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1.
International Journal ; 2022.
Article in English | Web of Science | ID: covidwho-2005552

ABSTRACT

Although traditionally viewed as paragons of international cooperation, research institutions and universities are becoming venues for hostile foreign activity. Research security (RS) refers to the measures that protect the inputs, processes, and products that are part of scientific research, inquiry, and discovery. While RS traces its roots to the 1940s, global economic and research and development competition, the nexus between dual-use technology and military power, a cluster of newly emerging industries, scientific responses to the COVID-19 pandemic, and societal shifts towards digitization, combine to challenge RS in unique ways. With an eye on safeguarding traditional notions of open science, our article refurbishes Canadian RS within the context of emerging challenges and international responses. Detailing the legal, extralegal, illegal, and other ways in which RS is threatened, we use a comparative assessment of emerging responses in the US, Australia, Japan, and Israel to draw lessons for Canada.

2.
Poblacion Y Salud En Mesoamerica ; 19(2):29, 2022.
Article in Spanish | Web of Science | ID: covidwho-1614360

ABSTRACT

Introduction: We analyze the relation between work and health drawing on the labor experiences of adult men who reside in a working-class neighborhood located in the periphery of Buenos Aires City. More specifically, we analyze how precarious jobs impact on their psychophysical health through work conditions that expose them to diverse risks and deprivations for quality of life and health care. Methodology: Data come from qualitative, in-depth, interviews that we conducted with adult men as part of a larger study on health care with residents of the neighborhood. Results: Precarious jobs affect health in various ways. Some of the interviewees have been exposed to physical and psychosocial risks due to the work conditions and environment in the workplace. The negative consequences that precarious jobs have for quality of life are also salient, by limiting their capability to plan ahead, organize everyday life and develop self-care practices. Conclusions: We highlight the importance of considering precarious work as a social determinant of health, since it is a multidimensional trait that helps to analyze its negative consequences on working-class men. We also point to the adverse consequences for health of precarious jobs throughout the life-course, in part, due to age-based chronic conditions but also due to the cumulative disadvantages produced by precarious and vulnerable work trajectories.

3.
Poblacion y Sociedad ; 28(2):138-167, 2021.
Article in Spanish | Scopus | ID: covidwho-1599756

ABSTRACT

The COVID-19 pandemic has dislocated work routines within health facilities due to new public health priorities. In circumstances characterized by uncertainty and risk in the face of an unknown disease and the constantly changing care protocols, questions arise about how members of healthcare teams have experienced these changes. We analyze the experience of health workers in a primary care center in the periphery of Buenos Aires during 2020, and describe the coordination strategies they developed to achieve greater anticipation and safety in the workplace. © 2021 Grupo Editor Yocavil. All rights reserved.

4.
adolescence |childhood |Pandemic ; 2022(Revista Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales, Ninez y Juventud)
Article in Spanish | WHO COVID | ID: covidwho-1863316

ABSTRACT

The advent of the COVID-19 pandemic and the preventive and compulsory social confinement established as a response by the national government of Argentina had an impact on the daily lives and subjectivities of children and adolescents. The authors carried out a qualitative exploratory-descriptive study that focused on the construction of meanings and emotions in relation to the pandemic, lock-downs, school experiences and care practices. A total of 68 children and adolescents from four different jurisdictions in Argentina participated in the study between March and June 2020. The authors collected oral narratives, photos, drawings and videos produced by the children and adolescents. The participants reinvented ways of bonding, playing and inhabiting spaces, establishing themselves as ethical-political subjects who are capable of caring and transforming the roles assigned to them by society despite worsening situations of inequality, fear of contagion and loss of loved ones. © 2022 Women's Health Care. All rights reserved.

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