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Gender, Technology, and the Potential for Social Marginalization : Kuala Lumpur and Singapore
Helen JOHNSON Ewha Womans University Press 2003 Asian Journal of Women's Studies(AJWS) Vol.9 No.1
My paper describes a study that links gender with gechnology use in Singapore and Kuala Lumpur. It argues that technology use is a significant 21st century social phenomenon due to the rise of consumption-based economics and government plans for technologically-led recoveries in the Aisa-Pacific. It describes how gender interacts with other cultural differences to shape the social use and effects of technology.
Helen E.S. Nesadurai 서강대학교 동아연구소 2017 TRaNS(Trans –Regional and –National Studies of Sou Vol.5 No.1
Private sustainability standards for palm oil – RSPO certification and especially the POIG/No Deforestation standards – show more promise than ASEAN in addressing the political-economic drivers of the fires/haze in Indonesia. ‘Sovereignty-free’ private actors – global NGOs, philanthropic foundations, and social investors – harnessed transnational markets and used consumer product multinationals and Asian palm oil traders/processers as intermediaries to reach oil palm growers previously shielded from private regulation. Exclusion of state actors gave regulatory entrepreneurs a freer hand to institute more stringent standards. This contrasts with ASEAN regional governance where state control of regional governance deflects global and local pressure for change. There are limitations, however, to the reach of voluntary private standards, which cannot address irresponsible cultivation practices in illegal supply chains and those catering to the domestic market, despite NGOs and other private regulatory entrepreneurs acting as ‘functional equivalents’ of state authorities in driving change. Nevertheless, palm oil’s economic importance to Indonesia and the global market transformations underway mean that global private standards have a first-mover advantage. However, central state actors have denounced private standards as intrusions on national sovereignty. While private standards have sparked national conversations on sustainability, the political bargaining between state authority, private regulators, and their proponents is only just beginning.
A Pilot Study: Association between Minor Physical Anomalies in Childhood and Future Mental Problems
Helen Cheng,ChengChen Chang,YueCune Chang,WenKuei Lee,RuuFen Tzang 대한신경정신의학회 2014 PSYCHIATRY INVESTIGATION Vol.11 No.3
Objective-This study aims to investigate association between early recognizable minor physical abnormality (MPA) during childhood is associated with mental health problems in young adults. Methods-In 1984, 169 preschool children in central Taiwan underwent a detailed physical examination for subtle abnormalities (MPA). Fourteen years later, the Brief Symptom Rating Scale (BSRS) and Chinese Health Questionnaire (CHQ) were used to measure specific psychiatric symptoms. Results-There is an association between MPA during childhood and adult characterized with interpersonal sensitivity, anxiety, depression and paranoid mental health symptoms. Conclusion-The signs of childhood MPA can be easily identified and should be regarded as risk factors when predicting mental disorder. Mental health professionals should consider MPAs as important signs for possible development of emotional problems.
History in China's Urban Post-Modern
Helen F. Siu 고려대학교 민족문화연구원 2011 Cross-Currents Vol.- No.1
Building upon decades of global market flows, population migrations, digital technology, and accelerated inter-connectedness, the twenty-first century is facing remarkable urban transformations (Harvey 1990, 2005; Sassen 2001; Holston 1999; Brenner 2004). In 1800, 3 percent of the world’s population lived in cities. In 2008, that figure reached over 50 percent (PRB 2011). Such processes are most evident in the emerging nodes of an inter-referencing urban Asian renaissance (Roy and Ong 2011). Eight of the world’s ten megacities (those with populations over ten million) are in Asia. In postreform China, which is conscious of its rising power and eager to catch up with worldly pursuits, city building has reached the scale, intensity, and audacity of a revolution (Campanella 2008; Ren 2011). What characterizes this dramatic urban transformation in China? Who are its major players and winners, and who is marginalized or excluded? What cultural meanings and lifestyles are visibly forged? How are these processes intertwined with nationalistic aspirations, social divisions, and political contestations? What analytical insights and theoretical reflections can we gain at this historical juncture from an urban postmodern linking China, Asia, and the rest of the globe? These are some of the issues in the minds of Asian scholars across the disciplines. I hope this review will provide an opening for us to engage in multiple conversations, hence my citing the works of many colleagues.
INITIAL ANALYSIS OF EXTRAGALACTIC FIELDS USING A NEW AKARI/IRC ANALYSIS PIPELINE
Helen Davidge,STEPHEN SERJEANT,CHRIS PEARSON 한국천문학회 2017 天文學論叢 Vol.32 No.1
We present the first results of a new data analysis pipeline for processing extragalactic AKARI/IRC images. The main improvements of the pipeline over the standard analysis are the removal of Earth shine and image distortion correction. We present the differential number counts of the AKARI/IRC S11 filter in the IRAC validation field. The differential number counts are consistent with S11 AKARI NEP deep and 12 $\mu$m WISE NEP number counts, and with a phenomenological backward evolution galaxy model, at brighter fluxes densities. There is a detection of fainter galaxies in the IRAC validation field.