Results 211 to 220 of about 40,004 (309)
PRECARIZED AGEING‐IN‐PERIFERIA: Low‐Income Older Adults in a Transforming Neighbourhood
Abstract In this article we investigate how intersecting forms of precarity shape the everyday practices of ageing‐in‐place developed by low‐income older adults in Via Milano, a historically segregated yet rapidly transforming neighbourhood in Brescia, northern Italy. We draw on qualitative and ethnographic research to examine how diverse urban changes—
Marco Alioni, Barbara Badiani
wiley +1 more source
Abstract This article outlines possibilities for counter configurations of data‐based urbanisms, whereby data practices, rather than reproducing logics of urban entrepreneurialism and smart‐city governance, are made from within urban peripheral territories.
Andrés Luque‐Ayala, Rodrigo Firmino
wiley +1 more source
Political construction of risk perception and preventive behaviour during the COVID-19 pandemic in the Republic of Korea. [PDF]
Jeong S, Chung JB, Kim M, Kim MK.
europepmc +1 more source
Technical rationality and (de)politicisation of standards Multi-stakeholder initiatives in sustainable agriculture [PDF]
Cheyns, Emmanuelle
core
Politics of Return, Inequality and Citizenship in the Post-Yugoslav Space [PDF]
Djordjevic, Biljana
core +1 more source
Abstract Oregon's wave of data center and semiconductor projects shows how cloud capitalism reorganizes resource systems and territorial governance. Examining Amazon, Google, and Intel, the article traces how fiscal incentives, utility programs, and land‐use instruments are recalibrated to secure hyperscale loads.
Justin Kollar
wiley +1 more source
The role of evidence-based medicine in the media: misinformation and the COVID-19 lesson. [PDF]
De Francisci S, Sotgiu G, Dobler CC.
europepmc +1 more source
Creating 'political space' for policy learning in 14-19 education and training in England [PDF]
Hodgson, Ann, Spours, Ken
core +1 more source
ABSTRACT In the last several years, disaster insurance programs around the world have experienced disruptions that many observers interpret to be a primary symptom of “climate crisis” (Bittle 2024). Governments have responded to these disruptions through disjointed and at times contradictory measures: they treat disasters, alternately, as “Acts of God”
Stephen J. Collier
wiley +1 more source

