Fukushima nuclear accident down to human factors | New Scientist - 0 views
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“They restarted Oi without addressing any of the real issues.”
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“We could have another Fukushima-scale nuclear accident tomorrow and 18 months down the line we’d be right back to where we are now,” says Watanabe.
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calls “the Japanese mindset” that meant the disaster was very much “made in Japan”. The disaster’s “fundamental causes are to be found in the ingrained conventions of Japanese culture: our reflexive obedience; our reluctance to question authority,” Kurokawa says.
Statistics on International Development Aid | P.a.p.-Blog | Human Rights Etc. - 0 views
Why Ebola is terrifying and dangerous: It preys on family, caregiving, and human bonds. - 0 views
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75 percent of Ebola victims are women, people who do much of the care work throughout Africa and the rest of the world. In short, Ebola parasitizes our humanity.
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Its kill rate: In this particular outbreak, a running tabulation suggests that 54 percent of the infected die, though adjusted numbers suggest that the rate is much higher. Its exponential growth: At this point, the number of people infected is doubling approximately every three weeks, leading some epidemiologists to project between 77,000 and 277,000 cases by the end of 2014. The gruesomeness with which it kills: by hijacking cells and migrating throughout the body to affect all organs, causing victims to bleed profusely. The ease with which it is transmitted: through contact with bodily fluids, including sweat, tears, saliva, blood, urine, semen, etc., including objects that have come in contact with bodily fluids (such as bed sheets, clothing, and needles) and corpses. The threat of mutation: Prominent figures have expressed serious concerns that this disease will go airborne, and there are many other mechanisms through which mutation might make it much more transmissible.
Admit it: we can't measure our ecological footprint | New Scientist - 0 views
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“when humanity exhausted nature’s budget for the year” and began “drawing down local resource stocks and accumulating carbon dioxide in the atmosphere”. This year it was on 20 August, the earliest date yet.
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“so misleading as to preclude their use in any serious science or policy context,” it says in a paper in PLoS Biology.
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The footprint analysis does not really measure our overuse of the planet’s resources at all. If anything, it underestimates it.
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Could this be the start of the end of world poverty? | Kevin Watkins | Opinion | The Gu... - 0 views
Food, energy and water: the politics of the nexus | Jeremy Allouche | Science | The Gua... - 0 views
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Jeremy Allouche
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In a paradoxical way, this was the first time that the business community came to realise the limits to growth.
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modellers, farmers, and civil engineers have known about these inter-relationships for a long time.
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Human Trafficking in Japan II - YouTube - 0 views
Advertising and Global Culture | Cultural Survival - 0 views
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of
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Author Janus Noreen No one can travel to Africa, Asia, or Latin America and not be struck by the Western elements of urban life. The symbols of transnational culture - automobiles, advertising, supermarkets, shopping centers, hotels, fast food chains, credit cards, and Hollywood movies - give the, feeling of being at home. Behind these tangible symbols are a corresponding set of values and attitudes about time, consumption, work relations, etc. Some believe global culture has resulted from gradual spontaneous processes that depended solely on technological innovations - increased international trade, global mass communications, jet travel. Recent studies show that the processes are anything but spontaneous; that they are the result of tremendous investments of time, energy and money by transnational corporations. This "transnational culture" is a direct outcome of the internationalization of production and accumulation promoted through standardized development models and cultural forms.
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The common theme of transnational culture is consumption. Advertising expresses this ideology of consumption in its most synthetic and visual form.
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20 million starving to death: inside the worst famine since World War II - Vox - 1 views
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region controlled by rebels from her same tribe
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starvation
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starved to death along the wa
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Climate change: global reshuffle of wildlife will have huge impacts on humanity | Envir... - 0 views
Chernobyl: 2. How has human health been affected by the Chernobyl accident? - 0 views
Blaming natural disasters on climate change will backfire. - 0 views
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Thus, the migration in response to the severe and prolonged drought exacerbated a number of the factors often cited as contributing to the unrest, which include unemployment, corruption, and rampant inequality. The conflict literature supports the idea that rapid demographic change encourages instability. Whether it was a primary or substantial factor is impossible to know, but drought can lead to devastating consequences when coupled with preexisting acute vulnerability, caused by poor policies and unsustainable land use practices in Syria’s case and perpetuated by the slow and ineffective response of the Assad regime [emphasis added].
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suggests that an unprecedented drought accentuated frustration with the Assad regime and led to migration from rural to urban areas.
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While climate change will probably increase the number and intensity of heavy showers, leading to more frequent landslides, intensive logging and government negligence in permitting new construction in these areas cause the real disasters.
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Japan panel: Fukushima nuclear disaster 'man-made' - BBC News - 0 views
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It said that the situation at the plant worsened in the aftermath of the earthquake because government agencies "did not function correctly", with key roles left ambiguous. It also highlighted communication failures between Tepco and the office of then Prime Minister Naoto Kan, whose visit to the site in the immediate aftermath of the earthquake "diverted" staff.
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"Japan's regulators need to shed the insular attitude of ignoring international safety standards and transform themselves into a globally trusted entity," it said.
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"could and should have been foreseen and prevented" and its effects "mitigated by a more effective human response",
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Last of the Amazon - National Geographic Magazine - 0 views
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Brazil’s dilemma: Allow widespread—and profitable—destruction of the rain forest to continue, or intensify conservation efforts.
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The market forces of globalization are invading the Amazon, hastening the demise of the forest and thwarting its most committed stewards.
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n the past three decades, hundreds of people have died in land wars; countless others endure fear and uncertainty, their lives threatened by those who profit from the theft of timber and land. In this Wild West frontier of guns, chain saws, and bulldozers, government agents are often corrupt and ineffective—or ill-equipped and outmatched. Now, industrial-scale soybean producers are joining loggers and cattle ranchers in the land grab, speeding up destruction and further fragmenting the great Brazilian wilderness.
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Kayapo Courage - 0 views
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five officially demarcated tracts of contiguous land that in sum make up an area about the size of Kentucky. T
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9,000 indigenous people, most of whom can’t read or write and who still follow a largely subsistence way of life in 44 villages linked only by rivers and all-but-invisible trails.
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Kendjam,
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The human toll of FIFA's corruption - The Washington Post - 0 views
The Most Important Thing, and It's Almost a Secret - The New York Times - 0 views
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The number of extremely poor people (defined as those earning less than $1 or $1.25 a day, depending on who’s counting) rose inexorably until the middle of the 20th century, then roughly stabilized for a few decades. Since the 1990s, the number of poor has plummeted.• In 1990, more than 12 million children died before the age of 5; this toll has since dropped by more than half. • More kids than ever are becoming educated, especially girls. In the 1980s, only half of girls in developing countries completed elementary school; now, 80 percent do.
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Granted, some 16,000 children still die unnecessarily each day. It’s maddening in my travels to watch children dying simply because they were born in the wrong place at the wrong time.
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The world’s best-kept secret is that we live at a historic inflection point when extreme poverty is retreating. United Nations members have just adopted 17 new Global Goals, of which the centerpiece is the elimination of extreme poverty by 2030.
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