Left

Distribution by Scientific Domains
Distribution within Medical Sciences

Kinds of Left

  • maternity leave
  • parental leave
  • sick leave

  • Terms modified by Left

  • leave anterior descending
  • leave anterior descending artery
  • leave anterior descending coronary artery
  • leave arm
  • leave atrial
  • leave atrial appendage
  • leave atrial catheter ablation
  • leave atrial diameter
  • leave atrial dimension
  • leave atrial function
  • leave atrial pressure
  • leave atrial size
  • leave atrial thrombus
  • leave atrial volume
  • leave atrium
  • leave breast
  • leave bundle branch
  • leave bundle branch block
  • leave buttock
  • leave carotid artery
  • leave cheek
  • leave circumflex artery
  • leave colon
  • leave coronary artery
  • leave dorsolateral prefrontal cortex
  • leave ear
  • leave empty
  • leave eye
  • leave femur
  • leave foot
  • leave forearm
  • leave frontal lobe
  • leave hand
  • leave hemisphere
  • leave hepatectomy
  • leave hippocampus
  • leave inferior frontal gyrus
  • leave intact
  • leave kidney
  • leave knee
  • leave lateral position
  • leave leg
  • leave liver
  • leave lobe
  • leave lobe graft
  • leave lower eyelid
  • leave lung
  • leave main coronary artery
  • leave middle cerebral artery
  • leave neck
  • leave nephrectomy
  • leave ovary
  • leave pulmonary artery
  • leave radius
  • leave renal tumor
  • leave renal vein
  • leave shift
  • leave shoulder
  • leave side
  • leave sinus
  • leave subclavian artery
  • leave superior
  • leave superior pulmonary vein
  • leave temporal lobe
  • leave testis
  • leave thalamus
  • leave thigh
  • leave thoracotomy
  • leave tibia
  • leave untreated
  • leave upper eyelid
  • leave upper lobe
  • leave ventricle
  • leave ventricular
  • leave ventricular aneurysm
  • leave ventricular contractility
  • leave ventricular developed pressure
  • leave ventricular diastolic function
  • leave ventricular dimension
  • leave ventricular dysfunction
  • leave ventricular ejection fraction
  • leave ventricular end-diastolic pressure
  • leave ventricular function
  • leave ventricular hypertrophy
  • leave ventricular mass
  • leave ventricular myocardium
  • leave ventricular outflow tract
  • leave ventricular pacing
  • leave ventricular pressure
  • leave ventricular remodeling
  • leave ventricular systolic
  • leave ventricular systolic dysfunction
  • leave ventricular systolic function
  • leave ventricular tachycardia
  • leave ventricular volume
  • leave ventricular wall
  • leave ventricular wall thickness
  • leave ventricular weight

  • Selected Abstracts


    SAATCHI, SENSATION, AND WHY CONTEMPORAR Y ART SHOULD NOT BE CONCEDED TO THE LEFT

    ECONOMIC AFFAIRS, Issue 2 2002
    Bunny Smedley
    Commentators from the ,Right' have contributed little to ,is-it-art' discussions. The Saatchi Sensation exhibition of 1997 offers the opportunity to explain what contribution anti-socialist, anti-collectivist writers might make. In particular, they should be honest in their response to contemporary art rather than treating it as a no-go area. [source]


    Reflexive Fathers: Negotiating Parental Leave and Working Life

    GENDER, WORK & ORGANISATION, Issue 2 2002
    Berit Brandth
    The emergence of parental leave schemes has been the most important area of expansion for the Norwegian welfare state in the 1990s. Schemes have been extended, and special rights have been granted to fathers. The main underpinning of this strategy is the intention to bolster the fathers' contact with and care for their children. Another objective is to share the benefits and burdens of working life and family life between men and women. In this article we analyse how fathers construct different fatherhood practices through negotiations in relation to the leave schemes and different working conditions. [source]


    Work-life balance is a cross-generational concern,and a key to retaining high performers at Accenture

    GLOBAL BUSINESS AND ORGANIZATIONAL EXCELLENCE, Issue 6 2008
    Sharon Klun
    Members of Generations X and Y are even more insistent than baby boomers are about balancing their professional and personal lives,a potential retention issue exacerbated by the shrinking pool of skilled talent. Three case studies highlight Accenture's successful new work-life program, Future Leave, which enables high performers to take extended time off for personal reasons without derailing promising or established careers with the company. The author also highlights some differences between the challenges that female and male professionals anticipate they will face over the next several years and cautions that global companies will need to become more adept at tailoring work-life programs to meet a range of needs in their increasingly diverse global workforces. © 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [source]


    A Change of Climate Provokes a Change of Paradigm: Taking Leave of Two Tacit Assumptions about Physical Lake Forcing

    INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF HYDROBIOLOGY, Issue 4-5 2008
    David M. Livingstone
    Abstract Physically, lakes have traditionally been viewed as individual systems forced by statistically stationary local weather. This view implies that the physical response of a lake to external physical forcing is unique and stationary. Recent recognition of the importance of large-scale climatic forcing in driving physical lake processes, combined with the realisation that this forcing is undergoing a long-term trend as a result of climate change, has led to a shift in this paradigm. The new physical paradigm views lakes more in terms of a local response to large-scale climatic forcing modulated by the addition of local noise. A strong climate signal leads to large-scale spatial coherence in the physical lake response, while the existence of trends in large-scale climatic forcing associated with climate change means that both the forcing and the physical lake response are statistically non-stationary. Thus increasing realisation of the importance of climate and climate change is invalidating the tacit assumptions of individuality and stationarity that underlie the old conceptual framework, resulting in its gradual abandonment in favour of a new paradigm based on the concepts of spatial coherence and temporal non-stationarity. (© 2008 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim) [source]


    Transitioning Residents from Nursing Facilities to Community Living: Who Wants to Leave?

    JOURNAL OF AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY, Issue 1 2008
    (See editorial comments by Dr. Rosalie Kane, 165)., pp 16
    OBJECTIVES: To examine nursing facility residents' or their legal proxies' perspectives on transitioning out of nursing facilities by assessing residents' perceptions of their ability to live more independently, their preferences regarding leaving the facility, and the feasibility of transitioning with community support. DESIGN: Analysis of survey findings from the California Nursing Facility Transition Screen (CNFTS). SETTING: Eight nursing facilities in southern California. PARTICIPANTS: All chronic maintenance, long-stay residents receiving Medi-Cal (California's Medicaid program) were eligible for the study (n=218). Of these, 121 (56%) self-consenting residents or legal proxies were interviewed. No presumptions were made as to which residents were appropriate candidates for transition based on health or functional capacity. MEASUREMENTS: CNFTS contains 27 open- and closed-ended questions on preference, ability, and feasibility of transitioning. RESULTS: Twenty-three percent of residents and proxies believed that the resident had the ability to transition; 46% indicated a preference to transition; and after discussing potential living arrangements and services, 33% thought that transitioning would be feasible. Of those who consented to allow access to their Minimum Data Set 2.0 (MDS) information (n=41; 34% of the sample), agreement in the assessment of preference was found in 39% of cases. CONCLUSION: Transition decisions are complex and include preference, as well as perceptions of the resident's ability to live in a more independent setting and the feasibility of transitioning. Compared with the MDS, the screen identified a higher proportion of residents who want to transition, suggesting that a systematic approach to assessing the complex decision to transition is needed. [source]


    The Secret Lives of Liberals and Conservatives: Personality Profiles, Interaction Styles, and the Things They Leave Behind

    POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY, Issue 6 2008
    Dana R. Carney
    Although skeptics continue to doubt that most people are "ideological," evidence suggests that meaningful left-right differences do exist and that they may be rooted in basic personality dispositions, that is, relatively stable individual differences in psychological needs, motives, and orientations toward the world. Seventy-five years of theory and research on personality and political orientation has produced a long list of dispositions, traits, and behaviors. Applying a theory of ideology as motivated social cognition and a "Big Five" framework, we find that two traits, Openness to New Experiences and Conscientiousness, parsimoniously capture many of the ways in which individual differences underlying political orientation have been conceptualized. In three studies we investigate the relationship between personality and political orientation using multiple domains and measurement techniques, including: self-reported personality assessment; nonverbal behavior in the context of social interaction; and personal possessions and the characteristics of living and working spaces. We obtained consistent and converging evidence that personality differences between liberals and conservatives are robust, replicable, and behaviorally significant, especially with respect to social (vs. economic) dimensions of ideology. In general, liberals are more open-minded, creative, curious, and novelty seeking, whereas conservatives are more orderly, conventional, and better organized. [source]


    "You Can Enter but You Cannot Leave,": U.S. Securities Markets and Foreign Firms

    THE JOURNAL OF FINANCE, Issue 5 2008
    ANDRÁS MAROSI
    ABSTRACT Although a number of prior papers have argued the benefits to foreign firms of cross-listing their shares in the U.S., the number of foreign firms exiting U.S. capital markets has been increasing. This has occurred despite the difficulties foreign firms face in deregistering from the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). This paper examines the reasons underlying this trend. One of our main findings is that the passage of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act has reduced the net benefits of a U.S. listing and registration, particularly for smaller foreign firms with lower trading volume and stronger insider control. [source]


    International Trade Theory and Policy: What is Left of the Free Trade Paradigm?

    DEVELOPMENT AND CHANGE, Issue 6 2005
    Sunanda Sen
    Free trade doctrines have been questioned from the angle of their logical validity as well as relevance. Their replacement by New Trade Theories has been matched by important policy moves on strategic trade and industrial policy in advanced countries. These are defended by the advanced nations, both at inter-governmental levels and in multilateral institutions, largely in the interest of big capital in industry and finance. However, the theoretically discarded principles of free trade are still in use to push trade liberalization in developing countries. An uneven power relation between the rich and poor nations of the world has generated this asymmetric combination of policies in the world economy. Neglect of the macroeconomic issues relating to the national as well as the world economy has led these theories and the related policies to ignore the concerns for growth as well as development. [source]


    ,Beyond Left and Right': The New Partisan Politics of Welfare

    GOVERNANCE, Issue 2 2000
    Fiona Ross
    The ,new politics of the welfare state,' the term coined by Pierson (1996) to differentiate between the popular politics of welfare expansion and the unpopular politics of retrenchment, emphasizes a number of factors that distinguish countries' capacities to pursue contentious measures and avoid electoral blame. Policy structures, vested interests, and institutions play a prominent role in accounting for cross-national differences in leaders' abilities to diffuse responsibility for divisive initiatives. One important omission from the ,new politics' literature, however, is a discussion of partisan politics. ,Old' conceptualizations of the political right and left are implicitly taken as constants despite radical changes in the governing agenda of many leftist parties over the last decade. Responding to this oversight, Castles (1998) has recently probed the role of parties with respect to aggregate government expenditures, only to concludethat parties do not matter under ,conditions of constraint.' This article contends that parties are relevant to the ,new politics' and that, under specified institutional conditions, their impact is counterintuitive. In some notable cases the left has had more effect inbruising the welfare state than the right. One explanation for these cross-cutting tendencies is that parties not only provide a principal source of political agency, they also serve as strategies, thereby conditioning opportunities for political leadership. By extension, they need to be situatedwithin the ,new politics' constellation of blame-avoidance instruments. [source]


    The Labour Party and Higher Education: The Nature of the Relationship

    HIGHER EDUCATION QUARTERLY, Issue 3 2003
    Jean Bocock
    Higher education policy has rarely been a major concern of the Labour Party in the second half of the twentieth century. This article explores the reasons for this and analyses the ideological coalition of the Labour Party in the context of the Welfare State and the commitments to moderate social democratic reformism. Three strands in particular are explored: the dominance of vocational, technological and professional priorities in HE expansion; the influence of utilitarian thinking, broadly construed; and the various social purpose, equality perspectives of those on the Left of the Party. Alongside these strands, has been Labour's reluctance to adopt interventionist policies especially in relation to the so-called elite Universities, and the persistent advocacy of ,modernisation'. Finally, the article considers, within a context of the debate in general political analysis, the potential of the Labour Party within this period to achieve significant reform in the field of higher education, drawing inter alia on the work of Ralph Miliband. [source]


    ,People Is All That Is Left to Privatize': Water Supply Privatization, Globalization and Social Justice in Belize City, Belize

    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF URBAN AND REGIONAL RESEARCH, Issue 3 2009
    DAANISH MUSTAFA
    Abstract This article presents the findings of an extensive survey on public and policy level perceptions of the failed water supply and sanitation system privatization in Belize City. Drawing upon the burgeoning critical geographical literature on the commodification and privatization of water, we formulate a conceptual framework for analyzing the ethnographic data on perceptions and experience of privatization by Belize City water users. The experience of water supply privatization was largely negative. Residents complained bitterly about an increase in water tariffs and excessive disconnection rates by the privatized Belize Water Supply Limited (BWSL). Many policy makers also accused BWSL of front-loading profits and not making strategic investments in infrastructure. But the symbolic significance of water privatization for the residents of a small Caribbean country like Belize exceeded its practical implications. We argue that the major themes to emerge from the ethnographic data collected for the study can be synthesized into three ,popular privatization narratives' (PPNs). The first was based on the perception that poor governance led to privatization; the second on a preference for national- over global-scale politics, so that objections to privatization were based on nationalism; the third on angst about losing control to the systemic compulsions of neoliberal globalization. Overall the privatization process not only had important (largely negative) material consequences for Belizeans but, given their historical and cultural geography, profound discursive and symbolic consequences for their sense of identity in a condition of neoliberal globalization. Résumé Cet article présente les résultats d'une vaste enquête sur les impressions, de la population et des acteurs des politiques publiques, concernant l'échec de la privatisation du réseau d'approvisionnement en eau et d'assainissement de Belize City. Utilisant les publications géographiques critiques qui se multiplient sur la marchandisation et la privatisation de l'eau, un cadre conceptuel est formulé pour analyser les données ethnographiques sur les impressions et l'expérience de la privatisation émanant des usagers de l'eau de Belize City. L'expérience de cette privatisation a été en grande partie négative. Les habitants se plaignent amèrement de l'augmentation des tarifs et de taux de coupures excessifs par la société privée Belize Water Supply Limited (BWSL). De nombreux décideurs politiques ont également accusé BWSL de prélever les bénéfices sans effectuer d'investissements stratégiques d'infrastructure. Toutefois, la place symbolique de la privatisation de l'eau pour les habitants d'un petit pays de la mer des Antilles comme Belize dépasse les incidences pratiques. Les principaux thèmes dessinés par les données ethnographiques collectées peuvent se résumer en trois ,récits populaires de la privatization'. Le premier repose sur l'impression que la faiblesse de la gouvernance a conduit à la privatisation; le deuxième sur une préférence pour une politique à l'échelon national plutôt que mondial, de sorte que les objections à la privatisation étaient liées au nationalisme; le troisième sur l'angoisse de perdre la maîtrise des pressions systémiques exercées par la mondialisation néolibérale. En général, le processus de privatisation a eu des conséquences matérielles importantes (en grande partie négatives) pour les Béliziens mais aussi, étant donnée la géographie historique et culturelle nationale, de profondes implications discursives et symboliques sur leur sens de l'identité dans un contexte de mondialisation néolibérale. [source]


    The International Financial Institutions (IFIs) and the Political Lessons from the Asian Crises of 1997,1998

    INTERNATIONAL SOCIAL SCIENCE JOURNAL, Issue 170 2001
    Luiz A. Pereira da Silva
    In the light of the 1997-98 Asian Crises that revealed to the general public more about the modus operandi and "raison d'être" of the Bretton Woods IFIs, this paper reviews the criticisms coming from the Left and the Right against them. Both sides suggest closing or limiting the IFIs' role but for opposite motives. The paper assesses the respective merits of these critiques to determine whether the IFIs can be seen as a prelude of a new, democratic global international order or, conversely, as merely the instruments of the "old" conservative world. [source]


    Cover Picture: J. Biophoton.

    JOURNAL OF BIOPHOTONICS, Issue 4 2009
    4/200
    AC Dielectrophoretic separation of 10 ,m non-fluorescent microspheres from 40 nm red fluorescent nanoparticles on a microelectrode array. The leftmost 3 × 3 microelectrodes are activated. The rightmost column of microelectrodes are used as control. (Top Left) Red Fluorescence image before experiment showing a red haze. (Top Right) Red Fluorescence image of the 40 nm nanoparticles concentrating on the electrodes at the conclusion of the experiment. (Bottom Left) Bright Field image of 10 ,m microspheres distributed in a random pattern before the experiment. (Bottom Right) Bright Field image of 10 ,m microspheres concentrating in between the microelectrodes at the conclusion of the experiment (© 2009 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim) [source]


    Comparison of Vasoactive Response of Left and Right Internal Thoracic Arteries to Isosorbide-Dinitrate and Nitroglycerin:

    JOURNAL OF CARDIAC SURGERY, Issue 4 2003
    An In Vitro Study
    Its distal region is, however, prone to vasospasm. We studied the effects of nitroglycerin (NTG) and isosorbide-dinitrate (DSDN) on distal segments of left versus right ITA. Methods: Rings of distal segments (6 to 9 mm proximal to bifurcation) of the human left and right ITA were studied. After baseline contraction of the rings, achieved using 60 mmol/L of KCl, they were exposed to increasing doses of ISDN and NTG (10 to 100 ,g/ml), and dose-response curves were recorded. Results: The contractile response of left ITA rings to KCl were significantly lower than those of right ITA rings (1.87 ± 0.25 g versus 3.5 ± 0.61 g, p < 0.005). Both nitrates inhibited the contractile response in a concentration-dependent manner, with relaxing effects of ISDN higher than those of NTG (p < 0.01) in both left and right ITA rings. Conclusions: The distal segment of the left ITA is less prone to vasospasm than that of the right. ISDN has a considerably higher relaxant effect on this segment than NTG. We therefore recommend favoring high doses of ISDN over NTG as an antispastic measure. (J Card Surg 2003; 18:279-285) [source]


    Frequency Analysis of Atrial Electrograms Identifies Conduction Pathways from the Left to the Right Atrium During Atrial Fibrillation,Studies in Two Canine Models

    JOURNAL OF CARDIOVASCULAR ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY, Issue 6 2009
    KYUNGMOO RYU Ph.D.
    Studies of atrial fibrillation (AF) have demonstrated that a stable rhythm of very short cycle length in the left atrium (LA) can cause fibrillatory conduction in the rest of the atria. We tested the hypothesis that fast Fourier transform (FFT) analysis of atrial electrograms (AEGs) during this AF will rapidly and reliably identify LA-to-right atrium (RA) conduction pathway(s) generated by the driver. Methods and Results: During induced atrial tachyarrhythmias in the canine sterile pericarditis and rapid ventricular pacing-induced congestive heart failure models, 380,404 AEGs were recorded simultaneously from epicardial electrodes on both atria. FFT analysis of AEGs during AF demonstrated a dominant frequency peak in the LA (driver), and multiple frequency peaks in parts of the LA and the most of the RA. Conduction pathways from the LA driver to the RA varied from study-to-study. They were identified by the presence of multiple frequency peaks with one of the frequency peaks at the same frequency as the driver, and traveled (1) inferior to the inferior vena cava (IVC); (2) between the superior vena cava and the right superior pulmonary vein (RSPV); (3) between the RSPV and the right inferior pulmonary vein (RIPV); (4) between the RIPV and the IVC; and (5) via Bachmann's bundle. Conduction pathways identified by FFT analysis corresponded to the conduction pathways found in classical sequence of activation mapping. Computation time for FFT analysis for each AF episode took less than 5 minutes. Conclusion: FFT analysis allowed rapid and reliable detection of the LA-to-RA conduction pathways in AF generated by a stable and rapid LA driver. [source]


    Capturing Government Policy on the Left,Right Scale: Evidence from the United Kingdom, 1956,2006

    POLITICAL STUDIES, Issue 4 2009
    Armèn Hakhverdian
    The left,right scheme is the most widely used and parsimonious representation of political competition. Yet, long time series of the left,right position of governments are sparse. Existing methods are of limited use in dynamic settings due to insufficient time points which hinders the proper specification of time-series regressions. This article analyses legislative speeches in order to construct an annual left,right policy variable for Britain from 1956 to 2006. Using a recently developed content analysis tool, known as Wordscores, it is shown that speeches yield valid and reliable estimates for the left,right position of British government policy. Long time series such as the one proposed in this article are vital to building dynamic macro-level models of politics. This measure is cross-validated with four independent sources: (1) it compares well to expert surveys; (2) a rightward trend is found in post-war British government policy; (3) Conservative governments are found to be more right wing in their policy outputs than Labour governments; (4) conventional accounts of British post-war politics support the pattern of government policy movement on the left,right scale. [source]


    Europeanization and the Communist Successor Parties in Post-Communist Politics

    POLITICS & POLICY, Issue 1 2006
    John Ishiyama
    In recent years, there has been a growing interest in the domestic political consequences of "Europeanization." This article seeks to focus on developing a framework by which the effects of Europeanization on the communist successor parties might be investigated and to initially examine that framework in light of the evidence presented by four "critical cases",the Bulgarian Socialist Party (BSP), the Communist Party of Bohemia and Moravia (KSCM), the Party of Social Democrats of Romania (PDSR/PSD), and the Party of the Democratic Left in Slovakia (SDL). Using textual analysis of party programs to ascertain the identity of the parties, and examining their organizational structures, this article finds that Europeanization itself does not explain the evolution of political parties in post-communist politics. Rather, domestic political considerations play a more important role in shaping these parties. [source]


    Looking at Paintings from Left, Front and Right

    THE CANADIAN JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL ENGINEERING, Issue 6 2003
    Abraham Tamir
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Different Gene Expressions on the Left and the Right: A Genotype/Phenotype Mismatch in Need of Attention

    ANNALS OF HUMAN GENETICS, Issue 1 2008
    Ursula Mittwoch
    Summary Discordance in monozygotic twins has traditionally been explained in terms of environmental influences. A recent investigation has found a difference in epigenetic markers in older but not in younger twins. However, phenotypic differences that depend on an individual's postnatal life style do not address the problem of discordance in congenital malformations, or the reason why malformations are frequently unilateral, often with a preference for one or the other side. One such condition, cleft lip with or without cleft palate, which is preferentially expressed on the left, is a multifactorial condition, that is caused by a failure of the critical timing necessary for different groups of cells to meet and develop into a normal face. This process is dependent on cell proliferation and migration, which are energy-dependent, while the additional requirement for apoptosis to allow cell fusion suggests the involvement of mitochondria. Recent progress in two separate areas of research could lead to a better understanding of the problem of facial clefts: (1) the recognition of an interaction between gene products and mitochondria in the aetiology of neurodegenerative diseases and (2) the discovery of an increasing number of genes, including transcription factors, growth factors and members of the TGF-, signalling family, that are differentially expressed on the left and right side, thus pointing to a difference in their micro-environment. These findings emphasize the importance of investigating the activity of candidate genes for complex developmental processes separately on the left and right sides. Data presented in this review suggest that differential growth rates may lead to an inversion of laterality. A method is described to test for a possible mitochondrial difference between left and right sides, using a mouse model with cleft lip. [source]


    Crisis, Continuity and Change: Neoliberalism, the Left and the Future of Capitalism

    ANTIPODE, Issue 2010
    Noel Castree
    Abstract:, This essay's point of departure is the coincident economic and environmental "crises" of our time. I locate both in the dynamics of capital accumulation on a world-scale, drawing on the ideas of Marx, Karl Polanyi and James O'Connor. I ask whether the recent profusion of "crisis talk" in the public domain presents an opportunity for progressive new ideas to take hold now that "neoliberalism" has seemingly been de-legitimated. My answer is that a "post-neoliberal" future is probably a long way off. I make my case in two stages and at two geographical scales. First, I examine the British social formation as currently constituted and explain why even a leading neoliberal state is failing to reform its ways. Second, I then scale-up from the domestic level to international affairs. I examine cross-border emissions trading,arguably,the,policy tool for mitigating the very real prospects of significant climate change this century. The overall conclusion is this: even though the "first" and "second" contradictions of capital have manifested themselves together and at a global level, there are currently few prospects for systemic reform (never mind revolution) led by a new, twenty-first century "red-green" Left. [source]


    On What's Right and Keeping Left: Or Why Geography Still Needs Marxian Political Economy

    ANTIPODE, Issue 2 2006
    Ray Hudson
    Recently the value of Marxian approaches to human geography has again been called into question in the pages of Antipode. In this paper I review the reasons as to why geographers re-discovered Marx and then, from the late 1960s, began to engage with Marxian approaches. I then consider some of the reasons why Marxian approaches in their turn became the subject of critique in geography and some of the alternatives explored in the wake of this. The conclusion is that a pluri-theoretical human geography is necessary but that Marxian approaches remain of central significance to radical and critically minded geographers. [source]


    The Art of Swinging Left in the 1930s: Modernism, Realism, and the Politics of the Left in the Murals of Stuart Davis

    ART HISTORY, Issue 1 2010
    Jody Patterson
    First page of article [source]


    Introduction: Nationalism, the Left and Hegemony in Latin America

    BULLETIN OF LATIN AMERICAN RESEARCH, Issue 3 2007
    MICHAEL GOEBEL
    First page of article [source]


    Contested Discourse, Contested Power: Nationalism and the Left in Paraguay

    BULLETIN OF LATIN AMERICAN RESEARCH, Issue 3 2007
    PETER LAMBERT
    Nationalism has been a key, but generally overlooked, component of twentieth-century Paraguayan politics and an important explanatory factor in the country's political outcomes. Indeed, it has been central to the struggle for political power, most significantly to the continuing hegemony of the Colorado Party. This article traces the development of the Paraguayan Left, highlighting its structural and functional weaknesses, and analyses its relationship with nationalism, in particular with the dominant Colorado nationalist discourse. It argues that an important failure of the Left , and indeed other political parties and movements , has been its inability to produce a successful challenge to this hegemonic discourse. [source]


    "If We Let the Market Prevail, We Won't Have a Neighborhood Left:" religious agency and urban restructuring on Chicago's southwest side

    CITY & SOCIETY, Issue 2 2005
    ELFRIEDE WEDAM
    Catholic parishes and their neighborhoods on the Southwest Side of Chicago have moved from a relatively autonomous, relatively self-enclosed local institutions with relatively narrow social perspectives to organizations that work across parish boundaries, address local problems regionally, and acknowledge relinquishing to some degree their local identity and autonomy as progressive responses to the new urban context. Much of this new vision was stimulated by archdiocesan management changes under Joseph Cardinal Bernardin; by massive realignment of people, jobs, and political power in metropolitan Chicago; and not least by broader cultural and theological visions of the Second Vatican Council (1962-1965). [source]


    Postcolonial Scholarship,Productions and Directions: An Interview With Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak

    COMMUNICATION THEORY, Issue 3 2002
    Radha S. Hegde
    This interview took place on December 18, 2000, in Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak's office at Columbia University, New York. In a room lined with books and papers stacked high, Spivak spoke about postcolonial scholarship and its global challenges. Spanning a diverse range of interests, Gayatri Spivak's work has influenced critical scholarship across multiple disciplines throughout the world. Her scholarship has significantly shaped the course of postcolonial thinking and has had profound impact on conceptualizing issues of culture, identity, communication, and transnationalism. When asked about her interest in the areas of global communication flows, new technologies, and the politics of culture, Spivak referred us to two of her recent essays where she writes about global cities and cyberliteracy in the journal Gray Room and in Judith Butler's edited volume What's Left of Theory. In this interview, we asked Spivak to speak to issues concerning the intersections between communication and postcoloniality. [source]


    Allergic contact dermatitis from ethylcyanoacrylate in an office worker with artificial nails led to months of sick leave

    CONTACT DERMATITIS, Issue 5 2007
    M. Isaksson
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Epoxy-based production of wind turbine rotor blades: occupational dermatoses

    CONTACT DERMATITIS, Issue 6 2004
    A. Pontén
    Occupational dermatoses were investigated in a factory producing rotor blades for wind turbines by an epoxy-based process. In a blinded study design, 603 workers were first interviewed and thereafter clinically examined. Based on a history of work-related skin disease, clinical findings of dermatitis, or both, 325 (53.9%) of the workers were patch tested with a specially profiled occupational patch-test series and the European standard patch-test series. Calculated on all investigated workers, 17.1% of the workers were diagnosed with occupational dermatoses caused by work. Occupational allergic contact dermatitis was found in 10.9% of the workers. The estimated frequency of irritant contact dermatitis caused by work was 6.1%. Dermatitis on the hands was associated with contact allergy to epoxy resin (P = 0.017). The number of days on leave before the clinical examination was negatively associated with the presence of dermatitis (P = 0.001). Among workers employed 7,12 months, the frequency of occupational contact allergy was higher than that among workers employed for ,6 months (P = 0.004). Females both washed their hands more often (P < 0.001) and used more moisturizers/protection creams at work (P < 0.001) than males. No sex differences were found concerning dermatitis on the hands. [source]


    FS07.1 A survey of occupational hand eczema in Denmark

    CONTACT DERMATITIS, Issue 3 2004
    Rikke Skoet
    Background:, The need for prevention to reduce the number of occupational hand eczema is high. Occupational hand eczema is the most frequently recognised work-related disease in Denmark. Previous findings have shown that almost half of all cases develop a chronic condition with persistent dermatitis, and the annual cost to society is immense. Aims:, The aim of this study was to survey the trends and development of occupational hand eczema in Denmark and thereby help to ensure future successful prevention of chronic disabling occupational hand eczema. Methods:, 758 patients with recognised occupational hand eczema were included prospectively in the period October 2001- November 2002. Data on diagnoses, disease duration, severity, absence from work and occupation was obtained from The Danish National Board of Industrial Injuries and an additional questionnaire was administered by mail. Results:, 621 patients answered the questionnaire (response rate 82%). Irritant contact dermatitis was the most frequent diagnosis and the female/male ratio was 2:1. High prevalence was found in particularly wet occupations. 19 per cent had sick leave more than 5 weeks per year and the mean disease duration was 4.8 years (median 2.1 years). 68.2% had chronic changes. Conclusion:, The results showed a marked gender difference in the pattern of diagnosis and occupation. The impact of occupational hand eczema is still high with prolonged absence from work and a high percentage of chronic disease. The results of the study give important suggestions for future preventive strategies for health authorities. [source]


    Clinical and sociodemographic variables associated with the onset of posttraumatic stress disorder in road traffic accidents

    DEPRESSION AND ANXIETY, Issue 5 2008
    Ramón Coronas M.D.
    Abstract Our objective was to identify variables related to the onset of acute posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) after a road traffic accident. We evaluated 60 victims of a motor vehicle accident (MVA) in 2004 at 2 months postaccident. Thirty of them had developed PTSD; the other 30 had not developed PTSD. Clinical data, physical injuries, and sociodemographic characteristics were determined in 60 victims. The Davidson Trauma Scale (DTS) and a Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV (SCID) were used to evaluate PTSD occurrence. PTSD scores assessed by DTS and SCID at 2 months were significantly and positively associated with female sex, severe physical injuries, perceived social deprivation, and loss of job activity due to the accident. Female sex, severe physical injury, perceived social deprivation, and sick leave were related to the diagnosis of PTSD 2 months after the accident. Depression and Anxiety 0:1,8, 2007. © 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]