, Escherichia coli O157:H7-specific bacteriophage (phage) wV8 belongs to the new myoviral genus, "the Felix O1-like viruses" along with Salmonella phage Felix O1 and Erwinia amylovora phage φEa21-4. The genome characteristics of phage wV8 (size 88.49 kb, mol%G+C 38.9, 138 ORFs, 23 tRNAs) are very similar to those of phage Felix O1 (86.16 kb, 39.0 mol%G+C, 131 ORFs and 22 tRNAs) and, indeed most of the proteins have their closest homologs within Felix O1. Approximately one-half of the Escherichia coli O157:H7 mutants resistant to phage wV8 still serotype as O157:H7 indicating that this phage may recognize, like coliphage T4, two different surface receptors: lipopolysaccharide and, perhaps, an outer membrane protein

    Felix Grant and Peter Ustinov

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    Felix Grant and internationally renowned actor, author and playwright Peter Ustinov converse.Made available in DSpace on 2012-10-09T17:40:17Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 4 b06f079-001display.jpg: 66678 bytes, checksum: 48164e925b7433a8175f613f27c5f38f (MD5) b06f079-001master.tif: 23014340 bytes, checksum: 1d459ed7a42ad2b20692e303caa57300 (MD5) b06f079-001thumb.jpg: 9275 bytes, checksum: 059cf3174f7fb856937261217abc14c0 (MD5) manifest.xml: 5312 bytes, checksum: 21a8b12c9b03c0a8b7ce7cb264a5fb07 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2002-11-04Handwritten on back: "Felix Grant and / Peter Ustinof [sic]
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