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Cash Transfer Programs Succeed for Zambia’s Poor, Offer Lessons for Battling African Poverty, AIR Finds

Fuente AIR / 8 de junio de 2016

Programs designed to alleviate hunger and increase food supply through cash transfers to some of Zambia’s poorest families achieved those goals and more, final evaluations conducted by the American Institutes for Research (AIR) revealed.

Overall, researchers found that a cash-transfer program geared toward families with at least one young child had effects that amounted to a net benefit of 1.5 kwacha—Zambia’s currency—for each kwacha transferred. A second program for households with fewer able-bodied people to farm had effects that amounted to a net benefit of 1.68 kwacha for each kwacha transferred.

Besides eating more meals and building more reliable food reserves, families used the money to improve their housing, buy additional necessities for their children, acquire more livestock and reduce debt.

The studies, commissioned by UNICEF, are likely to be closely watched as African nations increasingly embrace cash transfers to combat the continent’s cycle of poverty. South Africa’s program is the largest, with roughly 16.1 million people—about a third of its population—receiving some kind of social grant.

Notably, the two Zambian programs were unconditional—providing small, consistent sums of money with no strings attached on how they were spent. The programs bucked general criticisms that cash transfers spark dependency. Rather, the discretionary approach empowered families, who used the grants to improve their living standards in ways that made sense given their individual circumstances. At no point during the multiyear grants did alcohol consumption increase. Nor was there any impact on fertility, according to the evaluations.

“The unconditional approach worked,” said Stanfield Michelo, director of social welfare at Zambia’s Ministry of Community Development and Social Welfare. “And because it did, the region is making positive strides. Without a doubt, the changes would not have been possible without AIR’s rigorous evaluations.”

Animated infographic: Zambia cash transfer results

The evaluation of the Child Grant cash-transfer program (CGP) lasted four years, and the evaluation of the Multiple Category Targeting Grant (MCTG) lasted three years. Begun in 2010 in three of Zambia’s poorest districts, the CGP was open to all households with at least one child under age 4. Half were randomly assigned to receive cash transfers of 60 kwacha ($12) a month, and half to a control group that did not receive funds. The MCTG was aimed at poor households with fewer able-bodied people to farm, due largely to a “missing generation” of parents in their 30s and 40s and disproportionally high numbers of adolescents and orphans cared for by widows and grandparents. As with the CGP, half the MCTG participants received the equivalent of $12 a month and half were in a control group that didn’t.

The studies were notable not only for their duration, but also for their use of randomization and control groups to tease out the program’s true effects.

“Few evaluations of cash transfer programs can make such strong causal claims with as much certainty as these two evaluations,” said David Seidenfeld, AIR’s senior director of international research and evaluation and lead study author. “The design of the study, which extended over several years, allowed us to see that the beneficiaries do not grow complacent over time, but instead find ways to grow the value of the transfer beyond benefits related to food security and consumption.”

Although the studies revealed persistent successes, they also offered future researchers and policymakers an idea of cash transfers’ limitations. The studies did not show consistent successes in education or child nutrition, possibly due to large-scale infrastructure issues—namely, the supply of social services, access to clean water, and a lack of health care and education facilities.

Among the studies’ principal lessons, researchers found that the degree of positive impact depended largely on the participants’ characteristics. For example, the multiple-category grants had large impacts on schooling because participating households had more school-age children. Overall, school enrollment jumps of 8 percent for children ages 11–14 and 11 percent for children 15–17 were attributed to the program, and these age groups are at the greatest risk of dropping out in Zambia, according to the report. By contrast, four years into the program, the child grants had no enrollment or attendance impacts for children in three groups: ages 4–7, 8–10 and 15–17.

“Another lesson is that the unconditional nature of the grants gave participants the flexibility to use the money to combat principal life challenges,” said UNICEF Zambia Representative Hamid El-Bashir Ibrahim. “For example, the CGP significantly affected many indicators commonly associated with resiliency—the ability to manage and withstand shocks. Households with transfers significantly improved housing quality and tools, livestock procurement, and opportunities to diversify income-generating activities so they could better withstand emergencies.”

“The overall results demonstrate unequivocally that common perceptions about cash transfers—that they are handouts and cause dependency, or lead to alcohol and tobacco consumption, or increases in pregnancy—are not true in Zambia,” Seidenfeld said. “Quite the contrary. Due to the unconditional nature of the grants, households had the flexibility needed to meet their most pressing challenges head on.”

The final reports on the Child Grant cash transfer program and the Multiple Category Transfer Grant program can be found on AIR’s website. The site also features a video of David Seidenfeld discussing lessons learned from the multiyear studies.

About AIR
Established in 1946, with headquarters in Washington, D.C., the American Institutes for Research (AIR) is a nonpartisan, not-for-profit organization that conducts behavioral and social science research and delivers technical assistance both domestically and internationally in the areas of health, education and workforce productivity. For more information, visit www.air.org.

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Nicaragua: Más de 15 mil estudiantes marchan a favor del medioambiente en León

Nicaragua / 07 de junio de 2016 / Por: Eddy López Hernández / Fuente: http://www.laprensa.com.ni/

Más de 15 mil estudiantes a favor del medioambiente de la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Nicaragua (Unan-León), marchan por las principales calles de la ciudad de León.Durante la marcha los estudiantes entregaron a los pobladores plantas de marango y se estima que al finalizar la actividad se entreguen 2 mil plantas.

Según Carlos Ricardo Reyes, presidente del Centro Universitario de la Universidad Nacional, CUUN, Unan-León, esta es la décima actividad que se hace en la ciudad universitaria.“Esta actividad se realiza año con año, haciéndole presente al medio ambiente, diciéndole presente a que estamos fomentando y concientizando a las familias leonesas, garantizándole un futuro a nuestros por venir, a nuestros hijos, es la mayor herencia que le podemos dejar a nuestros hijos, un ambiente ecológico y sostenible”, dijo Reyes.

Fuente noticia: http://www.laprensa.com.ni/2016/06/07/departamentales/2047857-mas-de15-mil-estudiantes-marchan-a-favor-del-medioambiente-en-leon

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Reino Unido: Education in the media

Fuente: dfemedia.blog.gov.uk / 8 de junio de 2016

Education in the media: 8 June 2016

Today’s news review includes a stories about A level take-up across the country, evidence heard by the Women and Equalities Select Committee on incidents of alleged sexual harassment in schools and an Ofsted letter on East Midlands school performance.

A level take-up

On Wednesday, 8 June, the New Schools Network published new analysis looking at areas of the country that have the lowest numbers of young people studying A levels, claiming there is a deep-seated problem in ensuring that young people in poorer areas are able to take A levels.

The New Schools Network’s analysis is inaccurate as it only takes into account those young people that studied within their own borough and fails to acknowledge those students that travel to a different area to study, therefore creating an unrealistic picture of the areas they say have a low take-up. The figures suggest that 48 16-to-18 year olds in 2015 which lived in Knowsley studied A levels, when in fact the actual figure is 654.

BBC Online is the only outlet to cover the story using the figures to highlight the regional differences in the proportion of pupils studying A levels.

A Department for Education spokesperson said:

These figures are completely misleading – they do not reflect those young people who study A levels in a neighbouring borough, the actual levels of participation are far higher because many will choose to study in other areas. The primary reason the uptake of A levels differs from area to area is because demand varies across the country. Where there is demand, provision is always available.

 

We want to see high quality A level provision across the country so that all children have access to a good education. Our ambitious reforms are driving up standards and spreading educational excellence everywhere – a key part of this is ensuring post-16 providers have the resources they need to ensure young people can reach their full potential, and leave well prepared for life in modern Britain with the skills that employers value.

Sexual harassment

On Tuesday, 7 June, the Women and Equalities Select Committee held an evidence session as part of its ongoing inquiry into sexual harassment in schools. During the session, calls were made by a number of experts for children as young as four to be taught about sexism, harassment and sexual abuse.

The Guardian covers the story today focusing on the comments made regarding children as young as four being taught about sexism and harassment, while the Sun and Daily Mail look at calls to make sex education compulsory and for four-year-olds to be taught about this issue to stop children being abused.

A Government spokesperson said:

We welcome this inquiry, and are playing a full part in it. We know that teachers and schools are already doing excellent work on this issue, but no young person should be made to feel unsafe or suffer harassment in any circumstance. Schools are safe places and fortunately crime in schools is very rare but sexual assault of any kind is an offence and must always be reported to the police.

 

Sex and relationship education is already compulsory in all maintained secondary schools and we expect academies and free schools to teach it as part of the curriculum. We are also working with leading headteachers and practitioners to look at how to raise the quality of PSHE teaching, which includes sex and relationship education.

East Midlands school performance

The Guardian ran a story today based on a letter from Ofsted’s regional director to East Midlands MPs, local authorities, multi-academy trusts and dioceses to highlight the poor performance of the region.

We have made clear that we want to ensure all pupils are receiving a good education and have announced a series of ambitious reforms in our recent White Paper to tackle underperformance and drive up standards.

Education Secretary Nicky Morgan said:

Every child deserves a great education and that’s why our White Paper has spreading educational excellence everywhere at its heart.

 

The East Midlands has improved drastically since our reforms began and there are now 119,000 more pupils in good or outstanding schools than in 2010 – an increase greater than the English average. This is a testament to the hard work of teachers across the region in implementing our reforms.

 

But some parts of the country are not yet good enough. That is why, in common with other areas of underperformance, we are working with groups like Teach First to place great teachers where they are needed most, returning power back to the profession through our White Paper reforms and introducing schemes like the National Teaching Service which will develop even more brilliant leaders.

Find out more about our White Paper reforms.

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República Dominicana: Expertos holandeses expondrán en RD sobre nueva tecnología balística forense en 3D

Santo Domingo / 06 de junio de 2016 / Por: El Caribe / Fuente: http://entornointeligente.com/

Dos expertos en Tecnología Forense del Netherlands Forensic Institute de Holanda, participarán este martes 7 de junio en el país, en un conversatorio sobre “Balística Forense” donde  compartirán sus experiencias en cuanto a la “Adquisición Objetiva y Comparación de Estrías en 3D”.

El evento patrocinado por el Laboratorio Balístico y Biométrico del Sistema Nacional de Armas (SISNA), tendrá lugar en el Aula de Estudios Criminalísticos doctor Samuel de Moya Polanco, de la Facultad de Ciencias Jurídicas de la Universidad Autónoma de Santo Domingo (UASD).

Los expertos holandeses Renés Pieterman y Martin Baiker, expondrán sobre el uso de las tecnologías para la comparación y validación de las piezas balísticas como evidencia.

De igual forma  expondrán sobre las posibilidades de superar algunas de las limitaciones de la tecnología 2D microscópica de comparación y facilitar que el trabajo de investigaciones sea cada día más objetivo y eficaz.

Andrés Grullón, director operativo del Laboratorio Balístico y Biométrico, explicó en un comunicado que “vamos a demostrar el principio de aplicación práctica de una tecnología de adquisición de superficie 3D sin contacto, focus variable, que permita medir piezas de evidencia objetiva, en gran medida, independiente de la forma de la muestra y en muy alta resolución”.

Agregó que también mostrarán cómo los datos 3D de las marcas pueden ser estudiados y comparados para establecer las características adicionales que están disponibles en comparación con la microscopía 2D usando un computador con un microscopio de comparación virtual.

Destacó que los expertos holandeses también presentarán un método objetivo para la comparación automatizada de marcas estriadas completas o parciales, así como el cálculo de las razones de probabilidad y la tasa de error para las aplicaciones en forenses.

Fuente noticia: http://entornointeligente.com/articulo/8521506/Expertos-holandeses-expondran-en-RD-sobre-nueva-tecnologia-balistica-forense-en-3D-06062016

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Perú: 1,200 maestros de educación superior exigen ley con marcha

Puno / 08 de junio de 2016 / Por: Redes Pachamama / Fuente: http://www.pachamamaradio.org/

Hoy miércoles unos mil 200 maestros de los instituciones de educación superior de la región de Puno se movilizarán con la finalidad de exigir al Congreso de la Republica la aprobación de la nueva Ley de Institutos y Escuelas de Educación Superior del Perú.

El secretario general del Comité Ejecutivo Regional del Sindicato de Docentes de Educación Superior de Puno, Carlos Antonio Salas Ramos, relató que la movilización se efectuará en la ciudad de Puno, en vista que, este jueves se debatirá la iniciativa legislativa en la sesión plenaria.

En Pachamama Radio, sostuvo que esta nueva norma es bastante esperada, pues contempla una mejora metodológica de la educación superior, en sus procesos de enseñanza, el nombramiento de los docentes contratados y un incremento salarial, tomando en cuenta la meritocracia.

 El proyecto ley pretende además regular la creación, licenciamiento, gestión, supervisión y fiscalización de los institutos y escuelas de educación superior públicos y privados, para que brinden una formación de calidad, que responda a las necesidades del país, del mercado laboral, el sistema educativo y su articulación con los sectores productivos, que permita el desarrollo de las artes, la ciencia y la tecnología.
Fuente noticia: http://www.pachamamaradio.org/regional/4584-1-200-maestros-de-educacion-superior-exigen-ley-con-marcha
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End child labour in supply chains – It’s everyone’s business!

Fuente:  OIT / 8 de junio de 2016

This year, the focus for World Day Against Child Labour – marked on 12 June – is on child labour and supply chains. With 168 million children still in child labour, all supply chains, from agriculture to manufacturing, services to construction, run the risk that child labour may be present.

Child labour has no place in well-functioning and well regulated markets, or in any supply chain. The message that we must act now to stop child labour once and for all has been affirmed by the Sustainable Development Goals. Acting together, it is within our means to make the future of work a future without child labour.»

Guy Ryder, ILO Director-General

This year, the focus for World Day Against Child Labour  – marked on 12 June – is on child labour and supply chains. With 168 million children still in child labour, all supply chains, from agriculture to manufacturing, services to construction, run the risk that child labour may be present.

“Child labour has no place in well-functioning and well regulated markets, or in any supply chain. The message that we must act now to stop child labour once and for all has been affirmed by the Sustainable Development Goals. Acting together, it is within our means to make the future of work a future without child labour,” said ILO Director-General Guy Ryder.

To support businesses in their actions to remove child labour from their supply chains, the ILO and the International Organisation of Employers (IOE) have jointly created the Child Labour Guidance Tool , a resource for companies to increase their knowledge and ability to conduct business in line with international labour standards on child labour.

The tool draws on the long experience of the ILO’s International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour (ILO-IPEC) in collaborating with employers to combat child labour in supply chains and incorporates contributions from the a wide variety of companies including Coca-Cola Company, AngloGold Ashanti, Vale, Japan Tobacco and Sterling Manufacturing.

In addition, the ILO provides peer-to-peer best practice and knowledge sharing through the Child Labour Platform , which aims to identify the obstacles to the implementation of the ILO Conventions on child labour in supply chains, develop practical ways of overcoming these obstacles, and catalyse collective action.

Examples of good practise case studies of addressing child labour in supply chains are available here .

“With globalization, supply chains have become increasingly complex, involving workers, small producers, and enterprises around the world. Ending child labour in this context is everyone’s.business,” said Beate Andrees, Chief of the ILO’s Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work Branch.

World Day Events

The ILO is organizing a series of events on the occasion both in Geneva and throughout the world.

Geneva

A high-level event to mark the World Day will be held on 8 June 2016 in the Human Rights Council room of the Palais des Nations from 13:30 to 15:00. This event will take place during the 105th Session of the International Labour Conference .

The panel discussion will start at 2:00 p.m. and the panellists include:

  • Guy Ryder: Director-General, International Labour Organization
  • MaryAnn Mihychuk: Minister of Employment, Workforce Development and Labour, Canada
  • Jacqueline Mugo: Executive Director, Federation of Kenya Employers and Secretary General of Business Africa
  • Philip J. Jennings: General-Secretary, UNI Global Union.
  • Katharine Stewart: Director, Ethical Trade and Sustainability Division, Primark
  • Andrews Tagoe: Head of Program, Rural Workers, General Agricultural Workers Union of Ghana and Anglophone African Coordinator for the Global March Against Child Labour,
  • Vicky Bowman: Director, Myanmar Centre for Responsible Business

The panel discussion will be moderated by Nomia Iqbal from the BBC.

The Minister of Labour, Employment and Social Security of Argentina, Jorge Triaca, will make an announcement about the next Global Conference on Child Labour.

The panel discussion will be preceded by a musical performance by the “Choeur pour l’abolition du travail des enfants”, a group of artists and media professionals that joined together in 2013 to sensitize the public on the worst forms of child labour. The Group led by:

Guy Valery Constant NEZA, includes: Akissi Delphine LOUKOU (aka Akissi Delta), Ami Sarah BAMBA, Valley Ahou Manuella ETTE (aka Nuella), Odia Sidimé, Général Sead, Alain Amani GOLY (aka. Spyrow), Diarra Adama Dujiminika Koné (aka Jimmy James), Arthur Oswald Koya (aka Thura), Prisca Melaine Koffi (aka Prisk), and Dali Eva Christelle Kouko.

Their song “Mon enfant” is available on YouTube .

UN Geneva correspondents as well as ILC-accredited journalists are welcome to attend the event.

Globally

Over 30 events will be taking place around the world in support of the 2016 World Day Against Child Labour, including In New York hosted by UNICEF and in Rome hosted by FAO.

Musical concerts will also be performed around the world as part of the Music Against Child Labour Initiative  (MACLI).

Media

Interviews by print, web or broadcast media can be scheduled in advance via the ILO Department of Communication: newsroom@ilo.org , +4122/799-7912.

Social media

Please support an end to child labour with the hashtag #childlabour

ILO’s Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ILO.ORG/  
ILO’s Twitter: https://twitter.com/ilo  

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Chile: Universidad Autónoma: “En 2070 la generación eléctrica en Chile será de un 70% renovable”

Santiago / 07 de junio de 2016 / Por:Max Duhalde / Fuente: http://www.biobiochile.cl

El Metro de Santiago, el Biotrén o el Merval alimentados principalmente por la energía solar o eólica debiera ser considerada una realidad factible de implementar durante los próximos años, especialmente si tanto autoridades como expertos coinciden en que se trata de un paso necesario para transitar desde la matriz actual contaminante hacia una basada en energías renovables no convencionales.

Para los más optimistas es “factible y eficiente” que Chile alcance una matriz de generación eléctrica cercana al 100% renovable dentro de los próximos 30 ó 40 años, mientras que algunos más cautos proyectan que hacia el 2035 al menos el 50% de la generación eléctrica nacional provendrá de energías renovables, y que recién en el 2050, ésta llegará al 70%.

Sin embargo, durante las últimas dos décadas la contaminación por CO2 en Chile ha crecido en más de 150%, muy por encima del promedio mundial (51,3%) y del conjunto de países de la OCDE (9,4%). De hecho, el 70% de nuestra matriz energética primaria depende de combustibles fósiles, altamente contaminantes y, por ende, de carácter antropogénico o de responsabilidad humana.

En este marco, la Dra. Ximena Zárate –docente investigadora de la Universidad Autónoma de Chile- desarrolla un FONDECYT de Iniciación que apunta a mejorar la eficiencia de una nueva generación de celdas fotovoltaicas que resultarían más económicas que las actuales y masificadas celdas solares de silicio.

“El role de colorantes con arquitectura Aceptor-puente-Donor en los mecanismos de foto-inyección electrónica en celdas solares sensibilizadas por colorantes. Relación estructura del colorante versus el mecanismo de inyección”, es el nombre del proyecto que lleva adelante como investigadora principal.

“Debido a los esfuerzos que actualmente se llevan a cabo por la búsqueda de alternativas a fuentes de energía no contaminantes, las celdas solares son una prometedora opción”, señala, precisando que “a partir de las investigaciones en mi tesis de doctorado y ahora en el proyecto Fondecyt, me he enfocado en el estudio de las propiedades químicas óptimas de moléculas que sean buenos constituyentes de las celdas solares sensibilizadas por colorantes y en el mecanismo de generación de la corriente eléctrica. Esto con el fin de evaluar parámetros claves que influencien la eficiencia de las celdas”.

Celdas sensibilizadas por colorantes

La investigadora asegura que “a raíz de la alta demanda actual de los dispositivos fotovoltáicos que emplean la luz solar como fuente de energía, este campo ha atraído mucha atención, por lo que el estudio de las celdas solares sensibilizadas por colorantes (DSSCs) o también llamadas celdas solares de Grätzel (apellido del químico suizo que las patentó), es un tópico de gran interés”.

En ese sentido, la Dra. Zárate explica que las DSSCs son dispositivos que realizan conversión de energía luminosa a corriente eléctrica, las cuales están principalmente constituidas por un electrodo de vidrio conductor transparente, cubierto con una película porosa de un semiconductor, en el cual los colorantes o tinturas son absorbidos, además de un contra electrodo, que es también un vidrio cubierto con un material conductor.

“Una parte importante de las celdas son los colorantes, los cuales son compuestos que deben presentar propiedades como estabilidad y absorción en el rango UV-Vis del espectro electromagnético. Por otra parte, la base del funcionamiento de una celda de Grätzel es el efecto fotoeléctrico, en el cual la energía de la radiación solar es empleada para llevar a cabo una transferencia de electrones desde el colorante hacia el semiconductor, proceso llamado foto-inyección”, nos detalla.

Al respecto, la investigadora explica que se ha estudiado la foto-inyección electrónica, encontrando que existen dos tipos de mecanismos: el indirecto (o tipo I) y el directo (o tipo II). Agrega que, en este contexto, se plantea estudiar con herramientas de la mecánica cuántica, las propiedades fotovoltaicas de diferentes familias de colorantes con arquitectura Aceptor-puente-Donor y evaluar cuáles propiedades estructurales conducen a estas moléculas a presentar inyección del tipo I ó del tipo II.

Por ello, el propósito de su investigación es que, “a partir del análisis de las propiedades estructurales y fotoquímicas de los colorantes y el mecanismo de foto-inyección electrónica, busca comprender el hecho de qué colorantes toman un mecanismo de inyección específico”, ya que “el objetivo es proporcionar un medio simple que correlacione la estructura del colorante con los mecanismos de inyección, para así poder predecir la ruta de generación de corriente que mostrará una molécula, y de esta manera profundizar en mejorar la eficiencia de la foto conversión”.

Ximena Zárate Bonilla es Químico por la Universidad Industrial de Santander, Colombia, y Doctora en Fisicoquímica Molecular de la Universidad Andrés Bello. Actualmente, se desempeña como docente investigadora del Instituto de Ciencias Químicas Aplicadas, perteneciente a la Facultad de Ingeniería de la Universidad Autónoma de Chile.

Fuente noticia: http://www.biobiochile.cl/noticias/sociedad/medio-ambiente/2016/06/07/universidad-autonoma-en-2070-la-generacion-electrica-en-chile-sera-de-un-70-renovable.shtml

Foto: http://recursosnaturales-ceadl.blogspot.com/2016/03/energia-alternativa-fuentes-no.html

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