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Displaying Results 1 - 25 of 259 on page 1 of 11
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'I've changed so much within a year': care leavers' perspectives on the aftercare planning process
(2019)
Mayock, Paula; Glynn, Natalie
'I've changed so much within a year': care leavers' perspectives on the aftercare planning process
(2019)
Mayock, Paula; Glynn, Natalie
Abstract:
Increasing the participation of children and young people in matters related to their care and aftercare is regarded as international best practice. While research demonstrates that children and young people benefit from involvement in care-related processes, participation continues to pose challenges for social work practitioners. Studies to date have tended to focus on in-care engagement and, consequently, relatively little is known about the experiences of young people as they age out of care, particularly in terms of their perceived involvement and engagement in the planning-to-leave care process. This paper examines young people?s experiences of the aftercare planning process in Ireland drawing on data from the first phase of a qualitative longitudinal study of young people leaving care. Sixteen participants were recruited at baseline and interviewed in-depth. The approach to interviewing was flexible and encouraged participants to talk about their experiences of care and the a...
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/93024
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'Recovery' in the real world: service user experiences of mental health service use and recommendations for change 20 years on from a First Episode Psychosis
(2018)
O'KEEFFE, DONAL PADRAIG; Sheridan, Ann; Kelly, Aine; Doyle, Roisin; Madigan, Kevin...
'Recovery' in the real world: service user experiences of mental health service use and recommendations for change 20 years on from a First Episode Psychosis
(2018)
O'KEEFFE, DONAL PADRAIG; Sheridan, Ann; Kelly, Aine; Doyle, Roisin; Madigan, Kevin; Lawlor, Elizabeth; Clarke, Mary
Abstract:
Little is known about how recovery oriented policy and legislative changes influence service users? perceptions of mental health care over time. Although the recovery approach is endorsed in many countries, qualitative research examining its impact on service use experiences has been lacking. This study aimed to explore this impact as well as experiences of service utilisation and suggestions for change with people diagnosed with a First Episode Psychosis between 1995 and 1999. Participants had used services during the 10 year period prior to, and 10 years post, policy and legislative shifts to the recovery approach. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 10 participants who met criteria for ?full functional recovery? and 10 who did not. Data were analysed using Thematic Networks Analysis to develop Basic, Organising, and Global Themes. Over time, recovered participants perceived an improvement in service quality through the ?humanising? of treatment and non-recovered partic...
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/91783
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'Value'ing children differently? Migrant children in education
(2015)
Devine, Dympna
'Value'ing children differently? Migrant children in education
(2015)
Devine, Dympna
Abstract:
This paper considers dilemmas around 'value' and the 'valuing' of children and childhood(s) in schools. I argue that in neo-liberal contexts, processes of children's identity making become aligned with the idea of the corporate citizen – value and worth derived from the capacity to produce, excel, self-regulate as well as consume in an ever expanding marketplace. Taking the positioning of migrant children as an exemplar, the paper explores the tensions in pedagogic practices between the valuing of migrant children and their 'added value' that is communicated through spheres of re/action in schools. The paper argues for education that is radical and strategic; careful and nurturing. In its absence, being valued differently involves reproducing negative patterns in a circular dialectical loop that naturalises under achievement of migrant children and other children at risk, to deficiencies in culture and identity.
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/6405
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‘blessed are the young, for they shall inherit the national debt’: solidarity between generations in the irish crisis
(2018)
Carney, Gemma M.; Scharf, Thomas; Timonen, Virpi; Conlon, Catherine
‘blessed are the young, for they shall inherit the national debt’: solidarity between generations in the irish crisis
(2018)
Carney, Gemma M.; Scharf, Thomas; Timonen, Virpi; Conlon, Catherine
Abstract:
Ireland has gained a reputation for peaceable acceptance of austerity following a European Union/International Monetary Fund bailout in 2010. While proponents of austerity praise Ireland's stoicism, critics of global capitalism argue that individuals and families are paying for mistakes made by elites. However, little is known about the strategies people adopt to cope with cutbacks to welfare entitlements. Drawing on a study of solidarity between generations living in Ireland in 2011-12, this article explores the lived experience of economic crisis and austerity. One hundred interviews with people of all ages and socio-economic backgrounds are analysed using constructivist grounded theory. Data show how austerity impacts differentially according to socio-economic status. While solidarity between generations leads to re-distribution of resources within families, providing some security for people with access to family resources, it reinforces inequality at societal level. We con...
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/10699
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"Piketty is a genius, but…": An analysis of journalistic delegitimation of Thomas Piketty’s economic policy proposals
(2018)
Rieder, Maria; Theine, Hendrik
"Piketty is a genius, but…": An analysis of journalistic delegitimation of Thomas Piketty’s economic policy proposals
(2018)
Rieder, Maria; Theine, Hendrik
Abstract:
n/a
Please see http://hdl.handle.net/10344/7675 for the more recent version of this paper
.The continuous rise of socio-economic inequality over the past decades with its connected political outcomes such as the Brexit vote in the UK, and the election of Donald Trump are currently a matter of intense debate both in academia and in journalism. A significant sign of the heightened interest was the surprise popularity of Thomas Piketty’s Capital in the 21st Century. The book reached the top of the bestseller lists and was described as a ‘media sensation’ and Piketty himself as a ‘rock star economist’. This paper, drawing from a major international and cross-disciplinary study, investigates the print media treatment in four European countries of economic policy proposals presented in Capital. Applying social semiotic and critical discourse analysis, we specifically focus on articles which are in disagreement with these proposals and identify five categories of counterarguments ...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/6972
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21st century fisheries management: a spatio-temporally explicit tariff-based approach combining multiple drivers and incentivising responsible fishing
(2018)
Kraak, S. B. M.; Reid, D. G.; Gerritsen, H. D.; Kelly, C. J.; Fitzpatrick, M.; Codling,...
21st century fisheries management: a spatio-temporally explicit tariff-based approach combining multiple drivers and incentivising responsible fishing
(2018)
Kraak, S. B. M.; Reid, D. G.; Gerritsen, H. D.; Kelly, C. J.; Fitzpatrick, M.; Codling, E. A.; Rogan, E.
Abstract:
Traditionally fisheries management has focused on biomass and mortality, expressed annually and across large management units. However, because fish abundance varies at much smaller spatio-temporal scales, fishing mortality can potentially be controlled more effectively if managed at finer scale. The ecosystem approach requires more indicators at finer scales as well. Incorporating ecosystem targets would need additional management tools with potentially conflicting results. We present a simple, integrated, management approach that provides incentives for "good behaviour". Fishers would be given a number of fishing-impact credits, called real-time incentives ( RTIs), to spend according to spatio-temporally varying tariffs per fishing day. RTI quotas and tariffs could be based on commercial stocks and ecosystem targets. Fishers could choose how to spend their RTIs, e. g. by limited fishing in highcatch or sensitive areas or by fishing longer in lower-catch o...
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/12312
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A deliberative approach to valuation and precautionary management of cold water corals in norway
(2018)
Falk-Andersson, Jannike; Foley, Naomi S; Armstrong, Claire W; van den Hove, Sybille; va...
A deliberative approach to valuation and precautionary management of cold water corals in norway
(2018)
Falk-Andersson, Jannike; Foley, Naomi S; Armstrong, Claire W; van den Hove, Sybille; van Rensburg, Thomas M; Tinch, Rob
Abstract:
This paper explores management challenges in relation to human impacts on cold water corals (CWC) in Norway. CWC are a slow growing organism about which there is uncertainty regarding distribution and values. We discuss area closures to protect this environmental public good against destructive fishing practices. Focus groups were combined with questionnaires to inform precautionary management measures that can be used to protect known CWC as well as areas where CWC are thought to exist. The research finds that respondents believe CWC are valuable and should be protected, but that this requires information on their presence and importance. Furthermore, priorities for protecting CWC differed between group discussions and the questionnaire responses. Use-values, particularly habitat supporting fish production, dominated the focus group discussions, while non-use and intrinsic values were emphasised in the questionnaire responses. Respondents rejected the use of the precautionary measu...
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/11399
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A design research framework to inform policy in Irish higher education
(2015)
Maher, Carmel (Design Core/Institute of Technology Carlow); de Eyto, Adam (University o...
A design research framework to inform policy in Irish higher education
(2015)
Maher, Carmel (Design Core/Institute of Technology Carlow); de Eyto, Adam (University of Limerick); Hadfield, Mark (Bournemouth University); Hutchings, Maggie (Bournemouth University)
Abstract:
The landscape of higher education in Ireland is changing. In 2011, the National Strategy for Higher Education to 2030 was launched providing a blueprint for its future development. Part of this ongoing process will see the implementation of performance funding in the sector. Performance funding directly links state institutional funding to institutional performance as indicated by performance outcomes in key predetermined areas. This may impact significantly on design research funding and inquiry in higher education. As a practice which has developed to a significant extent outside of the university; design values, methodologies and requisites fundamental to its progression do not always align well with those of traditional academia and may not be reflected within the current strategic discussions. The focus of this research article is the implementation of performance funding within the Irish higher education sector, and its potential impact on design research funding and devel...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/5100
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A Discursive Institutionalist Approach to Understanding Policy Change: Ireland and Mexico in the 1980s
(2015)
Hogan, John; O'Rourke, Brendan
A Discursive Institutionalist Approach to Understanding Policy Change: Ireland and Mexico in the 1980s
(2015)
Hogan, John; O'Rourke, Brendan
Abstract:
Employing the critical juncture theory (CJT), a discursive institutionalist approach, this paper examines the nature of the changes to Irish industrial policy, and Mexican macroeconomic policy, during early the 1980s, a time when both countries went through economic crises. Did these policy changes constitute transformations, or were they simply continuations of previously established policy pathways? The CJT consists of three elements – economic crisis, ideational change, and the nature of the policy change – that must be identified for us to be able to declare with some certainty if the policy changes constituted critical junctures. Our findings will help explain why Irish industrial policy did not undergo a radical transformation during the 1980s, while Mexican macroeconomic policy underwent major change in that decade.
https://arrow.dit.ie/buschmarcon/130
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A Discursive Institutionalist Approach to Understanding the Changes to the Irish Social Partnership Policy After 2008
(2016)
Hogan, John; Timoney, Nicola
A Discursive Institutionalist Approach to Understanding the Changes to the Irish Social Partnership Policy After 2008
(2016)
Hogan, John; Timoney, Nicola
Abstract:
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Employing the critical juncture theory (CJT), a discursive institutionalist approach, this paper examines the nature of the changes to social partnership policy at the end of the decade of the 2000s. Did these changes constitute a transformation in social partnership policy, or were they a continuation of a previously established policy pathway? The CJT consists of three elements ? economic crisis, ideational change, and the nature of the policy change ? that must be identified for us to be able to declare with some certainty if the changes to social partnership policy constituted a critical juncture. In this context, ideational change is very important, constituting the intermediating factor between a crisis and the subsequent nature of the policy change. Our findings will help explain the nature of the changes to social partnership policy at this time.
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/79410
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A Discursive Institutionalist Approach to Understanding the Changes to the Irish Social Partnership Policy After 2008.
(2017)
Hogan, John; Timoney, Nicola A
A Discursive Institutionalist Approach to Understanding the Changes to the Irish Social Partnership Policy After 2008.
(2017)
Hogan, John; Timoney, Nicola A
Abstract:
Employing the critical juncture theory (CJT), a discursive institutionalist approach, this paper examines the nature of the changes to social partnership policy at the end of the decade of the 2000s. Did these changes constitute a transformation in social partnership policy, or were they a continuation of a previously established policy pathway? The CJT consists of three elements – economic crisis, ideational change, and the nature of the policy change – that must be identified for us to be able to declare with some certainty if the changes to social partnership policy constituted a critical juncture. In this context, ideational change is very important, constituting the intermediating factor between a crisis and the subsequent nature of the policy change. Our findings will help explain the nature of the changes to social partnership policy at this time.
https://arrow.dit.ie/buschgraart/12
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A framework for analysis of the inclusion of human rights and vulnerable groups in health policies
(2011)
MANNAN, HASHEEM; MacLachlan, Malcolm; McVeigh, Joanne
A framework for analysis of the inclusion of human rights and vulnerable groups in health policies
(2011)
MANNAN, HASHEEM; MacLachlan, Malcolm; McVeigh, Joanne
Abstract:
Ensuring that health policies uphold core concepts of human rights and are inclusive of vulnerable groups are imperative aspects of providing equity in health care, and of realizing the United Nations? call for Health for All. We outline the process of extensive consultation undertaken across countries and stakeholders culminating in the development of EquiFrame, in conjunction with its associated definitions of core concepts of human rights and vulnerability. EquiFrame is a systematic policy analysis framework that assesses the degree to which 21 core concepts of human rights and 12 vulnerable groups are mentioned and endorsed in health policy documents. We illustrate the scope of the framework by reporting the results of its application to two health policy documents from (Northern) Sudan: the rather generalist Health Policy of (Northern) Sudan, and the more specific National Drug Policy of (Northern) Sudan. We outline some limitations of the framework and highlight issues for con...
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/63912
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A mapping of entrepreneurship and innovation policy in Ireland.
(2008)
Cooney, Thomas
A mapping of entrepreneurship and innovation policy in Ireland.
(2008)
Cooney, Thomas
Abstract:
The objective at the centre of the IPREG (Innovative Policy Research for Economic Growth) project is the facilitation of a " network of networks" needed to address one of Europe's critical issues-empirically relevant research on growth policy. IPREG is an established "network of networks" encompassing researchers, policy makers and business people in twelve countries: Belgium, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Norway, Poland, Spain, Sweden and UK. The initial stage of the project was to map out the current policies and actors in each country and to develop a comprehensiveness index based upon interviews and survey feedback. This work would then facilitate the diverse debates that occur regarding the production and evaluation of research on policy and policy making in different contexts within Europe. It was envisaged that the scientific impact of the project actions would be the construction of a tanglible knowledge base on the size...
https://arrow.dit.ie/imerep/3
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A Meaningful Housing Policy Would Deal with Defautling Landlords and At-Risk Tenants
(2013)
Sirr, Lorcan; Dunne, Tom
A Meaningful Housing Policy Would Deal with Defautling Landlords and At-Risk Tenants
(2013)
Sirr, Lorcan; Dunne, Tom
https://arrow.dit.ie/beschrecmed/19
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A qualitative systematic review of studies using the normalization process theory to research implementation processes
(2014)
McEvoy, Rachel Margaret; Ballini, Luciana; Maltoni, Susanna; O'Donnell, Catherine ...
A qualitative systematic review of studies using the normalization process theory to research implementation processes
(2014)
McEvoy, Rachel Margaret; Ballini, Luciana; Maltoni, Susanna; O'Donnell, Catherine A.; Mair, Frances; MacFarlane, Anne E.
Abstract:
Background: There is a well-recognized need for greater use of theory to address research translational gaps. Normalization Process Theory (NPT) provides a set of sociological tools to understand and explain the social processes through which new or modified practices of thinking, enacting, and organizing work are implemented, embedded, and integrated in healthcare and other organizational settings. This review of NPT offers readers the opportunity to observe how, and in what areas, a particular theoretical approach to implementation is being used. In this article we review the literature on NPT in order to understand what interventions NPT is being used to analyze, how NPT is being operationalized, and the reported benefits, if any, of using NPT. Methods: Using a framework analysis approach, we conducted a qualitative systematic review of peer-reviewed literature using NPT. We searched 12 electronic databases and all citations linked to six key NPT development papers. Grey literatu...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/3752
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A Review of Literature and International Practice on National and Voluntary Registers for Sign Language Interpreters
(2017)
LEESON, LORRAINE
A Review of Literature and International Practice on National and Voluntary Registers for Sign Language Interpreters
(2017)
LEESON, LORRAINE
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/79791
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A Systems Approach to Policy Evaluation
(2017)
CAFFREY, LOUISE
A Systems Approach to Policy Evaluation
(2017)
CAFFREY, LOUISE
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/81953
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Acknowledging teacher professionalism in Ireland: the case for a chartered teacher initiative
(2013)
Lynch, Raymond; Hennessy, Jennifer; Gleeson, Jim
Acknowledging teacher professionalism in Ireland: the case for a chartered teacher initiative
(2013)
Lynch, Raymond; Hennessy, Jennifer; Gleeson, Jim
Abstract:
This paper presents an argument for the development of an Irish Chartered Teacher initiative which would acknowledge and accredit the professionalism of experienced and accomplished teachers. It begins by examining the current position of teaching as a profession based on findings from Irish and international research studies. Issues surrounding the accreditation of accomplished teachers are considered through the examination of a range of Chartered Teacher initiatives. Finally, the potential opportunities and challenges of accrediting teacher professionalism in Ireland are discussed with reference to the continuum of teacher education and recent developments introduced by the Teaching Council of Ireland.
ACCEPTED
peer-reviewed
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/5373
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Adherence to the infant vitamin D supplementation policy in Ireland
(2020)
Hemmingway, Andrea; Fisher, Dawn; Berkery, Teresa; Murray, Deirdre M.; Kiely Mairead E.
Adherence to the infant vitamin D supplementation policy in Ireland
(2020)
Hemmingway, Andrea; Fisher, Dawn; Berkery, Teresa; Murray, Deirdre M.; Kiely Mairead E.
Abstract:
Purpose: From September 2010 until November 2019, Ireland’s infant vitamin D supplementation policy recommended administration of 5 μg/day of vitamin D3 from birth to 12 months to all infants, regardless of feeding method. This study aims to examine policy adherence. Methods: In the prospective COMBINE birth cohort study (recruited 2015–2017), detailed longitudinal supplement data were examined in 364 infants across the first year of life, according to product type, dose, frequency, and duration. Vitamin D supplement use at 2, 6, and 12 months in COMBINE was compared with the BASELINE cohort (recruited 2008–2011, n = 1949). Results: In COMBINE, 92% of infants initiated supplementation at birth. The median supplementation duration was 51 (40, 52) weeks, with a range of 3–52 weeks. While supplementing, most parents (92%) used an exclusive vitamin D supplement as recommended and 88% gave 5 µg/day. Half (51%) gave vitamin D daily and a further 33% supplemented at least 3–6 times/week. O...
http://hdl.handle.net/10468/10307
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Agriculture, Rural Development and Potential for a ‘Middle Agriculture’ in Ireland
(2014)
Macken-Walsh, Aine
Agriculture, Rural Development and Potential for a ‘Middle Agriculture’ in Ireland
(2014)
Macken-Walsh, Aine
Abstract:
Working Paper
This paper gives a brief overview of current farm viability in Ireland and summarises some of the main ‘barriers’ to farm families’ engagement in contemporary rural development programmes. Against this backdrop, the paper discusses the potential of a middle agriculture model for rural development. The capacity of such a model to address some of the economic, social and cultural predicaments of Irish family farms is outlined. The potential of the model is also discussed in terms of how it may respond to contemporary EC rural development policy priority objectives.
http://hdl.handle.net/11019/690
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All-Ireland Health Data Inventory. Part 1: Metadata for key data sources, version 1.0
(2007)
Institute of Public Health in Ireland
All-Ireland Health Data Inventory. Part 1: Metadata for key data sources, version 1.0
(2007)
Institute of Public Health in Ireland
Abstract:
The All-Ireland Health Data Inventory. Part 1 is a catalogue of key sources of health data in the Republic and Northern Ireland. It includes relevant datasets from the major information reviews, conducted in the North and South, in the past few years. Information is essential for informed decision making and service provision. This inventory draws together information sources to facilitate such decision making. The inventory is intended as a resource for health professionals, researchers and the general public, providing the first phase of a ‘one-stop’ catalogue of health data. The datasets have been catalogued using an expanding numbering system which will allow for the inclusion of future resources. The Institute of Public Health in Ireland is in the process of expanding the Inventory to include further data sources.
http://dx.doi.org/10.14655/20070006
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All-Ireland Health Data Inventory. Part 1: Metadata for key data sources, version 1.0
(2007)
Institute of Public Health in Ireland
All-Ireland Health Data Inventory. Part 1: Metadata for key data sources, version 1.0
(2007)
Institute of Public Health in Ireland
Abstract:
The All-Ireland Health Data Inventory. Part 1 is a catalogue of key sources of health data in the Republic and Northern Ireland. It includes relevant datasets from the major information reviews, conducted in the North and South, in the past few years. Information is essential for informed decision making and service provision. This inventory draws together information sources to facilitate such decision making. The inventory is intended as a resource for health professionals, researchers and the general public, providing the first phase of a ‘one-stop’ catalogue of health data. The datasets have been catalogued using an expanding numbering system which will allow for the inclusion of future resources. The Institute of Public Health in Ireland is in the process of expanding the Inventory to include further data sources.
http://dx.doi.org/10.14655/20070006
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An Anthology of Enterprise Policy in Ireland
(2007)
Gorman, William; Cooney, Thomas
An Anthology of Enterprise Policy in Ireland
(2007)
Gorman, William; Cooney, Thomas
Abstract:
Ruane and Gorg (1996: 37) remarked that 'any careful comparison of the Irish economy with other economies in the European Union immediately focuses on two key features of Ireland's pattern of industrial development: the enormous significance of foreign direct investment (FDI) and the very high export ratios in the Irish manufacturing sector among foreign-owned companies. These two features have not developed by accident, but are directly related to the industrial strategy which Ireland has pursued over the past forty years, namely, of promoting export-led growth in Irish manufacturing through various incentives and of encouraging foreign companies to establish manufacturing plants in Ireland, producing specifically for export markets'.
https://arrow.dit.ie/buschmarart/40
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An assessment of bird species within irish agricultural landscapes using the field boundary evaluation and grading system
(2018)
McMahon, Barry J.; Sheridan, Helen; Kinsella, Anne; Purvis, Gordon
An assessment of bird species within irish agricultural landscapes using the field boundary evaluation and grading system
(2018)
McMahon, Barry J.; Sheridan, Helen; Kinsella, Anne; Purvis, Gordon
Abstract:
Capsule The Field Boundary Evaluation and Grading System (FBEGS) is a useful predictor of bird populations found in field boundaries located in southeast Ireland. Aims To assess the potential of FBEGS to evaluate the ecological quality of field boundaries in agricultural ecosystems and as a tool for the measurement of bird populations within field boundaries. Methods Surveys of bird populations were made in selected field boundaries on 50 farms in southeast Ireland in winter and during the breeding season. FBEGS surveys were also carried out on field boundaries to assess ecological quality. GLMs were fitted to assess the utility of the FBEGS Index as a predictor of bird populations. Results The FBEGS Index was an effective predictor of bird populations in the breeding season, but had limited use in predicting bird populations in winter. Within the overall FBEGS Index, the Associated Features score was a good predictor for populations in both the winter and breeding seasons. In addit...
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/12828
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An Estimate of the Value of Lost Load for Ireland
(2010)
LEAHY, EIMEAR; TOL, RICHARD S. J.
An Estimate of the Value of Lost Load for Ireland
(2010)
LEAHY, EIMEAR; TOL, RICHARD S. J.
Abstract:
This paper estimates the value of short term lost load in the all island electricity market which includes the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland. The value of lost load, also known as the value of security of electricity supply, is inferred using a production function approach. Detailed electricity use data for the Republic of Ireland allows us to estimate the value of lost load by time of day, time of week and type of user. We find that the value of lost load is highest in the residential sector in both the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland. Our results can be used to advise policy decisions in the case of supply outages and to encourage optimum supply security. In the context of this study short term is taken to be a matter of hours rather than days or weeks.
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/49781
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