Results 101 to 110 of about 178,151 (300)
Falling pupil numbers and school closures: Setting a research agenda for a new era of precarity
Abstract This paper explores the significant phenomenon of decreasing pupil numbers in England due to lower birth rates and the impact of a school closure on a school community. It then discusses how the sociology of education might research this major issue.
Eleanor Fagan, Alice Bradbury
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT Biopharmaceutical manufacturing requires robust analytics and process controls throughout production to insure high yield of quality products. New methodologies for rapidly accessing and integrating data‐rich information from complex dynamic biological environments are of great interest.
Kayla Chun +8 more
wiley +1 more source
Putting Environmental Injustice on the Map: Ecotestimonies from the Global South
This introductory essay to STTCL 39.2 discusses the importance of testimony as a flexible literary genre that can tell the stories of environmental injustice in the Global South, which is disproportionately affected by environmental violence and less ...
Erin S Finzer
doaj +1 more source
Environmental Injustice and Electronic Waste in Ghana: Challenges and Recommendations. [PDF]
Njoku A +5 more
europepmc +1 more source
ABSTRACT The shift towards sustainable food production is essential to address the urgent dual challenges of climate change and population growth, with agricultural cooperatives playing a vital role in this transformation. However, many cooperatives struggle to deliver the expected value to their members.
Ismail Badraoui +4 more
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT Although artificial intelligence (AI) is increasingly being touted to assist organizations, AI integration for sustainability efforts has been limited AND sporadic and tends to follow an ad hoc strategy. The existing literature therein focuses on the technological capabilities of AI, overlooking how organizations make sense of and ...
Amanda Balasooriya, Darshana Sedera
wiley +1 more source
Research in the Global North (e.g., US, Europe) has revealed robust patterns of environmental injustice whereby low income and minority residents face exposure to industrial hazards in their neighborhoods.
Sara E Grineski +2 more
doaj +1 more source
Since the early 1990s, environmental justice movements have demonstrated that the environment is a source of injustice, adding to existing inequalities. Repair tools and regulatory and participatory procedures have been developed to provide responses to ...
Caroline Lejeune
doaj +1 more source
Towards a Developmental Retribution and Reciprocity Model (RRM): Implications for Youth Justice
ABSTRACT Youth justice systems are frequently justified by reference to developmental change, yet chronological age is often treated as a proxy for underlying psychological processes. This paper develops a Developmental Retribution and Reciprocity Model (RRM), integrating evolutionary criminology with contemporary developmental neuroscience to clarify ...
Evelyn Svingen
wiley +1 more source
Mapping Air Quality Risk in Cape Town, South Africa: Implications for Environmental Justice
Air pollution disproportionately impacts socially vulnerable communities, yet spatial analyzes that integrate social vulnerability and air quality indicators are limited in low‐ and middle‐income countries.
Meryl Jagarnath, Lerato Shikwambana
doaj +1 more source

