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Showing posts with label cognitive development. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cognitive development. Show all posts

Monday, March 12, 2012

SWEDISH HUMANITARIANISM EXPANDS NGO AID

SWEDISH HUMANITARIANISM EXPANDS NGO AID

Erle Frayne D. Argonza

Good news for global citizens: Sweden is expanding its funding of NGO operations across the globe. This is in far contrast to the USA which has constricted funding for aid, funding that includes NGO partners across the globe as conduits for the same.

A short list of international NGO partners that serve as block fund recipients is shown in the news below. The likes of Oxfam and Save the Children are very actively engaged in Asia inclusive of my beloved Philippines which, thanks partly to the aid interventions of the North, is now a middle-income country and creditor economy.

Development stakeholders and civic professionals who may wish to enter social development as a new field of expertise are advised to co-partner with Swedish NGO partners.

[Philippines, 08 March 2012]

Source: http://www.devex.com/en/news/swedish-unveils-2012-aid-budget-for-ngos/77605?source=ArticleHomepage_Center_4

Sweden unveils 2012 aid budget for NGOs

inShare

Sweden has allocated more than 1.6 billion Swedish kronor ($243.8 million) to support the humanitarian and development projects led by local civil society organizations such as Save the Children and the umbrella group Forum Syd.

This year’s allocation includes 1.5 billion Swedish kronor for programs of Swedish nongovernmental organizations in development countries, 68 million Swedish kronor to raise awareness of Swedish aid and development initiatives, and some 26 million Swedish kronor to support reforms in Eastern Europe.

Aside from Save the Children and Forum Syd, the budget will be shared by SCC, Diakonia, Swedish Church, the Swedish Mission Council, Plan Sweden, PMU Inter Life, LO/TCO, Naturskyddsföreningen, SHIA, Afrikagrupperna, WWF Sweden, Oxfam, RFSU, Swedish Committee for Afghanistan, HIV/AIDS Alliance and Ibis.

See the top global development employers in Sweden, read more development aid news online, and subscribe to The Development Newswire to receive top international development headlines from the world’s leading donors, news sources and opinion leaders — emailed to you FREE every business day.

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

CHINA LACKADAISICAL SERIOUSNESS REGARDING TECHNO-RISKS

CHINA LACKADAISICAL SERIOUSNESS REGARDING TECHNO-RISKS

Erle Frayne D. Argonza

The risks posed by technological innovations and interventions have proved to be very fatal for affected stakeholders. This is especially true for China, where techno-risks have been scaling up such as shown by the cases of SARS outbreaks and the gargantuan floods that have buried whole towns.

Among the latest additions to technological risks is the accident involving the bullet train engineered and built by China. Though reputably the world’s fastest, as they are capable of running up to 450 kilometers per hour, the hazard they pose on riders seem to outweigh their benefits at this juncture.

China thus earned the flaks from various quarters within and outside its territorial bounds. The innovation stakeholders of China must take technological hazards more seriously, and shouldn’t wait for more floods to take place before reconsidering new giant projects as huge as the controversial 3 Gorges Dam and the nuclear plants.

Below is a discussion concerning the subject.

[Philippines, 21 September 2011]

Source: http://www.scidev.net/en/features/china-urged-to-take-technological-risk-more-seriously.html

China urged to take technological risk more seriously

Li Jiao

12 August 2011

The recent nuclear scare in Japan has reinforced pressure in China to raise its awareness of the risks of new technologies. Li Jiao reports.

[BEIJING] Like many other countries, China is currently reviewing the safety of its nuclear power programme following the damage caused by Japan's tsunami to the Fukushima nuclear plant in March, promising that 'full safety checks' of existing reactors would be carried out.

Although the government has also suspended approval of future nuclear projects until a new nuclear safety plan is published — currently expected before the end of the year — it is widely anticipated that its construction programme for nuclear power plants will resume at that point.

At the same time, however, the potential dangers highlighted by the Fukushima accident have reinforced growing demands for the country to strengthen its approach to risk management for all types of technological emergencies.

Critics believe that despite some recent signs of progress, there are still serious gaps in the government's preparedness plans for such situations. They argue that risk evaluation needs to be increased across the board, from areas such as genetically modified (GM) crops to the impact of human-induced global warming on food production.

Their argument is that, too often, safety concerns have fallen victim to cost-cutting and even corruption in the country's headlong pursuit of economic growth.

As Li Daguang, director of the Science Communication Centre at the Graduate University of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), says: "Generally, China doesn't consider the potential risks of technology because economic benefit is the top consideration."

Nuclear power safety

China already has four operating nuclear power plants, with 13 projects involving 27 separate reactors currently under construction. While several are along the coast, others are due to be located near large cities.

The country's chief climate negotiator Xie Zhenhua, deputy director of the National Development and Reform Commission, told a climate change policy forum in Canberra, Australia, in March that the Fukushima disaster is expected to lead to new safety measures in the country's nuclear programme,.

Reflecting this commitment, China will spend about 150 million yuan (US$23 million) this year to carry out the review of the safety of both existing power plants and new ones (in contrast, last year's budget did not even explicitly mention nuclear safety.)

"Operating plants and plants that are under construction will soon be inspected and reviewed by a group of experts," Lin Chengge, a senior expert at the State Nuclear Power Technology Corporation Ltd and former deputy director of the National Nuclear Safety Administration, told China Daily.

"The results of the inspection will be provided to the government so it can decide if safety improvements are needed."

Some improvements have already been seen …

The response is becoming a familiar one. During the SARS outbreak in 2003, for example, the government set up an emergency working group under the State Council, the country's highest administrative body, indicating that it considered the risks associated with the outbreak to be a high political priority.

Further evidence that the government has begun to take technological risks seriously was the creation in 2004 of a risk analysis committee — the first government organisation specialising in evaluating risk — under the Academy of Disaster Reduction and Emergency Management of the Ministry of Civil Affairs and Ministry of Education.

Risk assessment has certainly improved in the last ten years. Modern attitudes towards risk reduction and the concept of risk management have surfaced, and the government has introduced a number of laws and policies, such as emergency measures for nuclear accidents at power plants, and the regulation of emergency public health situations.

… but more is to be done

But not everyone is convinced that this action is sufficient.

Safety expert Bao Ou, of the Institute of Science, Technology and Society at Tsinghua University, Beijing, told SciDev.Net that, until recently, economic benefits had been given precedence over safety issues, adding that defects in technology have only been exposed after accidents have happened.

There are still serious limitations, such as a lack of centralised management for risk as well as a lack of civil participation, Bao adds. She points out that there is still "no special ministry dealing with national risk reduction and management on the Chinese mainland," and that there are few researchers and institutions specialising in risk.

To rectify this situation, some of the country's scientists and engineers, for example, have suggested setting up an institute for nuclear safety.

Another area in which concern exists about the lack of research into risks is in the field of GM crops. At the International Biosafety Forum in Beijing in April, for example, researchers urged China to strengthen risk research and evaluation on such crops.

In 2008, the government provided US$3.5 billion in funding for research into GM crops. Out of this sum, however, it has allocated a mere US$1.5 million over the five years for GM risk evaluation and public engagement.

"Although GM risk funding is increasing, it's far from being enough," says Wei Wei, an ecologist at CAS's Institute of Botany, in Beijing. "In particular, ecological risks should not be underestimated."

Natural risks are also an issue

Other concerns focus on the lack of adequate research into the risks of climate change, despite the fact that water scarcity is affecting 184,000 square kilometres of farmland as the worst drought in half a century grips the country.

It has put the risk of food insecurity back on the agenda, and revealed a lack of investment in agricultural land, says Jiang Gaoming of CAS's Institute of Botany.

China "should be concerned about the risk in many areas, such as nuclear power, earthquakes, tsunamis, floods and droughts," adds Chen I-wan, advisor to the state-run China Disaster Prevention Association led by the China Earthquake Administration.

Bao told SciDev.Net that China should study the experiences of other countries, set up institutions to research risk management, devise appropriate legislation and adopt effective counter-measures.

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Wednesday, September 07, 2011

FUNGUS’ FOOD BENEFITS

FUNGUS’ FOOD BENEFITS

Erle Frayne D. Argonza

Good day from the Pearl of the Orient!

Fungi have been stereotyped as curse species and should be destroyed as much as we can destroy them. Now, how about reflecting on the research fact that “rice inoculated with fungi grew five times faster” as per report from a Philippine-based food base research?

As always, let’s be prepared for the breakage of conventional wisdom. Conventional wisdom about fungi might turn out to be idiocies worth our ridicule and guffaws. Check out on the update news below from the Philippines.

[Philippines, 07 September 2011]

Source: http://www.scidev.net/en/news/fungi-could-protect-rice-against-climate-change.html

Fungi could protect rice against climate change

Ma. Theresa V. Ilano

26 July 2011

[CEBU, PHILIPPINES] Inoculating rice seeds with fungi makes the plants more tolerant of salt, drought and cold — all of which may become more common as the climate changes, according to researchers.

The researchers obtained two types of endophytic fungi, which have symbiotic (mutually beneficial) relationships with plants. One was from coastal dunegrass, and the other from a variety of wild strawberry that thrives in geothermal soils even in below-freezing winter temperatures.

When seeds of two commercial rice varieties were inoculated with the fungi, the resulting plants, grown in greenhouses, had increased growth and grain production, and were more tolerant of drought.

In addition, plants inoculated with fungi from coastal plants thrived under saline conditions, and those receiving fungi from wild strawberries grew well in low temperatures, according to the research published this month (5 July) in PLoS One.

"The fungus pretty much does all the work," said Russell J. Rodriguez, co-author of the research and a microbiologist with the US Geological Survey. "Within 24 hours, we saw the benefits. [Inoculated] plants were growing up to five times faster."

The technique does not change the rice plant's genetic material — its DNA — he said. "But the expression [switching on and off] of genes is modified and the plant now has the ability to resist environmental stress," he told SciDev.Net.

The researchers do not understand the mechanism but suggest that the fungi could be producing a substance that regulates plant growth.

In their symbiotic relationship with the plants, the fungi confer stress tolerance in exchange for nutrients, a phenomenon known as 'symbiogenics' because one symbiotic partner influences the expression of the other's genes.

The technique should work for different rice varieties and other crops, such as corn and peas, said Rodriguez, adding that the researchers are now trying to make rice plants heat tolerant, too.

Glenn Gregorio, who studies stress-tolerant plants at the International Rice Research Institute in the Philippines, said the experiment on salt tolerance was "impressive and very promising".

But further experiments are needed to see if the rice thrives under field conditions, he said, because fungi usually require specific habitats, such as geothermal soils, to survive.

"In field conditions, the soil and the overall environment [are] 'contaminated' with other organisms, which may also interact with the plant and, in essence, compete with the fungi," Gregorio said.

Rodriguez said his team has been collaborating with African and Korean scientists to test the findings in the field.

Link to full paper in PLoS ONE

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Come Visit E. Argonza’s blogs & website anytime!

Social Blogs:

IKONOKLAST: http://erleargonza.blogspot.com

UNLADTAU: http://unladtau.wordpress.com

Wisdom/Spiritual Blogs:

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BRIGHTWORLD: http://erlefraynebrightworld.wordpress.com

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ARTBLOG: http://erleargonza.wordpress.com

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RE-ENGINEERING TOILETS

RE-ENGINEERING TOILETS

Erle Frayne D. Argonza

Toilets can be re-engineered, rendering them less wasteful in water and assortment of hygiene accessories. This is the challenge posed upon all member states of the United Nations, most specially as the 2015 deadline for the Millenium Development Goal or MDG nears.

I recall having a chat one time with former colleague in UP Manila, Prof Roland Simbulan, when he was the Vice-Chancellor for Planning & Development there. He mentioned to me about the enormous water used in the flash toilets of the Philippine General Hospital alone, the noble service hospital of my beloved alma mater, water that eats up chunks of maintenance budget.

That brief conversation alone suffices to convince me about re-engineering toilets and other utilities. Incidentally, the infotech magnate Bill Gates has been titillated by the idea, and had offered research grants by the millions of dollars to r & d experts to produce acceptable prototypes of the new toilet.

[Philippines, 07 September 2011]

Source: http://www.scidev.net/en/news/gates-challenges-researchers-to-reinvent-the-toilet-.html

Gates challenges researchers to reinvent the toilet

Aimable Twahirwa

25 July 2011 | EN

New toilet concepts will have to be acceptable to local communities

Flickr/Sustainable sanitation

[KIGALI] It is time to reinvent the toilet for the developing world where other attempts to improve sanitation have failed, according to the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

Although billions of dollars have been poured into sanitation infrastructure in the developing world, rapid population growth means that there are now more people without access to improved sanitation in Sub-Saharan Africa than ever before, according to Sylvia Mathews Burwell, president of the Global Development Program at the foundation.

"Not only is using the world's precious water resources to flush and transport human waste not a smart or sustainable solution, it has simply proven to be too expensive for much of the world," she told the AfricaSan Conference, the third African Conference on Sanitation and Hygiene last week (19 July).

The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation is providing grants worth US$42 million in total to come up with a new toilet concept and more than 20 universities worldwide have submitted ideas. The University of Kwazulu Natal, for example, is working their local municipality to design a community toilet that can turn waste into clean water and energy.

"We asked that they develop a stand-alone facility without piped-in water, a sewerage connection, or outside electricity … [with] a total cost including capital, operation, and maintenance of just a few pennies per day per person," Burwell said.

Ideas include a toilet that turns human waste into ash and potable water through rapid dehydration and smouldering; a toilet that converts human waste into soil-improving biochar soon to be tested in Nairobi's slums; and a method of treating human waste with microwaves to turn it into gas.

Major challenges will be to ensure that the new toilets are acceptable to people and to cover whole rural populations with the scale up of good ideas.

"Our key focus is supporting local innovations in sanitation and hygiene," Burwell told SciDev.Net. "The project, which will provide a new cheap and waterless toilet, will also be dedicated to training local communities by helping them to better use this technology."

But getting rid of unsanitary defecation alone may not be enough to stem hygiene-related diseases.

Although new sanitation facilities can help prevent waterborne diseases in poor communities, it is also important to introduce water storage and distribution systems, according to Ananias Nsengiyumva, a medical doctor based in Kigali.

He told SciDev.Net: "Insufficient capacity to ensure proper water storage and filtration still has negative impacts on rural communities who risk contracting diseases like cholera, bacillary dysentery and typhoid."

Samuel Nkomo, Zimbabwean Minister of Water Resources Development and Management, said that several African countries still lag behind towards achieving the UN Millennium Development Goal on sanitation.

At the conference several African countries including Ghana, Malawi and Rwanda, announced major sanitation projects aimed at providing new toilet prototypes to increase availability of water supply, and sanitation services in rural areas.

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Come Visit E. Argonza’s blogs & website anytime!

Social Blogs:

IKONOKLAST: http://erleargonza.blogspot.com

UNLADTAU: http://unladtau.wordpress.com

Wisdom/Spiritual Blogs:

COSMICBUHAY: http://cosmicbuhay.blogspot.com

BRIGHTWORLD: http://erlefraynebrightworld.wordpress.com

Poetry & Art Blogs:

ARTBLOG: http://erleargonza.wordpress.com

ARGONZAPOEM: http://argonzapoem.blogspot.com

Mixed Blends Blogs:

@MULTIPLY: http://efdargon.multiply.com

@SOULCAST: http://www.soulcast.com/efdargon

Website:

PROF. ERLE FRAYNE ARGONZA: http://erleargonza.com

Saturday, September 03, 2011

EDUCATION TO NARROW DEVELOPMENTAL GAP: ASEAN TAKES LEAD

EDUCATION TO NARROW DEVELOPMENTAL GAP: ASEAN TAKES LEAD

Erle Frayne D. Argonza

Human & social capital constitutes the greatest driver to development. No less than the World Bank assessed that 77% of what constitutes development gains comes from human & social capital, which explains why the prosperous economies of the day reached their prosperity and widened their gap with other countries.

Being a social development expert who had long track record of capacity-building engagements, I can very easily point out to enthused parties the full import of education, training, and related capacity-building strategies aimed at shoring up human capital (individual competencies) and social capital (trust and institutional capabilities). I have witnessed how many poor folks graduate to better living through intensive trainings, workshops, seminars, and the likes.

Of course, being a university mentor for long, I was also witness to how former students coming from very poor families ended up as high achievers in their professions. I wish to site, for instance, Jericho Go, alumni of my former social science department, who once lived in the ghetto neighborhood of southern Manila, rise to top echelon in realty firms (Vice President at age 25…he’s senior VP today in a big dynamic realty company).

Manila today is the among the wealthiest megacities in the world, thanks to the very high concentration of competent and empowered individuals and groups (including civil society) in the city. Singapore, Jakarta, Kuala Lumpur, and Bangkok hold parallel prestige and power, thanks to their high concentration of well educated professionals and business leaders. Such experiences must gravitate to less developed areas in Asia as a way of closing the gap between rich and poor.

Below is a special report from the ASEAN about efforts being undertaken towards such goal.

[Philippines, 03 September 2011]

Source: http://www.asean.org/26469.htm

Education to Play a Central Role in Narrowing Development Gap: East Asia Summit Education Ministers Meet Informally in Bali

Bali, Indonesia, 20 July 2011

Education has a significant role to play in realising the objectives of the East Asia Summit, particularly in helping to build productive lives, the eradication of poverty, and the narrowing of the development gap in East Asia, said the Secretary-General of Asean, Dr Surin Pitsuwan.

He said that during an informal meeting with the Education Ministers from the East Asia Summit, which will be held in Bali later this week.

"Cooperation in education contributes both to the goals of ASEAN and the EAS. It will allow us to develop quality human capital and the next generation of leaders, contributing to more equitable development among the EAS countries. This will enhance our ability to compete in an increasingly competitive world," he said.

The timing for the initiative could not have come at a better time, with the region posting robust growth, and boasting of an upbeat outlook. Moreover, the EAS countries are home to almost half of the world's population, making the EAS a significant platform for dialogue and cooperation.

"We will need strong commitment to implement these objectives. We will need to invest in efforts and resources to develop our human capital. Regional cooperation in the ASEAN, ASEAN Plus Three, and the EAS platforms are well poised to achieve our goals," he said, urging the ministers to "leverage on these platforms to create opportunities for collaboration. For example, the EAS could exchange best practices and strategies on education which have worked in our countries, without reinventing the wheel."

ASEAN has a 5-year Work Plan on Education (2010 - 2015), which has a strong focus on enhancing the quality of education and improving access to education. The Work Plan represents ASEAN's aspiration to promote educational cooperation to (1) narrow development gaps (2) prepare the youth for regional leadership and (3) enhance the competitiveness of its people.

Similarly, the ASEAN Plus Three Educational Cooperation framework is currently finalising the ASEAN Plus Three Plan of Action on Education.

This is the first informal meeting among the Education Ministers, and more meetings are expected.

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Come Visit E. Argonza’s blogs & website anytime!

Social Blogs:

IKONOKLAST: http://erleargonza.blogspot.com

UNLADTAU: http://unladtau.wordpress.com

Wisdom/Spiritual Blogs:

COSMICBUHAY: http://cosmicbuhay.blogspot.com

BRIGHTWORLD: http://erlefraynebrightworld.wordpress.com

Poetry & Art Blogs:

ARTBLOG: http://erleargonza.wordpress.com

ARGONZAPOEM: http://argonzapoem.blogspot.com

Mixed Blends Blogs:

@MULTIPLY: http://efdargon.multiply.com

@SOULCAST: http://www.soulcast.com/efdargon

Website:

PROF. ERLE FRAYNE ARGONZA: http://erleargonza.com