12/08/2012

Germany attracts better-educated immigrants


Immigrants to Germany are better educated and find it easier to get a job than earlier arrivals, a new survey showed on Monday. But male newcomers from other EU countries have the best employment chances.


Researchers recorded a sharp rise in the number of educated immigrants arriving in Germany with at least an undergraduate degree from a university over the past seven years.

Of those coming to Germany, the share of people with a degree rose from 30 percent in 2005 to 44 percent by 2009, according to a report by the Institute for Employment Research in Nuremberg (IAB) released on Monday.

The figures show Germany's new immigrants are on average better qualified than previous arrivals and their second or third generation offspring, wrote the IAB. They are also more likely to get a job commensurate with their education and training than those who have been in the country for longer.

Of the new immigrants, men from EU countries were best off in terms of employment prospects, said the IAB, with an employment rate similar to that of male Germans not from immigrant backgrounds.

Women moving to Germany from the EU were less likely to get employment, figures showed, and were less likely to get a job their female German counterparts.

Yet people moving to Germany from outside the EU had a much harder time securing a job, something IAB report authors Holger Seibert and RĂ¼diger Wapler said was due to "formal hurdles" barring access to employment for many non-EU citizens.

Also, these immigrants were more likely to make the move to Germany for family or humanitarian reasons, rather than on the basis of a concrete offer of employment.

- Thelocal.com

New Zealand dogs learning to drive

The dog Monty is seen in the driver’s seat behind the
wheel while training. AFP photo

Rather than chasing cars, dogs in New Zealand are being taught to drive them, steering, pedals and all, in a heartwarming project aimed at increasing pet adoptions from animal shelters.

Animal trainer Mark Vette has spent two months training three cross-breed rescue dogs from the Auckland SPCA to drive a modified Mini as a way of proving that even unwanted canines can be taught to perform complex tasks.

The motorized mutts named Porter, Monty and Ginny sit in the driver’s seat, belted in with a safety harness, using their paws to operate specially designed dashboard-height pedals for the accelerator and brakes at Vette’s command.

The car’s steering wheel has been fitted with handles, allowing the dogs to turn it, while the “starter key” is a dashboard-mounted button that the dogs press to get the motor running.

“There is about 10 different behaviors involved, so we had to break them down into each behavior using the accelerator, feet on the wheel, turn the key on, feet on the brake, the gear (stick) and so on,” Vette said.


‘Doggie driving test’

The dogs began their driving lessons on a mock-up rig, learning basic commands through clicker training, before graduating to the Mini.

So far, their experience in the modified car has been limited but they will undergo a “doggie driving test” live on New Zealand television on Dec. 10.

Footage of the old dogs being taught new tricks has attracted more than 300,000 views on YouTube and also proved a trending hit on Twitter.

The dogs all had difficult backgrounds; Ginny was neglected, Monty dumped at the shelter because he was “a handful” and Porter a nervous stray, according to the Auckland Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.

- AFP

Culture diversity makes human cultural life interesting: Mo Yan


(Xinhua) -- Mo Yan, the 2012 Nobel Prize winner for literature, said on Friday that diversity in global cultures makes human beings' cultural life interesting.

Mo told a reception in the Chinese Embassy in Stockholm that it was a responsibility to protect the diversity in cultures while creating the diversity as well.

He said that translation played a very important role in bridging different cultures, adding that without the translators who had translated his books he couldn't have won the Nobel Prize.

"I think translation is much harder than writing itself," said Mo Yan, explaining that it only took 43 days to write the work Life and Death Are Wearing Me Out, while it took Swedish sinologist Anna Gustafsson Chen six years to translate the work.

Earlier in the day he visited a Swedish middle school, where about 20 Swedish students who were studying Chinese welcomed him by singing the theme song in the movie "Red Sorghum" which was based on his novel of the same name.

"Unlike the rough and husky voice in the movie, the Swedish students presented the song with a gentle and soft voice, making it rather a romantic song," Mo told the gathering at the Chinese Embassy.

He said he hoped that there were going to be some outstanding translators among the students, adding that meeting them made him "extraordinarily happy."

He said language was going to be "the most reliable way" for interaction between peoples because one had to know the language of a nation to understand the people's inner world and spiritual life.

Lan Lijun, Chinese Ambassador to Sweden, said that Chinese literature had stepped into the spotlight worldwide after Mo Yan had won the Nobel Prize, which would help contribute to the literature communication and dialogue between China and the rest of the world.

People in Sweden and other parts of the world were all welcome to know more about Chinese culture, he added.

There were about 130 people attending the reception, including Per Westerberg, speaker of the Swedish Parliament.

Push to extend Kyoto Protocol after climate talks stall


Qatar proposed keeping an existing U.N. plan for fighting climate change in place until 2020 on Saturday in an attempt to break a deadlock at talks over a new deal to curb world greenhouse gas emissions.

The OPEC nation hosting the negotiations among almost 200 countries also suggested putting off until 2013 a dispute about demands from developing nations for more cash to help them cope with global warming.

The U.N.’s 1997 Kyoto Protocol will expire by the end of the year if it is not extended and has already been weakened by withdrawals of Russia, Japan and Canada. Its backers, led by the European Union and Australia, account for just 15 percent of world greenhouse gas emissions.

Expiry of Kyoto would leave the world with no legally binding deal to confront global warming, merely a patchwork of national laws to rein in rising carbon emissions.

The draft deal would extend the pact, which had obliged about 35 industrialised nations to cut greenhouse gas emissions by an average of at least 5.2 percent below 1990 levels during the period from 2008 to 2012.


The two-week U.N. meeting in the Qatari capital had been due to end on Friday but the talks went on through the night in an attempt to avert failure.

“I believe this is a package we can all live with,” conference president Abdullah bin Hamad Al-Attiyah said as he presented the Qatari proposal to help combat floods, droughts, heat waves and rising sea levels.

The proposal would keep alive hopes for a new, global U.N. deal to fight climate change meant to be agreed by 2015 and enter into force by 2020 after successive failed attempts.

The 2015 deal would set goals for all nations, including emerging economies led by China and India that have no targets under Kyoto.

- Reuters

US jobless rate hits four-year low as employment increases


U.S. employment grew faster than expected in November, but a drop in the jobless rate to a near-four year low as people gave up the search for work suggested the labor market was still tepid.

Nonfarm employment increased by 146,000 jobs last month, the Labor Department said on Friday, defying expectations of a sharp pull back related to superstorm Sandy.

However, job gains for both September and October were revised to show 49,000 fewer jobs created in those months than earlier reported.

The jobless rate fell to 7.7 percent last month, the lowest since December 2008. But the drop was because people gave up the search for work, which does not bode well for the economy.

The government said the storm which slammed the densely populated East Coast had not had a substantive effect on employment last month.

- Reuters

Headline December9,2012

''DOES 'DENIAL' CONTRIBUTE TO HAPPINESS?''


Denial is taken as a hurdle over which we must jump, a barrier in the path of recovery.''If denial has not been bridged, people think they have somehow failed,'' said Jessica Corner, Director for Cancer and Palliative Care Studies at the Institute of Cancer Research at the Royal Marsden Hospital.
At its worst denial is a controlling mechanism which posts one version of reality as a superior to another. When Kearney asserted that one in 3 Americans either had a drinking problem or is affected by one, and that they are in denial, how is he to be disproven?



To accuse someone of being in denial is to set an account that is impossible to refute.
Modern critics of Freud, such as Richard Webster, author of ''Why Freud was wrong: Sin, Science and Psychoanalysis'',say that Freud used denial as a theoretical prove-all.According to Freud, denial was a evidence of repression, which was in itself pathological. He told the patients what he was going to find, when they replied with resistance, he told them they were in denial.

According to Dr Steven Greer, a consultant psychiatrist some years ago at the Royal Marsden Hospital, denial is not only a natural coping mechanism, it is a reaction that can vastly increase the chances of surviving a serious illness. In 1972, Dr Greer followed 62 women who were in the early stages of breast cancer. The psychological responses of the women were grouped in five categories; denial and avoidance; fighting spirit; stoic acceptance; helplessness and hopelessness; and anxious preoccupation.


When fighting spirit and denial were combined, 45 per cent of those patients were alive and well after a fifteen-year-follow-up, unlike 17 per cent of those in the other categories.
To some, lauding denial's role as a coping mechanism is still missing the point. ''That does not answer the question, ' Does denial contribute to happiness?'' said Professor Steinberg who was a visiting research fellow at psychology at Middlesex University. ''Digging up difficult memories is its by nature unpleasant, but I think it is only going to re-affirm the bad experience. A psychoanalyst would not agree, of course, and would argue that working through the memory is the only way you can lay the ghost. This is a very contentious issue. You cannot really do any controlled experiments. But surely it must be be better to get on with life than look back?''
True!

Good Night & God Bless!

At Elite French University, One Hurdle After Another


It may turn out to be a good vintage for French wine, but 2012 has been a terrible year for the Institut d’Études Politiques de Paris, the elite institute for political studies known as Sciences Po, which last week had its interim director removed by the French higher education minister, Geneviève Fioraso, who installed another candidate in his place.


In April, the school’s longtime director, Richard Descoings, was found dead in a New York hotel room. Officials ruled in May that he died of natural causes.

Under Mr. Descoings’s leadership the school instituted a controversial affirmative action program to recruit students from disadvantaged backgrounds, opened six satellite campuses and turned a feeder school for the French civil service into an international powerhouse that drew 40 percent of its students from outside France.

Even before Mr. Descoings’s death, the Cour des Comptes, the national audit office, had announced in October 2011 that it would investigate the university’s accounts from 2005 to 2010.

The Ministry of Higher Education and Research wanted the search for a new director to be delayed until the audit office could announce its findings, but the faculty pressed ahead with its search and on Oct. 30 nominated Hervé Crès, a deputy to Mr. Descoings who had been acting director, to succeed him.

Even though some details had been leaked to the French news media, when the national audit office formally published its findings on Nov. 22 the results were damning: Sciences Po was faulted for its “weak internal and external controls,” the “abusive use of credit cards” by staff members, “toxic loans” for faculty housing and the practice of paying some professors more than others even though they had fewer teaching hours.

According to French news reports, the investigation said that Mr. Descoings, whose gross annual pay was €537, 000, or about $700,000, was paid too much and in a manner that was “not transparent.” By comparison, President François Hollande of France is paid €179,000; his predecessor, Nicolas Sarkozy, received €255,600.

Last week Ms. Fioraso announced that Jean Gaeremynck, the head of the finance section of the Conseil d’État, or Council of State, would serve as the interim director of Sciences Po.

The school, which receives just over half its financing from the French government, has a unique structure that divides responsibility between the Institut and the Fondation Nationale des Sciences Politiques, a private, nonprofit foundation that manages the school and presides over research. Traditionally, the same person has led both units, but Francis VĂ©rillaud, vice president of the school, said that Mr. Gaeremynck would only head the institute.

“HervĂ© Crès had been elected by both boards after a search procedure,” Mr. VĂ©rillaud said by telephone. “Now that process has been interrupted.”

Mr. VĂ©rillaud pointed out that while the audit office’s report identified serious “dysfunctions” in the way the school was managed, no members of the administration had been singled out by name.

“Sciences Po is a public university. When you use public money there has to be regulation and accountability,” Mr. VĂ©rillaud said. “We took this report very seriously. Sciences Po will make the corrections necessary.”

The school has already issued a 75-page response to the report promising corrective action.

Some of the furor, however, appears to stem from Mr. Descoings’s effort to transform the institution. French professors are civil servants, whose salaries and working hours are strictly controlled. It was difficult for Mr. Descoings to recruit the faculty he wanted without offering the kind of arrangements, on pay and teaching load, that were criticized by the auditors.

“Descoings was a visionary,” Mr. VĂ©rillaud said. “In a globalized world you have to adapt to survive, and sometimes institutions find it painful to change.”

- nytimes.com

Unemployment rate drops to 7.2% on 59,000 new jobs



Canada cranked out 59,000 new jobs in November as an increase in full-time work helped push the unemployment rate down 0.2 percentage points to 7.2 per cent, according to statistics released today.

Statistics Canada said Friday there were job gains in Ontario, Quebec, Alberta, Manitoba and Prince Edward Island.

There was little change in the other provinces.

Much of the job gains came from the private sector, because public-sector jobs and the number of self employed people were basically unchanged.

The strong jobs number beat economists' expectations by a long shot, and was a big rebound from a flat showing the previous month.

The decline in the jobless rate was especially significant, as Canada's unemployment rate had been stagnating at around 7.4 per cent for a few months.

The unemployment rate dropped because the 59,000 new jobs number was large enough to offset the 19,000 new workers who entered the workforce during the month.

CBC News