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Global supply chains keep workers poor: Three case studies show how the cycle can be broken

Global supply chains keep workers poor: Three case studies show how the cycle can be broken Lisa Lock Scientific Editor Andrew Zinin Lead Editor Globally, about 1 in 5 people in jobs live in poverty. A key reason lies in how global supply chains are organized.

Phys.org 8d ago

Constrained flexibility: Which European countries have the highest job insecurity?

France, Italy, Spain and Greece have some of the highest rates of workers in fixed-term or part-time jobs. Some of these countries are trying to tackle that, while elsewhere, part-time roles are increasingly popular. It might sound paradoxical, but for many employees across Europe, temporary work is a constant condition.

Euronews 7d ago

DWP Universal Credit rule that adds up to £429 to claims for two groups of people

DWP Universal Credit rule that adds up to £429 to claims for two groups of people After the April rule changes, only two groups may be eligible for the add-on Universal Credit’s health element, also known as Limited Capability for Work and Work-related Activity (LWCRA), is a vital support for over two million claimants. It adds an extra amount onto the monthly payments for people with health conditions and disabilities to help cover their added cost of living and reduced earning potential...

Daily Mirror 2d ago

WISE-HAR: A Generalizable Ensemble Deep Learning Framework for WiFi-Based Human Activity Recognition

Announce Type: new Abstract: Human Activity Recognition (HAR) using WiFi signals has emerged as a transformative technology for smart homes, healthcare monitoring, security systems, and ambient assisted living. Unlike traditional camera-based systems that raise significant privacy concerns and fail in low-light conditions, or wearable sensors that require user compliance, WiFi-based HAR is non-intrusive, privacy-preserving, cost-effective, and works seamlessly in any lighting condition. This...

arXiv CS 7d ago

Mum died at 47 after six months of 'living hell' with common illness

Mum died at 47 after six months of 'living hell' with common illness The 47-year-old’s health took a significant downward turn, including losing her eyesight, sepsis and subsequent amputation A man says his wife’s final months on Earth were a “living hell” as she suffered with a condition 4.5 million people have in the UK. Christina Gavin had Type 2 diabetes and had been managing the disease until the stillbirth of her daughter, Angelica. The 47-year-old’s health took a significant downward...

Daily Mirror 2d ago

Superintelligence: The Idea That Eats Smart People (2016)

This is the text version of a talk I gave on October 29, 2016, at Web Camp Zagreb [video] (45 mins) SuperintelligenceThe Idea That Eats Smart People | | | In 1945, as American physicists were preparing to test the atomic bomb, it occurred to someone to ask if such a test could set the atmosphere on fire. This was a legitimate concern.

Hacker News 9d ago

‘I moved abroad for a higher salary’: Britons emigrating to escape rising cost of living

‘I moved abroad for a higher salary’: Britons emigrating to escape rising cost of living More than two-thirds of Britons who moved abroad did so due to the cost of living crisis in the UK - Bookmark - CommentsGo to comments Britons are no longer just moving abroad to escape the weather – many are looking for higher wages and a lower cost of living. A report found two-thirds of people in the UK who moved abroad did so to offset high prices, while one in five moved to save money. The findings,...

The Independent UK 2d ago

Tube strikes live: London Underground chaos this week - dates and lines affected

Tube strikes live: London Underground chaos this week - dates and lines affected More Tube strikes will hit the London Underground again this week over two 24-hour periods with passengers warned to plan ahead London is set for more travel chaos this week as the Underground is hit by two 24-hour Tube strikes. The Rail, Maritime and Transport (RMT) union voted for walkouts back in February, with April seeing 48 hours of strikes. Further planned industrial action in March and May was called off.

Daily Mirror 9d ago

New Scientist recommends a deep dive into our organs by Giulia Enders

Organ Speak Giulia Enders (Illustrated by Jill Enders, and translated by Jamie Bulloch), Hachette (UK); HarperCollins (US) Work, home, politics, TV sagas, juicy celebrity gossip – who doesn’t get caught up in the drama of everyday life? But there may be an equally compelling and fascinating story unfolding every second of every day inside the squishy bodies doing all that living. There, our organs do the quiet yet incredible work of providing the oxygen, energy and resilience we need to...

New Scientist 7d ago

A French hospital enlists donkeys in mental health care — and patients approve

From depression to schizophrenia, France's only hospital-based animal therapy unit is making the case that four legs can go where medicine alone cannot. When life gets you down, try petting a donkey — at least, that is one of the prescriptions at the Ville-Evrard hospital complex east of Paris. Tucked within its grounds, among 19th-century farm buildings and woodland, five donkeys are doing some of the mental health heavy lifting between hay-munching breaks.

Euronews 9d ago