Home About us Contact | |||
Historical Framework (historical + framework)
Selected AbstractsThings Still To Be Done on the Still-Face EffectINFANCY, Issue 4 2003E. Z. Tronick Adamson and Frick (2003/this issue) have written a fine and challenging review of the research on the still-face. Of special value is their placement of the face-to-face still-face (FFSF) paradigm in a historical framework, which permits us to see how much about the still-face effect and infant functioning we have learned in the past 30 years. Their review led me to think about several issues. First was the issue of whether or not to standardize the FFSF paradigm. Second, Adamson and Frick argue the still-face put the "infant's reaction in a new interpretive frame," but it is a reaction that still challenges our "understanding of young infants' social, emotional, and cognitive capacities." Thus, I would like to discuss explanations of the still-face effect. Last, I discuss some suggestions for further research. For an elaborated version of this article, additional archival material is located at http:www.infancyarchives.com. [source] The changing face of mass murder: massacre, genocide, and postgenocideINTERNATIONAL SOCIAL SCIENCE JOURNAL, Issue 174 2002Mark Levene This contribution argues the case for the efficacy of labelling distinct episodes of extreme violence. While accepting common ingredients in what are here denoted as examples of ,massacre', ,genocide', and ,post-genocide the clue to their ' separateness lies not in the form but in the historical framework within which each occurs. Only by examining patterns of historical process, in this case in the late-Ottoman empire, are we likely to be able to build a broader analysis of the nature and causation of chronic and systemic violence in the modern world. [source] The Sex Ratio Transition in AsiaPOPULATION AND DEVELOPMENT REVIEW, Issue 3 2009Christophe Z. Guilmoto This article adopts a comparative perspective to review the recent increase in the sex ratio at birth (SRB) across Asia. It first describes and compares the most recent birth statistics in Asia in order to identify commonalities in the gradual rise of SRBs observed from Armenia to South Korea. This comparison provides the basis for identifying specific transition patterns in the changes in SRBs. Their recent rise is then interpreted in a social and historical framework borrowed from fertility decline and based on three preconditions: access to sex-selection technology, preference for male births, and pressure from low fertility. On a broader plane, the process of growing imbalances in the sex composition of the population gives rise to a tragedy of the commons. This article indicates the factors that appear most likely to trigger a turnaround in this transitional demographic situation and to facilitate a return to biologically normal sex ratios in the future. [source] Phylogenetic analysis of bovine pestiviruses: testing the evolution of clinical symptomsCLADISTICS, Issue 5 2004L. R. Jones This study presents a phylogenetic analysis of 115 bovine pestiviruses. A sequence data set from the 5, untranslated genomic region was analyzed with maximum parsimony, bootstrapping and parsimony jackknifing. We tested for the proposed classifications of the group and analyzed the evolution of the symptoms associated with Pestivirus infections in bovines. Based on the historical framework provided by our phylogenetic trees, we also characterized the extent and importance of contamination caused in biologicals by the virus. Our phylogenetic analyses showed that the previously defined genotypes are monophyletic, except for genotype 1a. Based on our cladograms, we propose the existence of more than 12 monophyletic groups within the species BVDV 1. The mapping of clinical symptoms suggests that the emergence of some genotypes could have been driven by a change in the pathogenic process. Enteric Problems appear to be ancestral, while Reproductive and Respiratory Problems arise with the emergence of genotypes 1b, 1d and the herein-proposed genotype Arg 1. The distribution of contaminant strains on the cladograms shows that pestiviral contamination is a common process, and also suggests that a contaminated product might be a vehicle for virus dispersion. Implications for virus evolution, virus taxonomy, veterinary medicine and biotechnology are discussed. [source] |