scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Institution

Durham University

EducationDurham, United Kingdom
About: Durham University is a education organization based out in Durham, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Galaxy. The organization has 39385 authors who have published 82311 publications receiving 3110994 citations. The organization is also known as: University of Durham & Gallery of Durham University.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors evaluate the assets that cities and metropolitan regions provide in an era of globalization and develop an alternative perspective on the city based on the idea that contemporary urban life is founded on the heterogeneity of economic, social, cultural and institutional assets.
Abstract: As debates on globalization have progressed from an earlier phase in which commentators saw the intensification of world-scale flows and processes as the negation of local identities and autonomies, the city has been ‘rediscovered’ as the powerhouse of the globalized economy. Against the view that questions, for example, the continued specificity of the urban in an era increasingly mediated by locationally liberating, advanced telecommunications and rapid transport networks, some strands of urban research assert that cities are becoming more important as the key creative, control and cultural centres within globalizing economic, cultural and social dynamics. Building on these strands, this paper evaluates the assets that cities and metropolitan regions provide in an era of globalization. It attempts to develop an alternative perspective on the city based on the idea that contemporary urban life is founded on the heterogeneity of economic, social, cultural and institutional assets, and concludes by using this perspective to develop implications for urban policy and the quest for social and territorial justice.

484 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Several major enhancements have been included into VBFNLO, including the implementation of anomalous gauge boson couplings has been extended to all triboson and VBF $VVjj processes, and semileptonic decay modes of the vector bosons are now available for many processes.

482 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Gordon MacLeod1
TL;DR: In this article, a series of future theoretical directions for a geopolitically sensitive regional research agenda, drawing on recent thinking from the new regional geography, globalization and the politics of scale, institutional-relational state theory and the regulation approach, are presented.
Abstract: Amid the near frenzied exaltation of economic globalization and a purported decline of the nation state, a range of subnational regional economies and urban metropoles are increasingly being canonized as the paradigmatic exemplars of wealth creation. Indeed, across many of the advanced developed countries a whole host of academics, consultants, influential commentators, politicians and bourgeois interest groups are readily invoking the region to be the appropriate site for regulating global capitalism. In a recent article in IJURR, though, John Lovering disputes this emerging New Regionalism, viewing it to be seriously compromised by several practical and theoretical inadequacies. This article has two principal aims. First, and while sympathetic to the general tenor of Lovering’s critique, it offers a rejoinder through some sobering reflections on what might be recovered from the range of New Regionalist perspectives currently vying for attention within critical studies of regional development. Second, it presents a series of future theoretical directions for a geopolitically sensitive regional research agenda, drawing on recent thinking from the new regional geography, globalization and the politics of scale, institutional-relational state theory and the regulation approach. An argument is made that a synthesis of these perspectives might intensify our understanding of the social and political construction of regions, the uneven geography of growth, and the moments of re-scaled regionalized state power that now enframe the process of economic governance.

482 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Meta‐analysis shows a significant relationship between obesity and increased odds of caesarean and instrumental deliveries, haemorrhage, infection, longer duration of hospital stay and increased neonatal intensive care requirement.
Abstract: Obesity is rising in the obstetric population, yet there is an absence of services and guidance for the management of maternal obesity. This systematic review aimed to investigate relationships between obesity and impact on obstetric care. Literature was systematically searched for cohort studies of pregnant women with anthropometric measurements recorded within 16-weeks gestation, followed up for the term of the pregnancy, with at least one obese and one comparison group. Two researchers independently data-extracted and quality-assessed each included study. Outcome measures were those that directly or indirectly impacted on maternity resources. Primary outcomes included instrumental delivery, caesarean delivery, duration of hospital stay, neonatal intensive care, neonatal trauma, haemorrhage, infection and 3rd/4th degree tears. Meta-analysis shows a significant relationship between obesity and increased odds of caesarean and instrumental deliveries, haemorrhage, infection, longer duration of hospital stay and increased neonatal intensive care requirement. Maternal obesity significantly contributes to a poorer prognosis for mother and baby during delivery and in the immediate post-partum period. National clinical guidelines for management of obese pregnant women, and public health interventions to help safeguard the health of mothers and their babies are urgently required.

482 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The recent, dramatic retreat of many outlet glaciers of the Greenland ice sheet has raised concerns over Greenland's contribution to future sea-level rise as discussed by the authors, but the recent rates of mass loss in Greenland's outlet glaciers are transient and should not be extrapolated into the future.
Abstract: The recent, dramatic retreat of many outlet glaciers of the Greenland ice sheet has raised concerns over Greenland’s contribution to future sea-level rise. Simulations with a numerical ice-flow model indicate that the recent rates of mass loss in Greenland’s outlet glaciers are transient and should not be extrapolated into the future.

482 citations


Authors

Showing all 39730 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Eugene Braunwald2301711264576
Robert J. Lefkowitz214860147995
David J. Hunter2131836207050
Francis S. Collins196743250787
Robert M. Califf1961561167961
Martin White1962038232387
Eric J. Topol1931373151025
David J. Schlegel193600193972
Simon D. M. White189795231645
George Efstathiou187637156228
Terrie E. Moffitt182594150609
John A. Rogers1771341127390
Avshalom Caspi170524113583
Richard S. Ellis169882136011
Rob Ivison1661161102314
Network Information
Related Institutions (5)
University of Oxford
258.1K papers, 12.9M citations

94% related

University of Cambridge
282.2K papers, 14.4M citations

94% related

Imperial College London
209.1K papers, 9.3M citations

93% related

University College London
210.6K papers, 9.8M citations

92% related

University of Chicago
160K papers, 9.6M citations

92% related

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023182
2022555
20214,695
20204,628
20194,239
20184,047