The paper was given on 26 october 2001 at the international congress on "unprotected time of young people in the EU", held at the University of Bologna (Italy). It discusses the social problems connected to the time in which young people (10-15 years) are unprotected by the socialising agencies in everyday life. The policies designed so far in eu countries to combat these problems are analysed and evaluated. The author underlines the fact that time is not equal for all generations, because time undergoes very differing accelerations and decelerations depending on the position of each generation and therefore it acquires a very different value and meaning for each of them. For these reasons, to Ea003 Professor of Sociology. University of Bologna donati@spbo.unibo.it Pierpaolo Donati ESE Nº3 2002 pose the problem of unprotected time for young people means entering into the problem of how the various generations LIVE THEIR OWN time and the time for RELATING WITH OTHER GENERATIONS. The paper ends by suggesting some proposals for EU educational policies.
THE AUTHORS PRESENT A FRAMEWORK TO ANALYZE ORGANIZATIONAL CHANGES AMONG ENVIRONMENTAL GROUPS IN WESTERN EUROPE SINCE THE 1980S. A MORE DIVERSIFIED RANGE OF ORGANIZATIONAL MODELS EMERGES THAN THE SIMPLE DICHOTOMY "GRASSROOTS PROTEST GROUPS VS. PROFESSIONAL LOBBY." THEY CONCENTRATE ON FOUR ORGANIZATIONAL TYPES, BASED ON DIFFERENT ORGANIZATIONAL RESPONSES TO PROBLEMS OF RESOURCE MOBILIZATION AND POLITICAL EFFICACY: PUBLIC INTEREST LOBBY, PARTICIPATORY PROTEST ORGANIZATION, PROFESSIONAL PROTEST ORGANIZATION, AND THE PARTICIPATORY PRESSURE GROUP.
This is a pre-copyedited, author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society following peer review. The version of record Barragán, O. et al. "K2-139 b: A low-mass warm Jupiter on a 29-d orbit transiting an active K0 V star" is available online at: http://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stx3207 ; We announce the discovery of K2-139 b (EPIC 218916923 b), a transiting warm-Jupiter (Teq= 547± 25 K) on a 29-d orbit around an active (logR'HK=-4.46±0.06) K0V star in K2 Campaign 7.We derive the system's parameters by combining the K2 photometry with groundbased follow-up observations. With a mass of 0.387-0.033+0.075MJand radius of 0.808-0.033+0.034RJ, K2-139 b is one of the transiting warm Jupiters with the lowest mass known to date. The planetary mean density of 0.91-0.20+0.24g cm-3can be explained with a core of ~50M⊕. Given the brightness of the host star (V=11.653 mag), the relatively short transit duration (~5 h), and the expected amplitude of the Rossiter-McLaughlin effect (~25m s-1), K2-139 is an ideal target to measure the spin-orbit angle of a planetary system hosting a warm Jupiter ; D. Gandolfi gratefully acknowledges the financial support of the Programma Giovani Ricercatori – Rita Levi Montalcini – Rientro dei Cervelli (2012) awarded by the Italian Ministry of Education, Universities and Research (MIUR). Sz. Csizmadia thanks the Hungarian OTKA Grant K113117. H. J. Deeg and D. Nespral acknowledge support by grant ESP2015-65712-C5-4-R of the Spanish Secretary of State for R& D&i (MINECO). D. Lorenzo-Oliveira acknowledges the support from FAPESP (2016/20667-8). This research was supported by the Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad under project FIS2012-31079. The research leading to these results has received funding from the European Union Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2013-2016) under grant agreement No. 312430 (OPTICON).