Refine search
Results 1-4 of 4
How fair is workfare? gender, public works, and employment in rural Ethiopia Full text
Sakellariou, Chris | Yohannes, Yisehac | Quisumbing, Agnes R.
The authors use the Ethiopian Rural Household Survey to examine the gender dimensions of public works. They use three rounds of a panel conducted in 1994-95 to explore the determinants of participation in, days worked, wages, and earnings from wage labor, food-for-work (FFW), and self-employment. Then they analyze public works data collected in 1997, together with program data collected in 2003. FFW operates in a similar fashion with other labor markets in Ethiopia where female participation is low. Gender differences are important in the participation decision, but operate differently in different types of labor markets. Better-educated women are more likely to participate in the wage labor market, while higher livestock holdings diminish participation more for women. Females with more schooling are also more likely to participate in FFW. Mens and womens participation in FFW and self-employment responds differently to household and community shocks. After controlling for selection in which gender plays an important role, gender disadvantages in the wage labor market and FFW are insignificant. Returns to schooling and height are consistently positive in both wage labor and FFW, suggesting returns to human capital investment, even in the low-skill labor markets of rural Ethiopia. Program characteristics significantly affect participation, with differential effects on men and women. Participation, days worked, wages, and earnings vary according to the type of project. Relative to infrastructure projects, water, social services, and other projects decrease participation probabilities. Distance has a strong negative effect on womens participation relative to mens.<BR>
Show more [+] Less [-]Low-cost water-lifting from groundwater sources: a comparison of the EMAS Pump with the Rope Pump | Dispositifs à faible coût d’extraction d’eau souterraine: une comparaison de la Pompe EMAS avec la Pompe à Corde Extracción de agua a bajo costo a partir de fuentes de agua subterránea: una comparación entre la Bomba EMAS y la Bomba de Mecate 地下水源的低成本提水:EMAS泵和Rope泵的比较 Extração de água de baixo custo a partir de fontes de água subterrânea: comparação da Bomba EMAS com a Bomba de Mecate Full text
2017
MacCarthy, Michael F. | Carpenter, Jacob D. | Mihelcic, James R.
In sub-Saharan Africa, low-cost groundwater supply systems offer great opportunities for the current unserved population of >300 million to access drinking water. A comparative study was performed in Uganda of the EMAS Pump (designed by Escuela Móvil Aguas y Saneamiento Básico) with the trade-named Rope Pump, two low-cost manual water-lifting devices appropriate to pumping from shallow groundwater sources. Pumping rates, energy expended, material costs, and construction requirements were analyzed. Focus was on low-cost application for use in shallow groundwater systems at the household level in developing countries, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa. The study site was northern Uganda, with testing performed at several drilled boreholes. Two variants of each pump were tested by a male and female user, pumping from multiple static water-level depths ranging from 5 to 28 m. Results demonstrated the most common version of the EMAS Pump to perform similarly to the comparable version of the Rope Pump in terms of average pumping rate at depth range 5 to 18 m (93–111%), but less so at deeper depths (63–85%). Normalized pumping rates (considering energy expended) accentuated differences between these versions of the EMAS Pump and Rope Pump (47–97%). Cost of materials to construct the EMAS Pump were 21–60% those of the Rope Pump, and EMAS Pump construction requirements were also less. Based on the assessed factors, it is concluded that the EMAS Pump has potential for success in “self-supply” groundwater systems in sub-Saharan Africa and is particularly appropriate to link with low-cost shallow groundwater sources.
Show more [+] Less [-]Biometric analysis of "Perro de agua espanol" in two areas of different weather from Spain
1994
Ibanez, M. | Guerra, J. (Universidad Complutense de Madrid (Espana). Facultad de Veterinaria)
Se ha realizado un estudio biometrico con 121 hembras de la raza "Perro de agua espanol" en dos zonas geograficas distintas de la Peninsula Iberica, afectadas por dos climatologias diferentes. Una de tipo Atlantico en el Norte y otra de tipo Mediterraneo en el Sur. Los resultados fueron tratados estadisticamente comparando las dos zonas estudiadas, observando diferencias significativas (P0,05) en las medidas corporales, asi como en el indice cefalico, que se decantan claramente hacia las hembras de la zona Norte
Show more [+] Less [-]Efeito da qualidade da água no ciclo de vida e na atracao para oviposicao de Aedes aegypti (L.) (Diptera: Culicidae) | The effect of water quality in the life cycle and in the attraction for the egg oviposition of Aedes aegypti (L.) (Diptera: Culicidae) Full text
2010
Beserra, Eduardo B. | Fernandes, Carlos R.M. | Sousa, José T. de | Freitas, Eraldo M de | Santos, Keliana D.
The present research aimed at evaluating the influence of the water quality in the life cycle and attraction of Aedes aegypti (L.) females to oviposit using different sources of water (raw sewage, effluent of UASB reactor, effluent of polishing lagoon, effluent of anaerobic filter, rain water and de-chlorinated water). The immature development time and survivorship were evaluated on a daily basis in two distinct feeding systems (with and without food). The quality of the water was shown to affect the egg and larval stages, but not the pupal or the adult. In the absence of food, no development was observed in rain water and de-chlorinated water. Immature development was faster in water sources from raw sewage, although with the lowest survivorship (37.3%). Free-choice tests indicated that females preferred to lay most of their eggs on water collected from the effluent of a UASB reactor, achieving the highest oviposition activity index (OAI) of 0.57. In non-choice tests, females laid larger batches of eggs in water collected from anaerobic filters (204.8 eggs), with the lowest number of eggs being laid on de-chlorinated water (37.3 eggs). It can be concluded that A. aegypti does not demonstrate any particular preference to lay eggs on clean water. This has serious implications for developing strategies to manage populations of this important vector in urban areas as it was shown to lay eggs and successfully develop on several different sources of water.
Show more [+] Less [-]