organization:uc berkeley

  • The open access wars: How to free science from academic paywalls - Vox
    https://www.vox.com/the-highlight/2019/6/3/18271538/open-access-elsevier-california-sci-hub-academic-paywalls

    That’s because in February, the UC system — one of the country’s largest academic institutions, encompassing Berkeley, Los Angeles, Davis, and several other campuses — dropped its nearly $11 million annual subscription to Elsevier, the world’s largest publisher of academic journals.

    On the face of it, this seemed like an odd move. Why cut off students and researchers from academic research?

    In fact, it was a principled stance that may herald a revolution in the way science is shared around the world.

    The University of California decided it doesn’t want scientific knowledge locked behind paywalls, and thinks the cost of academic publishing has gotten out of control.

    Elsevier owns around 3,000 academic journals, and its articles account for some 18 percent of all the world’s research output. “They’re a monopolist, and they act like a monopolist,” says Jeffrey MacKie-Mason, head of the campus libraries at UC Berkeley and co-chair of the team that negotiated with the publisher. Elsevier makes huge profits on its journals, generating billions of dollars a year for its parent company RELX .

    This is a story about more than subscription fees. It’s about how a private industry has come to dominate the institutions of science, and how librarians, academics, and even pirates are trying to regain control.

    In 2018, Elsevier’s revenue grew by 2 percent, to a total of $3.2 billion. Gemma Hersh, a senior vice president for global policy at Elsevier, says the company’s net profit margin was 19 percent (more than double the net profit of Netflix).

    When the internet arrived, electronic PDFs became the main medium through which articles were disseminated. At that point, “librarians were optimistic this was going to be the solution; at last, journals are going to become much, much cheaper,” Fyfe says.

    But instead of adopting a new business and pricing model to match the new means of no-cost dissemination, consolidation gave academic publishers the freedom to raise prices. Starting in the late 1990s, publishers increasingly pushed sales of their subscriptions into large bundled deals. In this model, universities pay a hefty price to get a huge subset of a publisher’s journals, instead of purchasing individual titles

    But critics, including open access crusaders, think the business model is due for a change. “I think we’re nearing the tipping point, and the industry is going to change, just like the industry for recorded music has changed, the industry for movies has changed,” MacKie-Mason says. “[The publishers] know it’s going to happen. They just want to protect their profits and their business model as long as they can.”❞

    #Science #Open_access #Accès_libre #Université_Californie #Elsevier

  • Big tech firms are racing to track climate refugees - MIT Technology Review
    https://www.technologyreview.com/s/613531/big-tech-firms-are-racing-to-track-climate-refugees

    To be an undocumented refugee, these days, is to exist in many places and to not exist at all. It is to have your movements, words, and actions tracked, archived, and multiplied. It is to live between fences, tents, and databases—one new entry per doctor’s visit, per bag of rice, per canister of water. It can mean having your biometric and biographical data scanned, stored, and cross-checked by people you do not know, and who speak a language you may not understand. It is to have your identity multiplied, classified, and reduced to lines of code. It is to live in spreadsheets.

    Today, around 1.1 billion people live without a recognized form of identification. In many cases, their papers—if they ever had papers at all—have been burned, lost, or otherwise destroyed. And the number is growing every day. The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), the UN’s refugee agency, estimates that in 2017, one person became displaced every two seconds as a result of conflict, economics, or climate change. “In short, the world had almost as many forcibly displaced people in 2017 as the population of Thailand,” the agency reports. “Across all countries, one in every 110 persons is someone displaced.”

    The next frontier, though, is not figuring out where people have been or where they will settle: it is figuring out who they will be when they get there. What will their “digital identity” look like? Who will hold the keys? A number of new and established tech companies are rushing to answer these critical questions. Technology accelerated the global identity crisis, and now technology claims to have the solution.

    But now that so much of our economic and political life takes place online, creating new forms of identity has taken on a severe urgency. Both the private and public sectors are racing to come up with a sustainable way of counting, identifying, and connecting not only the growing population of the global displaced, but also the wealthy population of the voluntarily mobile. Mastercard, Microsoft, Apple, Palantir, and Facebook have all entered the field, through private ventures as well as controversial partnerships with some of the world’s largest humanitarian agencies.

    In 2015, all the UN’s member states committed to providing “legal identity for all” by 2030 as part of its Sustainable Development Goals. As a result, virtually every major aid-granting agency is either incubating, researching, or piloting a digital identity program.

    Et hop, Palantir dans la boucle... humanitaire, tant qu’à faire.

    The UN’s World Food Programme recently announced a new $45 million, five-year collaboration with Palantir that will use the Palo Alto firm’s “range of digital analytical solutions” to streamline and track the dispersal of humanitarian aid. The move was immediately met with skepticism among privacy advocates: a group of more than 60 human rights activists sent an open letter to WFP executives, expressing deep concern over the partnership and urging WFP leaders to “reconsider the terms and scope of the agreement with Palantir.”

    They argued that not only would the partnership threaten to “seriously damage the reputation of the WFP,” but also that it could “seriously undermine the rights of 90 million people the WFP serves.” The controversy, researchers said, should be a “wake-up call” to the humanitarian community about the dangers of relying on digital data and entrusting their networks to third parties.

    In a statement responding to these concerns, the WFP wrote that a series of “checks and balances” would protect private, identifying data, and that Palantir would not be able to use it for commercial gain. In an e-mail to MIT Technology Review, a WFP representative wrote that the agency has its own solutions to managing refugee identities, and that “the WFP-Palantir partnership does not focus on areas that require personally identifiable information (PII) of beneficiaries, nor does it focus on digital identity. No PII data is ever shared with Palantir or with any other partner. Only anonymized/encrypted information is used to analyze allocation of assistance to ensure complete privacy and security for the people we serve.”

    Yet as researcher Faine Greenwood said in Slate, the WFP may be overestimating its ability to protect and anonymize sensitive data.

    Expérimenter la blockchain sur des populations fragilisées comme les Rohynga, quelle bonne idée.

    Both the promise and the risks of digital identity have already become evident in the work of a small army of blockchain and biometric startups. The immutable, decentralized nature of the blockchain has led a number of startups to pin their hopes on the emerging technology as a solution to the problem of storing and protecting sensitive information, including biometric data.

    Passbase, which bills itself as “the first self-sovereign identity platform backed by verified government documents, linked social media accounts, and biometric signatures,” has raised seed funding from Alphabet and Stanford, and currently accepts documents from over 150 countries. Vinny Lingham, cofounder of the blockchain identity verification company Civic, goes so far as to claim that his company can help save democracy. WFP.s Building Blocks program also uses blockchain inside a refugee camp in Jordan.

    Maybe blockchain will save democracy. Or maybe it will make future political crises even worse. The Rohingya Project distributed blockchain-based digital identity cards to Rohingya refugees in order to help them access financial, legal, and medical services. It is, on the face of things, an altruistic, forward-looking humanitarian initiative. But uploading highly sensitive, identifying biometric information to an immutable ledger and testing emerging technology on a vulnerable population means exposing that population to untold risks.

    Data breaches, like those that have repeatedly exposed personal information in India’s Aadhaar biometric identification program, have exposed at-risk populations to new dangers. And they are all too common: in March, a data breach at the US Federal Emergency Management Agency exposed the personal information of 2.3 million survivors of American wildfires and hurricanes, leaving them vulnerable to identity fraud. In April, Kaspersky Labs reported that over 60,000 user digital identities could be bought for $5 to $200 via a dark-net marketplace. No technology is invulnerable to error, and no database, no matter how secure, is 100% protected from a breach.

    As digital identification technologies flood into the market, it is difficult to imagine predicting or preventing the disruptions—good and bad—that they will cause. Blockchain and biometric technologies have touched off a critical reevaluation of the most existential questions: What determines identity, and how many identities can one person claim? What will it mean when official identification eventually—inevitably—is no longer the purview of the nation-state?

    “Everybody deserves to have formal identification that they can use to exert their rights,” says Brandie Nonnecke, director of UC Berkeley’s CITRIS Policy Lab, which works on technology development in the social interest.

    But the rush of public and private digital identity programs has already begun to complicate fundamental questions about identification, registration, citizenship, and belonging. Even the simplest questions about digital identity have yet to be determined, Nonnecke says: “Do you have one identity, or do you have multiple identities across institutions? Is that a safeguard, or does it create more risk?”

    #Identité_numérique #Vie_privée #Humanitaire #Techno-fix

  • Will Artificial Intelligence Lead a #healthcare Renaissance in 2019?
    https://hackernoon.com/will-artificial-intelligence-lead-a-healthcare-renaissance-in-2019-b08a2

    Recognizing the Opportunities for Advanced Computing in HealthcareThe two topics of healthcare and technology have truly joined forces together to create a revolutionary era for healthcare today. I studied Biochemistry as one of my double majors at UC Berkeley many moons ago but decided to enter the field of Computer Science & application development when I entered the marketplace. At the time breakthroughs surrounding healthcare weren’t happening fast enough but now, with the combination of advancements in genetics, medical research, and the democratization of advanced data computing techniques, we are getting a glimpse into the future possibilities in improving healthcare substantially.Why it Hasn’t Happened YetThere is a multitude of reasons that have contributed to why AI hasn’t (...)

    #healthcare-renaissance #api #image-processing #artificial-intelligence

    • ronnie barkan @ronnie_barkan | 29 déc.
      https://twitter.com/ronnie_barkan/status/1078886873160912896

      1/ Good riddance #AmosOz.
      Oz was a leading apologist for mass-murder and #apartheid - all in the name of peace of course.
      Below is a letter by authors and self-proclaimed leftists Amos Oz and A.B. Yehoshua, which was sent in April 2010 to the UC Berkeley student senate.

      2/ The two have the gull to blame the Berkeley students of antisemitism, or at the very least allude to that, coz the student senate had voted to divest from American companies General Electric and United Technologies that supplied #apartheid Israel
      https://drive.google.com/file/d/1U1Kmae17OsjXmD2Vb7IzN_aJGS3JLEQa/edit

      3/ with the means of destruction that were used during its assault on #Gaza the year before - massacring 1400 people, including over 350 children. The two low-lives, Oz and Yehoshua, blamed the students of antisemitism for what exactly?!

      4/ For refusing to fund two American weapon manufacturers whose war machines were used for the massacre of children in the besieged #Gaza ghetto. In a way, their propaganda letter could not have been a more sinister & grotesque creation. Maybe they’re talented writers after all!

      5/ Want another of many such examples?
      As a dedicated apologist for Israeli mass-murder, #Oz begins the Deutsche Welle interview of 2014, during another onslaught on #Gaza, with these outrageous lies:

      6/ Amos Oz: I would like to begin the interview in a very unusual way: by presenting one or two questions to your readers and listeners. May I do that?
      Deutsche Welle: Go ahead!
      Amos Oz: Question 1: What would you do if your neighbor across the street sits down on the balcony,

      7/ puts his little boy on his lap and starts shooting machine gun fire into your nursery?
      Amos Oz: Question 2: What would you do if your neighbor across the street digs a tunnel from his nursery to your nursery in order to blow up your home or in order to kidnap your family?

      8/ These are your peaceniks, Israel. Their sheer supremacy and moral depravity will not be missed.
      NOTE: If you were offended by the above text - still desperately clinging on to the notion that Oz represents the good side of humanity -

      9/ ask yourself whether you’d be upset w/ writing about the demise of an outright fascist? Oz and his ilk represent, as far as I’m concerned, a far greater danger than the Liebermans & Netanyahus of the world, and your attempt to see him as any different exactly proves my point.

  • Top University #blockchain Curriculum #rankings of 2018
    https://hackernoon.com/top-university-blockchain-curriculum-rankings-of-2018-d3807b513dc8?sourc

    In the past two years, the soaring price of #bitcoin has brought a wave of attention to blockchain technology. In fact, keywords such as Bitcoin, blockchain, and cryptocurrency have become #academic spotlights that universities are paying attention to.In October this year, Coindesk announced the top ten universities in the United States that have opened blockchain courses. These universities are arguably the world’s top universities, including Stanford University, UC Berkeley, Harvard University, and Massachusetts Institute of Technology.Blockchain Courses Offered by Top UniversitiesWhat are the characteristics of the courses offered by these schools? Which colleges are offering related courses? SV Insight Research analyzed the top 30 North American universities from US News 2019 (...)

    #education

  • How #makerdao Created An Engaged, Cohesive #community Without An ICO
    https://hackernoon.com/how-makerdao-created-an-engaged-cohesive-community-without-an-ico-1247c2

    Find more helpful resources on building and running a successful crypto community on the Chainfuel blog, as well as their free e-book: The 7 Pillars of Crypto Community Management.MakerDAO are the makers of DAI, which is a stablecoin on the #ethereum network. DAI is a completely decentralized stablecoin that exists purely on the #blockchain.What’s your background? How did you get started in crypto, and then involved with Makerdao?I studied rhetoric at UC Berkeley and minored in political economy. I heard about crypto for the first time when I was 19, so that would have been in 2012. I thought the concept of a trustless, transnational digital currency like Bitcoin really fascinating but didn’t follow through to create a career path for myself.After college, I went to graduate school on a (...)

    #cryptocurrency

  • From refugees to entrepreneurs: How one family started over

    With just 30 days notice, the Rawas family was plucked from their temporary home in Jordan, where they’d fled the Syrian civil war, and resettled in Oakland. As refugees, they knew no one, had no job prospects and didn’t speak a word of English.

    Three years later, Mohammed Aref Rawas, Rawaa Kasedah and their four children are running a budding catering business that serves authentic Syrian food such as smoked basmati rice, falafel and fattoush salad. They’ve hired their first employee. Their clients include big tech companies. And the days when starting over seemed impossible are far behind them.

    They are among a large population of refugees who, after fleeing a homeland overrun by violence and political turmoil, started a business in the U.S., integrating quickly into the economy and life of a country that gave them a second chance. The family’s entrepreneurial approach is common among immigrants, studies show.

    An estimated 11 percent of all Syrian immigrants in the labor force are business owners — nearly four times the rate of U.S.-born business owners, according to a study by the New York-based Fiscal Policy Institute and the Center for American Progress. A significant part of that success has been the ability to master the English language, the report said.

    Meanwhile, a 2016 study by the Institute that followed Bosnian, Burmese, Hmong and Somali refugees nationwide found that they too moved up the occupational ladder and started businesses after settling in the U.S. Thirty one out of every 1,000 Bosnian refugees in the labor force are business owners, compared with 26 out of every 1,000 Burmese, 22 out of 1,000 Hmong and 15 out of every 1,000 Somalis, the study found.

    “There’s a hunger for dignified work,” said Dr. Thane Kreiner, executive director of the Miller Center for Social Entrepreneurship at Santa Clara University. Kreiner launched an accelerator program known as Social Entrepreneurship at the Margins, which helps businesses and organizations around the world run by refugees, migrants or victims of human trafficking. “There’s this element of launching businesses, but also of integrating with the new host community so the refugees become part of the community rather than the ‘other.’”

    The Rawas family started Old Damascus Fare casually, by happenstance last year though the family has entrepreneurship in their blood. Rawas owned a successful clothing factory in Syria, where he oversaw about 50 employees. The family lived comfortably in a suburb in their native Damascus. But increasing gunfire, kidnappings and the presence of military groups forced them to leave, and their temporary escape to Jordan in 2012 soon became permanent.

    More than 500,000 Syrians have died and nearly 6 million have fled during a civil war that began seven years ago with an uprising against President Bashar al-Assad. Since the Trump administration’s ban on travel from seven Muslim nations, including Syria, only a handful of Syrian refugees have been resettled in California in the past fiscal year.

    As the Rawas family settled into the Bay Area, new friends and acquaintances in the Arab community asked Kasedah to cater birthday parties and other events. By then, the family had noticed the absence of authentic Syrian food, even in Oakland’s diverse neighborhoods. Soon they were catering events for local tech companies such as Facebook and LinkedIn.

    “We got to the point where we realized it’s not only about food,” said Batool Rawoas, one of the couple’s daughters. “We are making new friends, we are hearing about new opportunities. It’s a way to share our culture with the people here.”

    They’re a powerful example of the American dream, said David Miliband, a former British foreign secretary and CEO of the International Rescue Committee, which resettled the Rawas family in 2015. “They show that these are people who want to work and not be reliant on welfare,” he said.

    Miliband visited the family recently at their catering kiosk on the UC Berkeley campus before he gave a speech, ordering the falafel sandwich and munching on appetizers that the family excitedly prepared for him. Because refugees like the Rawas’ often have to reinvent their lives, he said, that makes them resilient entrepreneurs.

    “In a way, being a refugee, having to flee for your life, having to figure out who to trust, having to figure out new ways of survival … there could hardly be a more effective job training program,” he said. “Those qualities of cooperation, determination, courage, trust are important for any entrepreneur. I don’t want to trivialize it, but it makes the point.”

    The family admits they’re still struggling. Their expenses regularly exceed their income, and they’re overwhelmed by the painstaking details of operating a business.

    “The main challenge for any refugee family is navigating how to survive in the Bay Area because it’s so expensive,” said Rawoas, who is attending community college and hopes to transfer to a four-year university to study psychology and public health. “We lived in Syria, we were from the middle class and we had a very comfortable life. We owned our own house, our own land.”

    “But we’re hoping, in the future, this will be a good thing to support us financially,” she added.

    Their next goal: to own a restaurant.


    https://www.mercurynews.com/2018/11/04/from-refugees-to-entrepreneurs-how-one-family-started-over
    #entrepreunariat #entreprenariat #USA #Etats-Unis #réfugiés #asile #migrations #travail #intégration_professionnelle #réfugiés_syriens #économie

  • Premature Birth Rates Drop in California After Coal and Oil Plants Shut Down
    https://insideclimatenews.org/news/22052018/air-pollution-coal-power-plants-oil-health-risks-premature-births

    The study, published in the American Journal of Epidemiology, found that the rate of premature births dropped from 7 to 5.1 percent after the plants were shuttered, between 2001 and 2011. The most significant declines came among African American and Asian women. Preterm birth can be associated with lifelong health complications.

    The results add fresh evidence to a robust body of research on the harmful effects of exposure to air pollution, especially in young children—even before they’re born.

    “The ah-ha moment was probably just seeing what a large, estimated effect size we got,” said lead author Joan Casey, who is a post-doctoral fellow at UC Berkeley. “We were pretty shocked by it—to the point that we did many, many additional analyses to try to make it go away, and didn’t succeed.”

    #pollution #air

  • Which World Cities Have the Best Universities ? - CityLab
    http://www.citylab.com/work/2017/01/mapping-the-worlds-knowledge-hubs/505748

    The global economy is increasingly powered by innovation and knowledge, and great universities are a key source of those, functioning as catalysts of the knowledge economy. Leading-edge universities form the axis of tech hubs like the Bay Area (Stanford, UC Berkeley, and the University of California at San Francisco), the Cambridge-Boston region (MIT and Harvard), and a regenerating Pittsburgh (Carnegie Mellon and the University of Pittsburgh).

    But what are the world’s leading centers for university knowledge?

    #savoir #université #connaissance #cartographie #classement #rating - tentative de nouveau mot clé dans lequel on pourrait bien intégrer le minable #decodex

  • Israel Is a Settler Colonial State - and That’s OK
    Repulsed by UC Berkeley’s ’Palestine: A Settler Colonial Analysis’ course? ‘Settler colonialism’ may have been eagerly adopted by the BDS movement – but early Zionist leaders weren’t shy about identifying with it either.

    Arnon Degani Sep 13, 2016
    read more: http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-1.741813
    Haaretz -

    Appalled and outraged posts appearing on the feeds of pro-Israel advocates announce that this coming fall semester, UC Berkeley students can attend a course titled “Palestine: A Settler Colonial Analysis.” The course, offered as part of Berkely’s “DeCal Program”, will be taught by a undergraduate student named Paul Hadaweh, and supervised by Dr. Hatem Bazian, one of the most vocal and industrious anti-Israel scholars in American academia.
    The fact that a one-unit course headed by an undergraduate student is creating such waves is telling of the level of anxiety that the term “settler-colonialism” evokes when the Israel-Palestinian conflict comes up. This shouldn’t be the case.
    For almost a century, Zionism’s intellectual enemies, especially from the left, have considered it part and parcel of European colonialism. In recent years, the addition of “settler” to colonialism has gained much traction among scholars who engage in anti-Israel activity, particularly BDS, as well as intersectionality activists. Settler colonialism conveys an unarguable sense of delegitimization, racial exclusion and financial exploitation. If anything, it sounds more biting (perhaps because Israel still actively sponsors settlers) and acerbic, but it also tends to be incorporated willy-nilly into research and public commentary.

  • Manipuler un smartphone à l’aide de commandes vocales dissimulées dans des vidéos Youtube
    http://korben.info/manipuler-smartphone-a-laide-de-commandes-vocales-dissimulees-videos-youtub

    siri

    Des chercheurs de l’Université de Georgetown et UC Berkeley ont mis au point une attaque qui permet de compromettre un smartphone à l’aide de commandes vocales planquées dans des vidéos YouTube.

    Pour y parvenir, ils cachent à l’intérieur de vidéo YouTube des commandes vocales, incompréhensibles par l’homme, mais pas par un smartphone équipé de Siri ou de Google Now.

    #Google_Now #Hijacking #Piratage_informatique #Reconnaissance_vocale #Siri_(logiciel) #Smartphone #Vidéo #Vidéo_virale #Virus #Vulnérabilité_(informatique)

  • Mapping Displacement and Gentrification in the #San_Francisco Bay Area

    The Bay Area’s booming jobs and housing market necessitates a careful look at the causes and consequences of neighborhood change to protect residents that are most vulnerable to potentially being displaced. Wages for the Bay Area’s low income residents have not kept pace with the sky-rocketing housing prices resulting in massive demographic shifts in the area.

    UC Berkeley analyzed regional data on housing, income and other demographics to better understand and predict where gentrification and displacement is happening and will likely occur in the future. This analysis, which is summarized in the interactive maps, will allow communities to better characterize their experience and risk of displacement and to stimulate action. The analysis behind these maps was validated through in-depth case studies of 9 Bay Area communities and with the support and advice of the Regional Prosperity Plan at the Metropolitan Transportation Commission. In developing 8 neighborhood displacement typologies, communities can better understand where they’re at and develop actions to prevent from advancing in the stages of gentrification and displacement.


    http://www.vividmaps.com/2016/03/mapping-displacement-and-gentrification.html
    #gentrification #urban_matter #cartographie #visualisation
    signalé par @ville_en

  • Des précaires et chômeurs signent une tribune dans Le Monde pour remercier Valls and co

    « Le projet de loi El Khomri représente une avancée pour les plus fragiles »

    LE MONDE | 04.03.2016

    La réforme du code du travail va dans le bon sens en inversant la tendance massive du recours au contrat à durée déterminée et de la généralisation de la précarité, selon un collectif d’universitaires.

    Le chômage, désormais au plus haut niveau depuis l’après-guerre, ne frappe pas tout le monde de la même manière. Il se concentre sur les jeunes et les moins qualifiés. Un chômeur sur quatre a moins de 25 ans, un sur trois n’a aucun diplôme et 80 % n’ont pas dépassé le bac. Ces publics sont les grands perdants d’un marché du travail qui exclut les plus fragiles ou les relègue dans des emplois précaires, tant les entreprises craignent d’embaucher en CDI.

    Ces inégalités sont insupportables. En réduisant l’incertitude qui entoure le CDI, le projet de loi El Khomri est de nature à changer la donne : c’est avant tout à ces publics défavorisés qu’elle va donner accès à un emploi durable.

    Une réforme d’ampleur est nécessaire. Le code du travail ne donne aujourd’hui aucune définition précise des difficultés économiques justifiant un licenciement, et n’encadre pas non plus le montant des indemnités en cas de licenciement non fondé. Il est devenu une source d’insécurité pour l’entreprise comme pour le salarié, car il laisse au juge un champ d’appréciation qui va bien au-delà de ses compétences juridiques.

    Aujourd’hui, ni le salarié ni l’employeur ne sont capables de savoir si les difficultés économiques seront considérées comme suffisantes par le juge pour justifier un licenciement. Ils sont également incapables de prévoir précisément le coût des fins de CDI, tant le montant des indemnités octroyées par les prud’hommes relève d’une logique difficilement prévisible.

    Un salarié dont l’ancienneté est comprise entre deux et cinq ans peut se voir proposer entre un et dix mois de salaire aux prud’hommes si son licenciement est considéré comme non fondé. Cette incertitude est lourde de conséquences pour les salariés autant que pour les entreprises, notamment les plus petites, souvent incapables d’affronter de longues périodes de contentieux juridiques en s’offrant les services de cabinets d’avocats spécialisés.

    Les CDD, 90 % des embauches

    Par crainte d’embaucher en CDI, les entreprises ont massivement recours au CDD, bien au-delà des cas prévus par la loi. Les CDD représentent 90 % des embauches. Les jeunes et les moins qualifiés ne connaissent pratiquement que ce type de contrat, parfois durant de nombreuses années. Or, outre la précarité, les CDD proposent moins de formation professionnelle, offrent des salaires plus faibles, et pénalisent l’accès au crédit et au logement.

    Un barème plus précis des indemnités octroyées par les prud’hommes et une définition objective des situations pouvant justifier un licenciement sont de nature à inverser ces tendances. C’est ce que propose le projet de loi El Khomri. L’exemple de l’Espagne devrait faire réfléchir ses détracteurs. Ayant adopté une loi similaire en 2012, ce pays a connu un surcroît de 300 000 embauches en CDI dès l’année suivante. Ces embauches sont surtout le fait de PME pour lesquelles la crainte du conflit prud’homal pèse le plus sur les décisions d’embauche. Ces embauches en CDI ont bénéficié en priorité aux personnes abonnées au CDD, ce qui a permis de réduire les pertes d’emploi.

    Pour que la réforme du licenciement devienne un pilier d’un « Jobs Act » à la française permettant d’en finir avec le chômage de masse, il y aurait urgence à la compléter dans plusieurs directions. L’une concerne la formation professionnelle : elle doit être profondément refondée pour devenir opérationnelle, en particulier en instaurant un système individualisé qui laisse l’employé ou le chômeur choisir son prestataire de services de formation.

    Cela suppose la mise en place d’un système d’évaluation des formations transparent et indépendant. Une autre serait d’améliorer les garanties de revenus pour les chômeurs en formation et la recherche d’un nouvel emploi. Enfin, il faudrait renforcer les avantages des contrats longs, notamment à travers un système de bonus-malus des cotisations à l’assurance chômage incitant les entreprises à privilégier de telles embauches.

    En attendant ces réformes indispensables, le projet de loi El Khomri représente néanmoins une avancée pour les plus fragiles. En réduisant fortement l’incertitude attachée à la rupture des contrats de travail, il incite les entreprises à revenir vers des embauches en CDI. C’est un moyen de lutter efficacement contre les inégalités et la précarité.

    Philippe Aghion , professeur au Collège de France ;
    Yann Algan , professeur à Sciences Po ;
    Agnès Bénassy-Quéré , professeure à Paris School of Economics ;
    Olivier Blanchard , Senior Fellow au Peterson Institute for International Economics ;
    François Bourguignon , professeur à Paris School of Economics ;
    Pierre Cahuc , professeur à l’Ecole polytechnique ;
    Arnaud Chéron , directeur de recherche à l’Edhec ;
    Stéphane Carcillo , professeur au département d’économie de Sciences Po ;
    Elie Cohen , directeur de recherche au CNRS ;
    Antoine d’Autume , professeur à Paris School of Economics ;
    Marc Ferracci , professeur à l’université Paris-II ;
    François Fontaine , professeur à Paris School of Economics ;
    Robert Gary-Bobo , professeur à l’Ensae ;
    Pierre-Yves Geoffard , professeur à Paris School of Economics ;
    Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas , professeur à UC Berkeley ;
    Jean-Olivier Hairault, professeur à Paris School of Economics ;
    Hubert Kempf , professeur à l’Ecole normale supérieure de Cachan ; Francis Kramarz , professeur à l’Ecole polytechnique ;
    Augustin Landier , professeur à Toulouse School of Economics ;
    François Langot , professeur à l’université du Mans ;
    Yannick L’Horty , professeur à l’université Paris-Est Marne-La Vallée ;
    Thomas Philippon , professeur à New York University ;
    Richard Portes , professeur à la London Business School ;
    Hélène Rey , professeure à la London Business School ;
    Katheline Schubert , professeure à Paris School of Economics ;
    Claudia Senik , professeure à Paris School of Economics ;
    Jean Tirole , professeur à Toulouse School of Economics, Prix Nobel d’économie (2014) ;
    Alain Trannoy , directeur de recherche à l’EHESS ;
    Marie Claire Villeval , directrice de recherche au CNRS ;
    Radu Vranceanu , professeur à l’Essec ;
    Etienne Wasmer , professeur à Sciences Po ;
    André Zylberberg , directeur de recherche émérite au CNRS.

  • Guerrilla Cartographer Maps Hidden Worlds of Cupcakes, Sex, and Doggy Day Care | WIRED

    L’article date de 2013, mais je référence pour mémoire, l’initiative est super intéressante et l’équipe super chouette.
    http://www.wired.com/2013/08/darin-jensen-guerrilla-cartographer

    In his day job as staff cartographer at UC Berkeley, Darin Jensen makes maps for other people. When professors need a map for teaching a class or submitting a research paper to a journal, he’s their man. But his real passion is fostering what he calls guerrilla cartography.

    If traditional cartography is slow, methodical, and ethically bound to be free of bias, guerrilla cartography is a rapid and loosely coordinated effort to draw attention to social issues. It’s “the act of making a map in the interest of the change that it can inspire or induce,” Jensen said.

    #cartographie #cartographie_radicale #cartoexperiment

  • How to build your own particle detector | symmetry magazine
    http://www.symmetrymagazine.org/article/january-2015/how-to-build-your-own-particle-detector

    The scale of the detectors at the Large Hadron Collider is almost incomprehensible: They weigh thousands of tons, contain millions of detecting elements and support a research program for an international community of thousands of scientists.

    But particle detectors aren’t always so complicated. In fact, some particle detectors are so simple that you can make (and operate) them in your own home.

    The Continuously Sensitive Diffusion Cloud Chamber is one such detector. Originally developed at UC Berkeley in 1938, this type of detector uses evaporated alcohol to make a ‘cloud’ that is extremely sensitive to passing particles.

    #cool #kids

  • Maps + algorithms to bring infrastructure and services to urban slums worldwide

    This year, Stamen has been working with the Santa Fe Institute and UC Berkeley College of Environmental Design for Slum Dwellers International to create Open Reblock, a public interface for their innovative research to develop better planning and development tools for informal settlements. The result is a publicly available tool at http://openreblock.org. It takes maps of existing buildings and roads or paths and uses a sophisticated algorithm to create a map showing how city infrastructure and services can be brought to informal settlements with the least disruption for existing communities and their residents.

    Informal settlements are part of cities worldwide, and they’re growing rapidly. Some demographers estimate that virtually all of the population growth on the planet in this century will effectively be absorbed by informal settlements. A single city “block” in informal settlements can have hundreds of residences, most without direct street access. It’s difficult to provide services, roads, water, and sewage, in these situations. One reason often cited for either doing nothing or for the demolition and redevelopment of these settlements is their lack of easy access for infrastructure and services. Open Reblock provides an alternative — a way forward for integrating services in existing informal settlements, respecting these communities, while helping them gain access to essential services. It does this by generating maps to connect as many parcels as possible — up to all of the parcels — in a block to roads and utilities.

    via http://content.stamen.com/open_data_essential_infrastructure

    #map #osm

  • Borderwall as #Architecture (Ronald Rael and Virginia San Fratello)

    From the curators: Ronald Rael and Virginia San Fratello, practicing architects as well as architecture professors at UC Berkeley and San José State University, respectively, created the Borderwall as Architecture project to reimagine the design, function, and use of the controversial dividing wall between the U.S. and Mexico. The current border wall is not one monolithic fortification but rather a collection of several physical barriers that stretches across parts of Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, and California. Borderwall as Architecture is a multilayered proposal both serious in its intent to suggest new types of infrastructure that could positively affect the complex issues of immigration control and violence at the border, and also deliberately satirical. The speculative designs include a divider made of solar energy panels that would enforce the border while productively capturing the fierce sunlight native to the region; water collection and purification points adjacent to the wall to give respite to those of any nationality in proximity; a binational and bilingual library that would foster reciprocal cultural understanding; and designs such as the cross-border teeter-totter that highlight the absurdity of a barrier that is both imposing and porous. While there has been an international border boundary line between the United States and Mexico since 1848, construction of the barrier began in 2006, with the signing of the Secure Fence Act by then-President George W. Bush. The project rationale cited a desire to mitigate the flow of illegal crossings and to protect U.S. citizens from drug cartel violence. Over 600 miles of fencing and concrete was installed before the project was halted in 2010 due to excessive costs. As Rael and San Fratello’s provocation highlights, the U.S.-Mexico barrier wall remains hotly contested, as do the politics and policies that surround its design.

    http://designandviolence.moma.org/borderwall-as-architecture-ronald-rael-and-virginia-san-frat
    #murs #barrières_frontalières
    cc @daphne @marty @albertocampiphoto

  • UC Berkeley cartography team works on atlas of Oakland’s International Boulevard | The Daily Californian

    http://www.dailycal.org/2015/05/19/uc-berkeley-cartography-team-works-on-atlas-of-oaklands-international-boul

    A team of students and faculty members at UC Berkeley’s Cartography and GIS Education Lab is creating an atlas of maps that highlights a diverse array of themes on International Boulevard in Oakland.

    The atlas, called the Intranational International Boulevard, maps a range of topics respective to specific areas including the prevalence of asthma, density of litter and garbage, and locations of public art and sweet shops. The atlas of maps, started in 2014, stretches from suburban Hayward and through East Oakland to the border of San Leandro.

    #cartographie #californie #san_francisco #cartographie_radicale

  • It’s the Neoliberalism, Stupid: Why Open Access / Data / Science is not Enough
    http://www.alexandriaarchive.org/blog/?p=931

    “Big Data,” “Data Science,” and “Open Data” are now hot topics at universities. Investments are flowing into dedicated centers and programs to establish institutional leadership in all things related to #data. I welcome the new Data Science effort at UC Berkeley to explore how to make research data professionalism fit into the academic reward systems. That sounds great! But will these new data professionals have any real autonomy in shaping how they conduct their research and build their careers? Or will they simply be part of an expanding class of harried and contingent employees hired and fired through the whims of creative destruction fueled by the latest corporate-academic hype-cycle?

    #open_data #recherche #neoliberalisme #evaluation #publications #sciences #universites

  • Pesticides’ effect on generations of field-workers- SFGate
    http://www.sfgate.com/science/article/Pesticides-affect-on-generations-of-field-workers-4833219.php

    In the late 1990s, the federal government announced it would fund research about environmental chemicals and children’s health. Brenda Eskenazi, a professor of maternal and child health and epidemiology at UC Berkeley, hatched a plan to study Salinas Valley and the people who live there.

    She and her team would attempt to understand how pesticides affect the health of families across generations. They would later expand their research to include other potential sources of environmental harm, such as the chemicals manufacturers put in their products.

    #Agriculture and health

    Over the years, the study’s dozens of findings would draw the attention of residents, doctors, scientists and activists. Hundreds of Mexican American families, many of them employed in the county’s $4 billion agriculture industry, would take part. Because of them, the study is called the Center for the Health Assessment of Mothers and Children of Salinas - or Chamacos, which means “little children” in a Mexican dialect of Spanish.

    “People aren’t exposed to one thing,” Eskenazi said. “They’re exposed to everything around them, including air pollution and alcohol and smoking.”

    _First focus: #pesticides_

    Still, researchers have a lot of educated guesses.

    They began their study by examining organophosphate pesticides, a commonly used type known to harm the human nervous system.

    One of the researchers’ first findings, in 2005, showed the chemicals’ presence in the urine of the women in their study group in greater quantity than women of child-bearing age in the general U.S population.

    Scientists also noticed that the higher the mother’s pesticide levels prior to delivery, the higher the chance their baby would demonstrate abnormal reflexes, such as passive leg movements, after the first three days of life.

    The finding preceded many others. At age 5, youths who had been exposed to high levels of pesticides in the womb were more likely than others to score high on tests that determine the likelihood of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, or ADHD.

    When the children were 7, researchers noted a 5.5-point drop in overall IQ scores for every 10-fold increase in the mothers’ pesticides level during pregnancy.

    There is difficulty, researchers admit, in pinning prenatal pesticide exposure directly to those issues. But Asa Bradman, the research team’s associate director of exposures assessment, said there are problems after adjusting for factors such as age, smoking and other neurotoxicants.

    #santé

  • Climbing the income ladder

    http://flowingdata.com/2013/07/22/climbing-the-income-ladder

    Via Nathan Yau de Flowing Data et repris par le NYT. Toujours très intéressant...

    In a study conducted by researchers at Harvard and UC Berkeley, data shows spatial variations for the chances of rising out of poverty into higher income brackets. The New York Times reports:

    Climbing the income ladder occurs less often in the Southeast and industrial Midwest, the data shows, with the odds notably low in Atlanta, Charlotte, Memphis, Raleigh, Indianapolis, Cincinnati and Columbus. By contrast, some of the highest rates occur in the Northeast, Great Plains and West, including in New York, Boston, Salt Lake City, Pittsburgh, Seattle and large swaths of California and Minnesota.

    “Where you grow up matters,” said Nathaniel Hendren, a Harvard economist and one of the study’s authors. “There is tremendous variation across the U.S. in the extent to which kids can rise out of poverty.”

    Two things. First, the NYT piece is really nice. Graphics and interactives are typically shown separate from the written story, but NYT has been shifting as of late and I’m sure other publications will follow. (Although, as you can see in the credits, eight people made the graphics, and most places don’t have such resources yet.) The story is all tied together, so you read and interact in a continuous flow.

    Second, the Harvard/UC Berkeley research group released the data, so you can have a go yourself.

  • Eric George in Addendum # 11 to Suspicious Financial Machinations Surrounding University of California Regent Richard Blum — Husband of Dianne Feinstein : UC Berkeley Institute of Governmental Studies aka “IGS” [TLR Note: 1- Eric George part of IGS; 2- California Supreme Court Historical Society ("CSCHS") headed by Ronald George, PG&E’s Ophelia Basgal of CaliforniaALL, and Kay Werdegar forward money to IGS 3- In 2007 , CSCHS transfers the unusually high amount of $ 51, 720 to IGS — which YR is in the process of analyzing — may have been used to bribe Joseph Grodin in matter involving PG&E, Jerry Brown, Bill Lockyer, Howard Rice’s Jerome Falk and Amy Margolin 5. CSCHS also transfers funds to “University of California Board of Regents” 6- Separately, according to YR, CSCHS can’t treat expenses for services as “grants” or “donations” 7- Eric George remains under scrutiny in matters involving Toyota, In Re Girardi, Ocean Liners, Winnie the Pooh, Bet Tzedek, 1st. Century Bank,
    etc...]

    Please see story :

    http://lesliebrodie.wordpress.com/2013/02/09/eric-george-in-addendum-11-to-suspicious-financial-machinati

    Eric George of Browne George Ross — son of deposed Ronald George — hereby asked disclose reason necessary to solicit money from private parties (i.e. law firms, lawyers) during time surplus funds of non-profit “California Supreme Court Historical Society” were invested at brokerage-house Smith Barney

    Please see @:

    http://lesliebrodie.wordpress.com/2013/02/08/eric-george-of-browne-george-ross-son-of-deposed-ronald-geor