Academic literature on the topic 'Economic aspects of Reproductive technology'

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Journal articles on the topic "Economic aspects of Reproductive technology"

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Takácsné György, Katalin. "Economic aspects of an agricultural innovation – precision crop production." Applied Studies in Agribusiness and Commerce 6, no. 1-2 (2012): 51–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.19041/apstract/2012/1-2/6.

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Innovation in agriculture ensures the wide-spread use of the latest, up-to-date technology. Such new technology is precision farming in crop production, which serves as a validation of the criteria of environmental and economic sustainability. The economic applicability of precision crop production depends on several factors.Among them the following aspects must be emphasized: the size of the farm, the characteristics of the production structure, the current input-output prices and their tendencies, the investment needed for transitioning to precision technology and its capital source, the level of professional knowledge and the managerial attitudes of the farm. I have examined the economic relations between potential savings in chemicals on EU level. It has been found that after switching to precision farming, the active ingredient use for fertilizers can be reduced by 340 thousand tons at the same expected yield level in an optimistic scenario in the EU-27, while the savings in pesticide use can be 30 thousand tons (calculating with the current dose-level). If approximately 30% of the crop producing and mixed farms over 16 ESU adopt this new technology, this will diminish environmental loads by up to 10-35%. The majority of farms characterized by greater output and size can be based on their own equipment but it might as well be presumed that smaller farms can turn to precision farming not based on their own investment. They can buy the technical service from providers, they can establish producer cooperation, for example in the frame of machinery rings. At a certain farm size and farming intensity precision crop production is a real, environmentally friendly farming strategy, with the help of which the farm can reach earnings that cover at least the economic conditions of simple reproduction.
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Martin, Graeme B., and Teuku Reza Ferasyi. "1. Clean, Green, Ethical (CGE) Management: What Research Do We Really Need?" International Journal of Tropical Veterinary and Biomedical Research 1, no. 1 (2016): 1–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.21157/ijtvbr.v1i1.5066.

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Industries based on small ruminants are major contributors to world food supply but, in many production systems, reproductive technology is not directly relevant. In addition, there is a general need to embrace the vision for products that are ‘clean, green and ethical’ (CGE). In the concept of CGE management, the environment of the animal is used to control reproduction rather than technological tools. Nutrition is the primary factor but, rather than feeding ruminants with potential human food, we need to focus on forages with occasional ‘smart supplements’. This focus also opens up opportunities – new forages can supply energy and protein whilst improving animal health and welfare, and reducing carbon emissions.Nutritional inputs must be accurately coordinated with reproductive events to ensure that the metabolic signals are appropriate to the stage of the reproductive process. To control the timing of reproduction, we begin with simply managing the presence of the male but then seek more precision through the greater use of ultrasound.Finally, genetic improvement should be part of every industry strategy and it is critical in the long-term development of CGE management. Most aspects of CGE management have a strong genetic component, as evidenced by variation among genotypes, and among individuals within genotypes. For example, a combination of nutritional management with genetic improvement in the rate of muscle accumulation can accelerate sexual maturity, potentially leading to simultaneous improvements in meat production, reproductive efficiency and environmental footprint.For each local situation, we need to introduce the various elements of the CGE package in stages, adapting the process to cover variations in genotype and in geographical and socio-economic environments. Some concepts might need further research and development for local conditions. Ultimately, CGE management is a simple and cost-effective way to improve productivity whilst safeguarding the future of the livestock industries.
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I. I., Onyshchuk. "Reproductive Rights and Surrogate Motherhood: Legislative, Doctrinal and Bioethical Principles." Almanac of law: The role of legal doctrine in ensuring of human rights 11, no. 11 (2020): 69–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.33663/2524-017x-2020-11-12.

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The sphere of reproductive rights is still beyond the scope of a thorough legal analysis, and it is not given due attention in the legal literature. This may be due to the fact that the concept of reproductive rights is new to Ukrainian law and has not yet found its proper place in the general system of law. There is a lack of scientific development in the issue of protection of the rights of the child to birth, trafficking in human beings for the purpose of exploiting surrogate mothers or children born as a result of surrogate motherhood, etc. The purpose of the study is to analyze the legislative, doctrinal and moral aspects of reproductive rights and to identify effective legal measures to improve the legal regulation of surrogate motherhood in Ukraine and the proper legal protection of the child before and after birth. Experimenting with human gene material as a conception in vitro turns children into a commodity. There is an artificial situation in which wealthy men will hire women to provide contracting services to their offspring. It is difficult to disagree that in surrogate motherhood, as in any business, personal financial gain dominates. So, from this point of view, surrogacy is a kind of market and business. The conception of the child is not a right, but an opportunity that is not given to all, but surrogate motherhood turns the child into an "object of economic agreement and contract, a kind of ordering of goods." The child cannot be considered as an object of property. It is unacceptable to consider the practice of surrogacy as ethical. In addition, forced commercial surrogate motherhood falls within the definition of trafficking in human beings. The issue of reproductive technology must be addressed in such a way that the child born as a result of surrogate motherhood does not fall prey to further exploitation. The author concluded that in many countries with a licensing or altruistic regime, many aspects of the use of assisted reproductive technologies and surrogate motherhood remain unregulated. There is no clear understanding of all the principles and standards governing the use of assisted reproductive technologies and surrogacy agreements. In general, the legislation lacks sufficient standards and provisions to protect the rights of parties to surrogacy agreements. The most controversial issues are the rights of the surrogate mother, the expectant parents and the children born as a result of the surrogate motherhood. At the present stage, legal adaptation of society to the development of medicine in the field of reproductive technologies has not yet taken place in Ukraine. Cases such as the birth of several children by surrogate mothers, births of a child with developmental disabilities, birth of a dead child or miscarriage, the need for an artificial interruption of pregnancy according to the medical opinion of doctors, the termination of marriage by genetic parents, the death of one or both parents. Keywords: reproductive rights, surrogacy motherhood, legal regulation, legal protection, embryo, child rights, family, surrogacy agreement.
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Bashford, Alison. "Nation, Empire, Globe: The Spaces of Population Debate in the Interwar Years." Comparative Studies in Society and History 49, no. 1 (2006): 170–201. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0010417507000448.

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There are several analytical strands through which historians and demographers understand the evolution of twentieth-century population politics and expertise. One is the history of the declining birthrate, nationalism, pro-natalism, and modern degeneration anxieties, including histories of eugenics. A second strand is the story of global overpopulation, its mobilization as a mid-twentieth-century issue in Cold War politics, the dominance of the idea of demographic transitions and political economy, and subsequent links between aid, development, family planning, and various international agencies. A third is the history of reproductive and bodily rights, feminism, and birth control, which has been analyzed with respect to the history of technology, the history of colonialism and neo-colonialism, the history of nationalism, and to some extent the history of internationalism. The political economy aspects of the population question tend chronologically to bookend the feminist narrative, with Malthus at the late eighteenth-century end and Cold War political economy of third world development at the twentieth-century end. A fourth strand is a burgeoning intellectual history of demography, social science, and economic theory.
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Malak-Rawlikowska, Agata, Monika Gębska, Robert Hoste, et al. "Developing a Methodology for Aggregated Assessment of the Economic Sustainability of Pig Farms." Energies 14, no. 6 (2021): 1760. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/en14061760.

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The economic sustainability of agricultural production is a crucial concern for most farmers, especially for pig producers who face dynamic changes in the market. Approaches for economic sustainability assessment found in the literature are mainly focused on the short-term economic viability of the farm and rarely take a long-term perspective. In this paper, we propose and test a new, innovative assessment and aggregation method, which brings about a broader view on more long-term aspects of economic sustainability. This wider view on economic sustainability, in addition to classical concepts such as technical efficiency, labor productivity, and farm profitability, incorporates the assessment of the levels of entrepreneurship, risk management, and the resilience of the invested resources. All indicators were scaled and aggregated using scaling and weighting procedures proposed by experts into subthemes and themes. The methodology was tested on a sample of 131 pig farms located in 6 EU countries: Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, Finland, and Austria. We hypothesized that closed-cycle farms might be economically more sustainable than those farms that are specialized in pig breeding or finishing. The results showed that closed-cycle farms do indeed have advantages in terms of raising healthy animals and having slightly better overall resilience of resources, however specialized breeding and finishing farms appeared to be more sustainable in the areas of profitability, risk management, and reproductive efficiency. Our approach supports evidence-based economic sustainability assessments of pig farms and provides a tool that can be used for economic sustainability improvement strategies for farms.
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Fortunatov, Anton, Olga Chepiuk, and Valentina Kravchenko. "Giftedness as technology and social projects in the communicative reality of the XXI century." KANT 37, no. 4 (2020): 317–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.24923/2222-243x.2020-37.65.

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The article examines the question of the social causes of the phenomenon of giftedness. The social aspects of the economic behavior of a gifted person are actualized taking into account the current historical stage of social reproduction, in the light of post-materialism, postmodernism, the theory of communicative action by J. Habermas, the influence of the means of communication on society by M. McLuhan, based on the phenomenon of "alienation" from the works of K. Marx, E. Fromm, T. Adorno. The main context of the research is focused on the growing role of social communication as a space for interaction between the individual and society. As a result, it has been shown that the very concept of giftedness has passed the stage of desacralization, and has been reduced to a socially significant need for certain human qualities. Such a modern, socio-philosophical interpretation of giftedness allows us to perceive and analyze this phenomenon as a communicative process (and not a status), which is influenced by fluctuations in external assessments of society, as well as fashion and trends. Hence, it is concluded that an important epistemological role is acquired by the historical context, in connection with which the behavior of a gifted person becomes noticeable to the researcher.
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SADYKOV, Ramil' M., and Natal'ya L. BOL'SHAKOVA. "The fundamental renewal of the social security system protecting interests of families with children." National Interests: Priorities and Security 17 (June 15, 2021): 1143–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.24891/ni.17.6.1143.

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Subject. The social welfare for families with children is actively evolving in Russia. Its social and legislative framework is advanced as well, promoting the respective organizational, material and technological basis. The technology for assisting and supporting the said category is renewed. The fundamental renewal of social support practices for families with children depends on the adoption of the new social welfare legislation. Objectives. We analyze processes renewing the social welfare for families with children and articulate what specifically can be done to support them. Methods. The study involves a set of general research methods, including logic, systems, comparative, functional, statistical and sociological ones. Results. We determined how it is possible to shift from social servicing to strengthening reproductive and educational opportunities of families, especially young ones. This implies various aspects and mechanisms for assistance by type of family, their problems and needs. The article demonstrates the transition from socio-economic support to socio-cultural, socio-educational, socio-psychological servicing. The fundamental renewal of various social servicing practices was found to result in a growing role of non-governmental sector. Conclusions and Relevance. Implementing and developing a personalized servicing program, as a new simplified service procedure, is a promising step to enhance the efficiency and quality of social welfare services. In Russia, the social welfare system can be mainly updated by activating the social activity of profit-making and non-profit entities. Self-help, self-organization of families seem to be the most promising trends, as the social welfare system is being technologically reshaped.
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Assadourian, Carlos Sempat. "The Colonial Economy: The Transfer of the European System of Production to New Spain and Peru." Journal of Latin American Studies 24, S1 (1992): 55–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022216x00023774.

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Research into the economic structures established by Spain in the Indies, based on sources which allow at least an approximate reconstruction of reality, dates only from the last thirty or forty years. The advances made, despite the uncertainty still surrounding certain aspects of the processes of production, appropriation and distribution, enable us to abandon traditional conceptions of this economy as isolated, closed, rustic in its technology, archaic or ‘feudal’.The dominant profile of the economic structures imposed on New Spain and Peru, especially during a fifty-year cycle the nature and timing of which will be discussed below, was shaped by the transfer of the European system of mercantile production, in terms of both its technological bases and the legal structure and methods of calculation which governed its reproduction. Thus, we retain the adjective ‘colonial’ for this modern economy, in as much as its development was conditioned by the need to maximise shipments of silver to the metropolis and, in pursuit of this aim, the indigenous population was subjected to severe oppression. Likewise, the metropolis maintained a high level of control over the internal economic dynamic of these regions and a monopoly of their foreign trade.Towards the mid-sixteenth century the expression ‘conquista y población’ was frequently invoked to characterise Spain's dominion in the New World. ‘Conquista’ referred to the initial feat of arms, by which the papal right to grant lands to the Catholic monarchs (hitherto only valid within the order of European nations) was imposed on the indigenous kingdoms and domains of the Indies.
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Makarenko, Petro, and Volodymyr Piliavsky. "Innovative and investment support for the potential of agricultural enterprises sustainable development." University Economic Bulletin, no. 41 (March 30, 2019): 29–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.31470/2306-546x-2019-41-29-35.

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The subject of the research is theoretical and practical aspects of the formation, use and reproduction of the potential of sustainable development of agrarian enterprises on the basis of innovation and investment support. The purpose of the work is to identify the features and competitive advantages of innovation and investment to ensure the sustainable development of agrarian enterprises and to substantiate the tools and means for its improvement in the future. Methodological basis of the article became as general scientific, and special methods of scientific knowledge. Were used methods: dialectical, monographic, historical, system-structural analysis and synthesis, economic comparison, problem and program-target approaches. Results of work. The article substantiates the relevance of innovation-investment tools, tools and methods and models of reproduction and increase of the potential of sustainable development of agrarian enterprises. The content of innovation and investment activity and its influence on resource use, as well as the provision of resource support as a reverse process, are revealed. The main manifestations, problems and trends of development of these actions are assessed. Mechanisms and forms of realization of innovation-investment support of sustainable development potential are developed. The means of system management for improvement in the future are determined. The field of application of results. Conclusions and results of the article can be used in the educational-scientific process of the economic faculties of higher educational institutions. It is expedient to transfer them for practical use in the management of agrarian enterprises, first of all, the resource potential of their development. Conclusions. Preservation and strengthening of innovation and investment support of sustainable development of agrarian enterprises is connected both with the restoration of the rates of economic growth, which provides demand for high technology products, as well as the formation of innovative support of agrarian production, proving the results of scientific and technical activities to practical use, as well as organizations serving the market for innovative services. It is determined that management of innovative activity of agroformations consists in the fact that the set of operations and procedures of the influence of the control subsystem on the managed is carried out within the limits of organizational and economic structures in which the organizational and economic management mechanism is complex and multidimensional entities. Management of innovation and investment activity should cover the scope of management activities directly related to the use of specific system elements and control levers: innovation and investment design, indicative planning; marketing and resource strategies, etc.
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Sumaryadi, Mas Yedi, Dadang Mulyadi Saleh, Budi Haryanto, Dedi Herdiansah, Sudrajat Sudrajat, and Chotim A. Yasin. "Kajian Aspek Reproduksi dan Estimasi Ekonomi pada Ternak Sapi yang di Inovasi Teknologi Reproduksi." Jurnal Agripet 10, no. 1 (2010): 1–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.17969/agripet.v10i1.601.

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Study of reproduction and economic estimation aspect in cow which innovated of reproduction technologyABSTRACT. Twenty cows head were used in research to know aspect reproduce and economic estimation in cow which innovated by reproduction technology. All of cows in allocated into two groups at random each 10 heads. The first group come from farmer of co-operation member of Ciamis was used as control without innovated by reproduction technology, that mean the cow was naturally of oestrous and inseminated with frozen semen not a result of separation sex. The second group come from farmer group “lumba-lumba” innovated with oestrous synchronization which was injected prosolvin of 7.5 mg per headl by intramuscular (i.m.) and super ovulated with injected fertagyl of 150 mg per tail by i.m., and then it oestrous was inseminated with frozen semen result of sex separation. Research result indicates that technically there were difference of performance reproduce in cow which is innovated by reproduction technology than control. It concluded that the improvement of reproduction efficiency in cow after innovated by technology of reproduction in term of type of birth in twin and increasing of male sex up to 12 percent. It is in line with the economic estimation of cow which is technological application of reproduction improves generating revenue up to 22.35 percent per month.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Economic aspects of Reproductive technology"

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Lemrick, Steve. "Economic Aspects of Reproductive Problems in Utah and Southeastern Idaho Dairy Herds." DigitalCommons@USU, 1987. https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/etd/4066.

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One hundred eighty-seven survey questionnaires asking for reproductive information for 1985 were sent to dairymen in Utah and Southeastern Idaho. Forty- two herds with current DHI information and whose owners or managers completed and returned the questionnaire were used to estimate economic losses due to reproductive problems, especially excessive days open, in Utah and Southeastern Idaho. Average days open for herds surveyed were 122.4 days with a standard deviation of 22.6 days, and a range of 89 to 177 days. Several factors were significantly correlated with days open including services per conception, previous calving interval, and missed heats. Missed heats accounted for most of the variability in days open with an r2 of .82. Surveyed dairymen were losing an average $1.22 per cow per day due to excessive days open beyond 90 days. In addition they were losing approximately $22.87 per cow per year due to reproductive levels inferior to the top expected levels and veterinary costs associated with reproductive problems other than excessive days open. Although this is the estimated average loss in Utah and Southeastern Idaho, dairymen should try to determine losses in their own herds due to reproductive problems because of the extreme variability which exists among herds. Utah and Southeastern Idaho dairymen are suffering se rious economic losses due to excessive days open and they need to improve their heat detection methods to r educe these losses .
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Brokensha, Steven. "Psychosocial discourse and the "new" reproductive technologies : a critical analysis." Master's thesis, University of Cape Town, 1989. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/14320.

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Bibliography: leaves 47-53.<br>The "new" reproductive technologies (NRTs) have gathered substantial momentum in recent years. 'Psychological' discourse on these techniques has tended towards uncritical preoccupation with intra-individual, constitutional factors, and has ignored the sociocultural, political and economic contexts of these practices. Within an inter-disciplinary, social-constructionist framework, this study presents a feminist critique of the NRTs in which they are argued to be biopsychosocially noxious to women. Modern biomedicine's appropriation and ownership of infertility as "disease" is argued to be consistent with the agendas of capitalism and patriarchy. Results of fieldwork within a particular medical setting are presented to develop a hermeneutic of the discursive interface between medical gatekeepers and the applicant 'patients' with whom they negotiate treatment. In a concluding section a dominant theme in gatekeepers' talk, "the well-being of the child", is ideologically analyzed; women-centered strategies are briefly discussed; and implications for the interface between psychology and reproductive technology are drawn.
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Tam, Sze-ying, and 譚思映. "The development of the information and communications technology (ICT)industry in China, 1995-2005." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 2006. http://hub.hku.hk/bib/B36549265.

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Cooper, Benedict C. "The evolution of technology and adaptive economic behaviour." Thesis, University of Oxford, 1997. http://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:6b6fece5-fdc3-4ac5-ad38-ca94f6aea127.

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This thesis studies the role of learning as a mechanism of economic change. Two areas are considered where this would seem to be important. First, how firms learn about new technology; and secondly, how agents learn to behave in interactive situations. A model of research and development is presented which models the process by which firms solve specific design problems. This may be by individual experimental search or by partial imitation. In the latter case, a close parallel is drawn between biological evolution, based on genetic reproduction, and technological evolution, based on firms blending existing technologies. Some economic implications of these processes are explored, including their application to stochastic learning curves, patent design and the transfer of technology to developing countries. The thesis continues by critically assessing the analogy between biological and cultural evolution often used to model how agents learn to behave in interactive situations. It is argued that the methods used by economists exploiting this analogy are often ill-suited to an economic context. Models are presented which deal with specific issues in the transition from a biological context to an economic context, including models of partnership formation, models of imperfect imitation, and models without payoff-monotonic dynamics. The issue of imperfect imitation is expanded upon in an evolutionary model of the infinitely repeated prisoners' dilemma, where it is shown that the problem of inter-generational copying fidelity may allow one to restrict attention to strategies with a very simple stochastic structure.
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Wasunna, Angela. "Averting a clash between culture, law and science : an examination of the effects of new reproductive technologies in Kenya." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1999. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk2/ftp03/MQ64309.pdf.

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Wilson, Paul, Roger Coupal, and William Hart. "An Economic Evaluation of Linear-Move Irrigation Technology." College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 1987. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/602128.

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Smith, Heather K. "The impact of framing on policy passage: the case of assisted reproductive technology." Thesis, Georgia Institute of Technology, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/1853/42774.

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In the last 30 years, in vitro fertilization (IVF) has created a significant amount of controversy around the world. Within the U.S., policy movement has been limited, occurring primarily at the state level, which has created a fragmented system of rules to manage the technology. However, there appear to be indications that how the issue is presented, and which actors are chosen to be represented in legislation, may impact the passage of policy, thereby also providing a reason for why little policy movement has occurred. In this study, pieces of federal, California and Georgia legislation were examined for the occurrence of differing frames, as identified by the actors presented, in order to determine whether different frames occurred in passed legislation than those found in failed legislation. It was determined that, while actors did not differ significantly between passed and failed legislation, there were some slight differences between actors used at the federal level, as well between the different state levels. Even further, the presentation of actors and their interests did appear to differ slightly between passed and failed legislation.
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Olynk, Nicole J. "Economic analyses of reproduction management strategies and technologies on U.S. dairy farms." Diss., Connect to online resource - MSU authorized users, 2008.

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Thesis (M.S.)--Michigan State University. Dept. of Agricultural, Food, and Resource Economics, 2008.<br>Title from PDF t.p. (viewed on July 28, 2009) Includes bibliographical references (p. 105-108). Also issued in print.
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Meiring, Natalie. "Factors impacting Tablet PC usage in low-income communities." Thesis, Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/10948/4642.

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The purpose of this research was to identify factors that impact on tablet PC usage in low-income communities. In order to determine and identify these factors a main research question and sub-research questions were formulated. The primary research question of this study was "What factors impact on tablet PC usage in low-income communities?" This main research question was answered by creating three sub-research questions followed by triangulating the results from these questions. The first sub-research question was aimed at determining whether prior exposure to touch screen technology impacts the user experience. In order to reach this objective an extensive literature review was conducted on the tablet PC landscape in South Africa. This literature review, coupled with the case study helped answer this first research question. The second sub-research question was concerned with determining whether existing user experience guidelines are relevant to South African users. A thorough literature review was conducted on user experience guidelines and related studies. This literature review, together with the results from the case study helped answer this second research question. The third sub-research question involved identifying specific factors which help improve the user experience of tablet PC users in a specific context. This research question was addressed in the case study. Each sub-research question provided results which were analysed in order to answer the main research question. The factors which impact on tablet PC usage were thus identified and recommendations were proposed.
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Misri, Anita P. "A feminist interpretation of the implications and consequences of new reproductive technologies /." Thesis, McGill University, 1996. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=28032.

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The development of pre-conception and post-conception reproductive technologies has substantial implications and consequences for women. To better establish the impact of the eugenic and sexist traditions which support the elimination of disability/defect and the propagation of "designer babies," a survey of literature outlining the scientific, feminist, legal, cultural, and social perspectives regarding new reproductive technologies was undertaken. Three conclusions of this review are that while new reproductive technologies are not responsible for the environment which fosters bias and intolerance towards oppressed members of society, they have created eugenic demands by supporting genetic perfection; they have informally displaced women's rights to bodily autonomy in favour of the fetus' or potential future person's rights by supporting fetal personhood; and they have perpetuated sexism within the Indian community in Canada by supporting patriarchal institutions.
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Books on the topic "Economic aspects of Reproductive technology"

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Kossoudji, Sherrie. The economics of assisted reproduction. IZA, 2005.

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Mundy, Liza. Everything conceivable: How assisted reproduction is changing men, women, and the world. Penguin Books, 2007.

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Mundy, Liza. Everything conceivable: How assisted reproduction is changing our world. Anchor Books, 2008.

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Mundy, Liza. Everything conceivable: How assisted reproduction is changing our world. Anchor Books, 2008.

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Wagner, William Joseph. The contractual reallocation of procreative resources and parental rights: The natural endowment critique. Dartmouth, 1995.

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Banerjee, Swapnendu. Gestational surrogacy contracts: Altruistic or commercial ? Gokhale Institute of Politics and Economics, 2008.

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Twine, France Winddance. Outsourcing the womb: Race, class and gestational surrogacy in a global market. Routledge, 2011.

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Angie, Best-Boss, ed. Budgeting for infertility: How to bring home a baby without breaking the bank. Simon & Schuster, 2009.

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The baby business: Elite eggs, designer genes, and the thriving commerce of conception. Harvard Business School Press, 2005.

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Bowlby, Rachel. Shopping with Freud. Routledge, 1993.

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Book chapters on the topic "Economic aspects of Reproductive technology"

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Boot, Elisa Aimo. "Economic Aspects." In Plasma Technology for Hyperfunctional Surfaces. Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9783527630455.ch11.

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Mahany, Erica B., and Yolanda R. Smith. "Assisted Reproductive Technology: Clinical Aspects." In Clinical Reproductive Medicine and Surgery. Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-52210-4_17.

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Bormann, Charles L. "Assisted Reproductive Technology: Laboratory Aspects." In Clinical Reproductive Medicine and Surgery. Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-52210-4_18.

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Bajpai, Pratima. "Economic Aspects." In Anaerobic Technology in Pulp and Paper Industry. Springer Singapore, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-4130-3_9.

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Huppes, Gjalt. "Economic Aspects of Environmental Product Design." In Environmental Technology. Springer Netherlands, 1987. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-009-3663-8_49.

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Bertrand, Emmanuel, Marilys Pradel, and Claude-Gilles Dussap. "Economic and Environmental Aspects of Biofuels." In Green Fuels Technology. Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-30205-8_22.

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Todd, D. J. "Economic and Social Aspects of Robotics." In Fundamentals of Robot Technology. Springer Netherlands, 1986. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-011-6768-0_12.

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Bevis, M. J. "Economic Aspects of Plastics Recycling." In Frontiers in the Science and Technology of Polymer Recycling. Springer Netherlands, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-1626-0_4.

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Nolan, Keith, and Vânia Gonçalves. "Economic Aspects of CR Policy and Regulation." In Signals and Communication Technology. Springer International Publishing, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-04022-6_4.

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Janssens, Ronny, and Johan Guns. "Chapter 20 Troubleshooting aspects in clean room assisted reproductive units." In Clean Room Technology in ART Clinics. CRC Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781315372464-21.

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Conference papers on the topic "Economic aspects of Reproductive technology"

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Lepore, Mario, and Antonio Petruzziello. "A Situation-Aware DSS to Support Assisted Reproductive Technology Outcome Prediction." In 2021 IEEE Conference on Cognitive and Computational Aspects of Situation Management (CogSIMA). IEEE, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/cogsima51574.2021.9475933.

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Kemp, A. G., and Bruce MacDonald. "Economic Aspects Of Cost Savings In The Ukcs." In Offshore Technology Conference. Offshore Technology Conference, 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.4043/7434-ms.

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Barthold, L. "Technical and Economic Aspects of Tripole HVDC." In 2006 International Conference on Power System Technology. IEEE, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icpst.2006.321422.

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Ehsani, Mehrdad, and Hussein M. K. Al-Masri. "Engineering and socio-economic aspects of sustainable energy." In 2016 IEEE Global Humanitarian Technology Conference (GHTC). IEEE, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ghtc.2016.7857307.

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Morev, Kirill, Alina Kazanskaya, and Yana Nalesnaya. "Intelligent Video Monitoring System: Technical and Economic Aspects." In 2019 Ural Symposium on Biomedical Engineering, Radioelectronics and Information Technology (USBEREIT). IEEE, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/usbereit.2019.8736675.

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Nocheva, Maria Slavova, and Anna Dzhaleva-Chonkova. "Economic Aspects of Transport Development in Bulgaria Under Contemporary Conditions." In Automotive and Transportation Technology Congress and Exposition. SAE International, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.4271/2001-01-3300.

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Gupta, Ajai, R. P. Saini, and M. P. Sharma. "Economic Aspects of Hybrid Renewable Energy Systems for Remote Area." In 2006 IEEE International Conference on Industrial Technology. IEEE, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icit.2006.372496.

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Purevdorj, G., and Kh Enkjargal. "Ecological, economic and social aspects from the renewable energy and energy conservation." In 2007 International Forum on Strategic Technology. IEEE, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ifost.2007.4798509.

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Pilishvili, Anatoly, and Tatiana Pilishvili. "HUMAN CAPITAL MANAGEMENT IN RUDN UNIVERSITY- INDUSTRY COLLABORATION: ECONOMIC AND PSYCHOLOGICAL ASPECTS." In International Technology, Education and Development Conference. IATED, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.21125/inted.2017.0463.

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Bineva, Velika. "Environmental Aspects of Economic Issues Associated with the Factors of Production." In 2020 III International Conference on High Technology for Sustainable Development (HiTech). IEEE, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/hitech51434.2020.9363998.

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Reports on the topic "Economic aspects of Reproductive technology"

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Sultana, Munawar. Culture of silence: A brief on reproductive health of adolescents and youth in Pakistan. Population Council, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.31899/pgy19.1006.

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Previous research on the reproductive health of adolescents and youth in Pakistan has not addressed the diversity of adolescent experiences based on social status, residence, and gender. To understand the transition from adolescence to adulthood more fully, it is important to assess social, economic, and cultural aspects of that transition. This brief presents the experience of married and unmarried young people (males and females) from different social strata and residence regarding their own attitudes and expectations about reproductive health. More young people aged 15–24 live in Pakistan now than at any other time in its history—an estimated 36 million in 2004. Recognizing the dearth of information on this large group of young people, the Population Council undertook a nationally representative survey from October 2001 to March 2002. The analysis presented here comes from Adolescents and Youth in Pakistan 2001–02: A Nationally Representative Survey. The survey sought information from youth aged 15–24, responsible adults in the household, and other community members in 254 communities. A total of 6,585 households were visited and 8,074 young people were interviewed.
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Shannon, Caitlin S., and Beverly Winikoff. Misoprostol: An emerging technology for women's health—Report of a seminar. Population Council, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.31899/rh17.1002.

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On May 7–8, 2001, the Population Council and the Center for Reproductive Health Research &amp; Policy of the University of California, San Francisco, convened a technical seminar in New York City on the use of misoprostol for women’s health indications. The seminar was designed to provide a forum for researchers, providers, women’s health advocates, and educators to exchange information with the goal of advancing the potential of misoprostol to improve women’s health. Participants discussed the state of the art in research, examined current clinical use of misoprostol, and created strategies for the future. The first day focused on scientific and clinical aspects of misoprostol use. The second day’s discussion centered on the future of misoprostol for women’s health, including identifying priorities for research and the role of provider groups and women’s health and advocacy organizations in helping to ensure misoprostol’s continued, appropriate use. At the end of each session, the group had an opportunity to share ideas and discuss unanswered questions. This report covers the key issues raised by each speaker and highlights general areas of discussion among participants.
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