Blog

  • News story: Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering honours internet pioneers

    David Cameron launched the Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering in 2011 with the Deputy Prime Minister and Leader of the Opposition. All three will be at the prize’s inaugural royal reception which will award internet pioneers Bob Kahn, Vint Cerf, Louis Pouzin, Sir Tim Berners-Lee and Marc Andreessen.

    Recognising the importance of engineering and innovation, the Prime Minister said:

    This is a fantastic week for innovation, which is absolutely vital to jobs and growth in our economy. Yesterday I met the face of engineering’s future in Downing Street as we launched a drive for 100,000 new engineering apprentices – and today we have the inaugural Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering.

    More than any other time in history our world is being shaped by innovation, new ideas, new technologies and new companies. This is the story of the global economy. People young and old around the world will be inspired by the incredible feats that these men have achieved – with our very own Sir Tim Berners-Lee a shining example of Britain’s ability to succeed in the global race.

    The Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering is a £1 million global prize rewarding those whose groundbreaking engineering work has worldwide benefit to humanity.

  • Memory improves for older adults using computerized brain-fitness program

    UCLA RESEARCH ALERT
     
    FINDINGS:  
    UCLA researchers have found that older adults who regularly used a brain-fitness program on a computer demonstrated significantly improved memory and language skills. 
     
    The UCLA team studied 69 dementia-free participants, with an average age of 82, who were recruited from retirement communities in Southern California. The participants played a computerized brain-fitness program called Dakim BrainFitness, which trains individuals through more than 400 exercises in the areas of short- and long-term memory, language, visual-spatial processing, reasoning and problem-solving, and calculation skills.
     
    The researchers found that of the 69 participants, the 52 individuals who over a six-month period completed at least 40 sessions (of 20–25 minutes each) on the program showed improvement in both immediate and delayed memory skills, as well as language skills.
     
    The findings suggest that older adults who participate in computerized brain training can improve their cognitive skills.
     
    IMPACT:    
    The study’s findings add to a body of research exploring whether brain fitness tools may help improve language and memory and ultimately help protect individuals from the cognitive decline associated with aging and Alzheimer’s disease.
     
    Age-related memory decline affects approximately 40 percent of older adults.  And while previous studies have shown that engaging in stimulating mental activities can help older adults improve their memory, little research had been done to determine whether the numerous computerized brain-fitness games and memory training programs on the market are effective in improving memory. This is one of the first studies to assess the cognitive effects of a computerized memory-training program.  
     
    AUTHORS:  
    Authors of the study were Karen Miller, Ph.D., an associate clinical professor at the Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior at UCLA, and Prabha Siddarth, Ph.D., a research statistician in psychiatry and biobehavioral sciences at the Semel Institute. Both are available for interviews.
     
    FUNDING:   
    The study was funded in part by Dakim, manufacturer of Dakim BrainFitness, the computerized program used in the study. Miller and Siddarth have served as consultants on the development of the software included in the program.
     
    JOURNAL:  
    The study is published in the July issue of the American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry. A copy of the full study is also available.

  • TRB Special Report 311: Effects of Diluted Bitumen on Crude Oil Transmission Pipelines

    Prepublication Now Available

    TRB Special Report 311: Effects of Diluted Bitumen on Crude Oil Transmission Pipelines analyzes whether shipments of diluted bitumen have a greater likelihood of release from pipelines than shipments of other crude oils. The oil sands region of Canada is the source of diluted bitumen shipped by pipeline to the United States.

    The committee that produced the report did not find any pipeline failures unique to the transportation of diluted bitumen or evidence of physical or chemical properties of diluted bitumen shipments that are outside the range of those of other crude oil shipments. The committee’s comprehensive review did not find evidence of any specific aspect of the transportation of diluted bitumen that would make it more likely than other crude oils to cause pipeline releases.

    [Read the full report]

    Topics: Transportation

  • The CTSA Program at NIH: Opportunities for Advancing Clinical and Translational Research

    Prepublication Now Available

    In 2006 the National Institutes of Health (NIH) established the Clinical and Translational Science Awards (CTSA) Program, recognizing the need for a new impetus to encourage clinical and translational research. At the time it was very difficult to translate basic and clinical research into clinical and community practice; making it difficult for individual patients and communities to receive its benefits. Since its creation the CTSA Program has expanded, with 61 sites spread across the nation’s academic health centers and other institutions, hoping to provide catalysts and test beds for policies and practices that can benefit clinical and translation research organizations throughout the country.

    The NIH contracted with the Institute of Medicine (IOM) in 2012 to conduct a study to assess and provide recommendations on appropriateness of the CTSA Program’s mission and strategic goals and whether changes were needed. The study was also address the implementation of the program by the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS) while exploring the CTSA’s contributions in the acceleration of the development of new therapeutics. A 13-member committee was established to head this task; the committee had collective expertise in community outreach and engagement, public health and health policy, bioethics, education and training, pharmaceutical research and development, program evaluation, clinical and biomedical research, and child health research.

    The CTSA Program at NIH: Opportunities for Advancing Clinical and Translational Research is the result of investigations into previous program evaluations and assessments, open-session meetings and conference class, and the review of scientific literature. Overall, the committee believes that the CTSA Program is significant to the advancement of clinical and translational research through its contributions. The Program would benefit from a variety of revisions, however, to make it more efficient and effective.

    [Read the full report]

    Topics: Health and Medicine

  • Core Measurement Needs for Better Care, Better Health, and Lower Costs: Counting What Counts: Workshop Summary

    Prepublication Now Available

    Health care quality and its affordability have become very pressing issues in the United States. All sectors of the country are attempting to push forward initiatives that will improve the health care system as well as the health of the American population in general. Despite the economical dedication to health care, about 1/5, the system remains uneven and fragmented, patient harm is quite common, care is often uncoordinated, and many more mishaps occur. There exists many obstacles to improve the nation’s health care system; these include the capacity to reliably and consistently measure progress. In 2006 the Institute of Medicine (IOM) established the Roundtable on Value & Science-Driven Health Care which has since accelerated the development of a learning health system- one in which science, informatics, incentives, and culture are aligned to create a continuous learning loop. This learning loop would thus help make the health care system better.

    In response, the IOM organized a 2-day workshop to explore in depth the core measurement needs for population health, health care quality, and health care costs. The workshop hoped to gain a full understanding of how to improve the nation’s measurement capacity to track progress in the health care system. Having this knowledge would help the nation get one step closer to the creation of an efficient learning loop.

    The workshop was divided into a series of sessions that focused on different aspects of measurement. Core Measurement Needs for Better Care, Better Health, and Lower Costs: Counting What Counts: Workshop Summary includes explanations and key details for these sessions: Vision, Current Measurement Capabilities, Specifying the Shape of a Core Metric Set, and Implementation. The report also features common themes within these areas, the workshop agenda, and information about those involved.

    [Read the full report]

    Topics: Health and Medicine

  • Sensing and Shaping Emerging Conflicts: Report of a Joint Workshop of the National Academy of Engineering and the United States Institute of Peace: Roundtable on Technology, Science, and Peacebuilding

    Final Book Now Available

    Technology has revolutionized many aspects of modern life, from how businesses operate, to how people get information, to how countries wage war. Certain technologies in particular, including not only cell phones and the Internet but also satellites, drones, and sensors of various kinds, are transforming the work of mitigating conflict and building peaceful societies. Rapid increases in the capabilities and availability of digital technologies have put powerful communications devices in the hands of most of the world’s population.

    These technologies enable one-to-one and one-to-many flows of information, connecting people in conflict settings to individuals and groups outside those settings and, conversely, linking humanitarian organizations to people threatened by violence. Communications within groups have also intensified and diversified as the group members use new technologies to exchange text, images, video, and audio. Monitoring and analysis of the flow and content of this information can yield insights into how violence can be prevented or mitigated. In this way technologies and the resulting information can be used to detect and analyze, or sense, impending conflict or developments in ongoing conflict.

    On October 11, 2012, the National Academy of Engineering (NAE) and the United States Institute of Peace (USIP) held a workshop in Washington, DC, to identify “major opportunities and impediments to providing better real-time information to actors directly involved in situations that could lead to deadly violence.” The workshop brought together experts in technology, experts in peacebuilding, and people who have worked at the intersections of those two fields on the applications of technology in conflict settings, to consider uses of technology to sense emerging and ongoing conflicts and provide information and analyses that can be used to prevent violent and deadly conflict. Sensing and Shaping Emerging Conflicts: Report of a Joint Workshop of the National Academy of Engineering and the United States Institute of Peace: Roundtable on Technology, Science, and Peacebuilding summarizes the workshop.

    [Read the full report]

    Topics: Engineering and Technology | Conflict and Security Issues

  • News story: Armed Forces Day flags fly across UK

    Flags are being raised at hundreds of locations across the UK today, 24 June, in advance of the national event on Saturday 29 June which is being hosted this year by the city of Nottingham.

    Government departments, local authorities, businesses and Number 10 Downing Street are flying the Armed Forces Day flag to show support for the men and women of the UK Armed Forces past and present.

    In London, the flag is flying on various famous landmarks, including the City of London’s Guildhall, the Mayor of London’s office, Tower Bridge, the BT Tower and the Bank of England. In addition, around the country, communities large and small are raising the flag to show their support, including in Glasgow, Cardiff, Birmingham, Liverpool and Newcastle.

    Prime Minister David Cameron with Service personnel
    Prime Minister David Cameron shows his support for Armed Forces Day with personnel from each of the three Services [Picture: Petty Officer (Photographer) Derek Wade, Crown copyright]

    The Chief of the Defence Staff, General Sir David Richards, said:

    Armed Forces Day is an opportunity for the nation to show its backing for the Armed Forces. We are very grateful for all the support you give us. It makes a difference to every soldier, sailor and airman to know that you value them.

    ‘Flying the Flag’ is a symbol for all to see that the public care for our servicemen and women, past and present, who continue to rise to the very difficult challenge of defending this country and its interests.

    Barbara Windsor with an Armed Forces Day flag
    Actress Barbara Windsor with an Armed Forces Day flag [Picture: Harland Quarrington, Crown copyright]

    The city of Nottingham, home to this year’s national event, is raising the Armed Forces Day flag at a ceremony at local landmark Wollaton Hall. The flag is being delivered by 4 servicemen, who will parachute into the park in front of the Hall, before the flag is raised by the Lord Mayor of Nottingham, Councillor Merlita Bryan.

    Now in its fifth year, Armed Forces Day is attracting a host of supporters from businesses, such as National Express and Transport for London’s Crossrail, to celebrities and sports personalities including Barbara Windsor, Ricky Hatton and Chris Evans.

    DJ Chris Evans with members of the RAF's Battle of Britain Memorial Flight
    DJ Chris Evans joins members of the RAF’s Battle of Britain Memorial Flight flying the Armed Forces Day flag at Biggin Hill Airport [Picture: Senior Aircraftman Tommy Axford, Crown copyright]

    Flying near you?

    This year we are encouraging you to share your photos of the Armed Forces Day flag if you see it out and about in your community.

    You can upload your images to the Armed Forces Day Facebook page or share them with the @ArmedForces_Day Twitter account, using the hashtag #ArmedForcesDay. In either case, please include the flag’s location, and a personal message of support if you choose.

    Bank of England staff
    Staff at the Bank of England, who include ex-Service personnel, show their support for Armed Forces Day [Picture: Petty Officer (Photographer) Derek Wade, Crown copyright]
  • Adapting to a Changing World–Challenges and Opportunities in Undergraduate Physics Education

    Final Book Now Available

    Adapting to a Changing World was commissioned by the National Science Foundation to examine the present status of undergraduate physics education, including the state of physics education research, and, most importantly, to develop a series of recommendations for improving physics education that draws from the knowledge we have about learning and effective teaching. Our committee has endeavored to do so, with great interest and more than a little passion.

    The Committee on Undergraduate Physics Education Research and Implementation was established in 2010 by the Board on Physics and Astronomy of the National Research Council. This report summarizes the committee’s response to its statement of task, which requires the committee to produce a report that identifies the goals and challenges facing undergraduate physics education and identifies how best practices for undergraduate physics education can be implemented on a widespread and sustained basis, assess the status of physics education research (PER) and discuss how PER can assist in accomplishing the goal of improving undergraduate physics education best practices and education policy.

    [Read the full report]

    Topics: Education

  • News story: Prime Minister pays tribute to Windrush generation

    The arrival of the Windrush on 22 June 1948 is widely considered the landmark of mass migration to Britain and to celebrate the anniversary there will be a number of events across the country.

    The Prime Minister paid tribute to the ‘Windrush generation’ and their contribution to modern Britain:

    Prime Minister David Cameron said:

    The 65th anniversary of the arrival of the Empire Windrush at Tilbury Dock on 22 June 1948 marks a truly historical moment for modern day Britain. Nearly 500 people arrived from the Caribbean that day to find work or a new life, and it led to the transformation of this country into the richly diverse nation it now is.

    The early arrivals from the Caribbean came to help rebuild our country after the Second World War. They brought with them the skills and resolve to help get Britain back on her feet and to make a better life for themselves and their families. But as history has shown many of them suffered unjust hardships and barriers – from social exclusion and prejudice to discrimination and racism.

    I pay tribute to the Windrush generation and praise their fortitude and determination in overcoming those difficult challenges. Younger generations are rightly very proud of those early pioneers, and while some social issues still need to be tackled, I strongly believe that our country today is an overwhelmingly fair and tolerant one. And this is in part down to the people from the Caribbean and around the world who settled here.

    Those early migrants did so much for our country, and paved the way for their children and subsequent generations to make enormous contributions to Britain in the 21st century. Whether this is in the field of public service, business, culture or the arts, the children of the Windrush generation have given so much.

    Whenever I meet people from Britain’s African-Caribbean community, I’m always struck by the stories I hear. Stories of guts, determination and sheer hard work. Our island is richer in every sense of the word for your contribution.

  • News from 1st June to 21st June

    Much embarrassment. Has three weeks really passed since my last post?  I knew that it had been a while but I had no idea that it was that long.  Apparently time also passes when you’re up to your ears in chaos! 

    Here’s the usual, albeit belated roundup, with an emphasis in the media on the terrible looting of Egyptian sites.  It needs highlighting, so that’s a good thing, but it is a ghastly outcome of the so-called revolution that it is happening at all.   Other stories, with much better news, are inevitably overshadowed but should not be forgotten.

    This is, inevitably, a rather long post.  Sorry!

    The recently excavated Avenue of the Sphinxes,
    Luxor (photograph taken in early 2011)


    Fieldwork

    A new discovery has been made at the Hyksos fortress at Tell el Yahodiya in the Nile Delta. With photos. Luxor Times http://bit.ly/14mzhOK
    Remains of a town inhabited from around 2000BC until the Graeco-Roman era discovered in Qalioubiya area. Ahram Online http://bit.ly/13YLOaL

    Town of admin staff and workers who built Giza pyramids suffered multiple flash floods in Old Kingdom. New Scientist http://bit.ly/18Xk8Zy

    4 minute YouTube video, in Spanish, re recent work at Qubbet el Hawa (Aswan), including opening of a sealed chamber. http://bit.ly/17iwwE3

    Arqueólogos españoles hallan un doble sarcófago de 4.000 años en Egipto http://qwapo.es/16D8NKT

    Acceden a una cámara intacta de más de 4.000 años en la necrópolis faraónica Qubbet el Hawa, Aswan. Europa Press http://bit.ly/14fOVeT

    Update on work being carried out in Karakhamun’s burial chamber. South Asasif Project http://bit.ly/1bERhpT


    Update from recent excavations at Abydos. Penn Museum Artifact Lab http://bit.ly/11X4yEG 

    Archaeos excavating in the Sudan have uncovered a necropolis where hundreds of small pyramids once stood. Archaeology http://bit.ly/117JS1c

    Human bone study at Amarna and other topics. I have copied the latest email update from the Amarna team to my blog at http://bit.ly/13MSp8p

    Gebel el Silsila Survey Project season finale – lots of info and some great pics http://bit.ly/198HZ8P

    A section of a New Kingdom stele listing offerings made to gods was discovered at Matariya in Cairo. Ahram Online http://bit.ly/OXjl0m 

    Research


    Polish scientists will examine how climate changed in Egypt thousands of years ago. Nauka W Polske http://bit.ly/14aEPvt

    Pyramids of Giza built by trade unions of hired workers? Pravda http://bit.ly/10VfGCO

    Unpublished 18th century manuscript on hieroglyphs, believed lost, now presented by the Griffith Institute: http://www.griffith.ox.ac.uk/bracci-special/

    A previously unknown album of drawings by Amelia Edwards recently identified in the GI Archive. Griffith Institute http://bit.ly/1bMEbXR

    Elephant and giraffe hair? No problem! Includes 18th Dynasty elephant-hair basket. Penn Artifact Lab http://bit.ly/17fGFRY

    More re conservation work by Massachusetts General Hospital on mummy Padihershef. Washington Post http://wapo.st/18VX7ni

    The Edinburgh Casing Stone – A piece of Giza at the National Museum of Scotland. Arkysite http://bit.ly/17ldAU5

    Scientists investigate a 3,000-yr-old mummy discovered in Scotland after more than 7 decades in storage. Channel4 http://bit.ly/15Gegzu

    Boston hospital cleaning 2,500-year-old mummy of Padihershef. PhysOrg http://bit.ly/14laVXz

    The mysteries of the Egyptian hairstyles by Collection Correspondent Monika Zgoda. UCL Collections blog http://bit.ly/12qDvJ2 

    Heritage Management and Looting


    Why does Shura Council’s culture, tourism + media committee want to modify present antiquities law? Al Ahram Weekly http://bit.ly/149TXch

    More re the armed gang that attacked 5 Aswan tombs, robbed their contents + dug several holes nearby. Al Ahram Weekly http://bit.ly/11QKgwI

    Activists in Cairo and Alex call for protests aimed at saving local historical site from destruction. Ahram Online http://bit.ly/11O1Jqt

    More re looting at Dashour, Abusir al Malaq and elsewhere. With slideshow showing some of the travesty. Triblive http://bit.ly/1c2ZxAf

    Ancient Heliopolis under threat. Daily News Egypt http://bit.ly/1bX7bMu

    Forbidden by Islam, grave-robbing has exploded since the 2011 revolution. More from TribLive re looting in Egypt http://bit.ly/16fPWoj

    More re the looting of Egypt’s ancient Roman Antinopolis. Hurriyet Daily News http://bit.ly/11GZzbl

    Human bones lie scattered with broken ancient mud bricks at the looted settlement site of El-Hibeh. TribLive http://bit.ly/14dcftx

    We only sell real thing, Egyptian grave-robbing family in village of Abu Sir al Malaq boasts. TribLive http://bit.ly/11G0bxY

    Dr. Monica Hanna, an Egyptian archaeologist, risks life, career to expose looting. TribLive http://bit.ly/14cS5Qr

    Depressing account of looting: Unchecked looting guts Egypt’s heritage with 1 ancient site 70 percent gone. TribLive http://bit.ly/16aUmgk

    Minister for Antiquities says new committee will confront worsening conditions near Giza Pyramids. Daily News Egypt http://bit.ly/164JtMR

    A nobles’ tomb site, not yet fully excavated, has been looted in Aswan. 4 other Aswan sites looted too. Ahram Online http://bit.ly/ZX0l7D

    Antiquities ministry forms National Committee on heritage sites and plans monthly reviews. Daily News Egypt http://bit.ly/15XW18Y

    Cultural non-profit complains of lack of access to Egyptian heritage site thanks to high fee. Ahram Online http://bit.ly/16aSfJp

    Antiquities ministry leads a new govmnt committee that will aim to protect UNESCO World Heritage sites. Ahram Online http://bit.ly/17agvQi

    Ministry for Antiquities awaiting the green light from Cairo Governorate to begin renovation. Daily News Egypt http://bit.ly/19wDJjA

    Ministry of Antiquities issues a statement regarding monuments’ security. Daily News Egypt http://bit.ly/1a14TO8

    After years of neglect the Abbey Church of the Apostles in Atfih in Giza regains its original splendour. Ahram Online http://bit.ly/183i7eX

    Looting continues of sites, urban and rural, contributing to the dramatic loss of Egypt’s heritage. Daily News Egypt http://bit.ly/18XmSpK 


    Books

    Book Review: C.Bilsel. Antiquity on Display: Regimes of the Authentic in Berlin’s Pergamon Museum. OUP 2012. BMCR http://bit.ly/10CUbfd 

    Book Review: Andrew Monson, From the Ptolemies to the Romans: Political and Economic Change in Egypt. CUP 2012 BMCR http://bit.ly/11k1nro 


    Conferences

    The synopses for eleven of the ARCE 2013 panel sessions is now ready for your enjoyment. Emhotep http://bit.ly/16ZjL0Z 

    27th International Congress of Papyrologists / XXVIIe Congrès international de papyrologie. What’s New In Papyrology http://bit.ly/17rsrgW 

    3DPetrie will give a workshop at the Museums Association conference in Nov ’13 in Liverpool. More information: https://www.ucl.ac.uk/museums/petrie/research/3dpetrie/3dpetrie-news/2013-06-21MA-conference …

    1st International Conference on Heritage Conservation & Site Management, Cairo, 8-11 Dec 2013: http://www.heritage.edu.eg/index-en.htm 

    Museums and exhibitions

    260 yrs ago the British Museum came into being: 7 June 1753, the British Museum Act received royal assent. Brit Mus http://bit.ly/17tfVMS 

    A plan to restore security in museums and archaeological sites across Egypt is finally going ahead. Ahram Online http://bit.ly/199PfkK 

    The Post Office Museum in Attaba recalls the days when pigeons, camels and boats transported mail. Egyptian Gazette http://bit.ly/11PAsE7 

    The revamped State Information Service page about the existing and new Egyptian Museums in Cairo. SIS http://bit.ly/19kowQ0 

    Unwrap a real mummy – Museum visitors explore historic artifacts using state of the art 3D reality capture. http://buff.ly/1bWexzS 

    The mystery of the spinning statuette (II) http://wp.me/pfm2O-zB 

    Eternal Egypt Lives on in the Hall of Ancient Egypt at the Houston Museum of Natural Science. Houston Press http://bit.ly/11nWpO6 

    Somewhat confused story about the continuing decay of a mummy in the Hyderabad museum. Deccan Chronicle http://bit.ly/11kBmfw 

    Chiddingstone Castle has a new display of its Egyptian artefacts after shipping exhibits out to America. ThisIsKent http://bit.ly/1bMCJEI 

    Slideshow: Chiddingstone Castle in UK loans Egyptian artefacts to Houston (US) museum. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-kent-22773779 …
    Two new exhibits at Philadelphia’s Penn Museum offer a new way to look at race, war and mummies. Penn Live http://bit.ly/1264hPN 

    Janet Kamien, internationally renowned consultant who brought museum exhibits to life. Chicago Sun-Times http://bit.ly/15XHytz 

    Exhib of photo portraits explores how cultural achievements of ancient Middle East contributed to modern life. O.I. http://bit.ly/11mn6y4 

    Art at Villa Borghese’s Egyptian Museum back in Cairo. ANSAmed http://bit.ly/16RCbk6 

    Secret Egypt, at Worcester City Art Gallery/Museum, will bring together more than 100 objects. Worcester News http://bit.ly/10T9bnx 

    El sótano de la La Casa de los Botines en León albergará mascotas embalsamadas hace más de 25 siglos. Ushebtis http://bit.ly/17kGjbN 

    Heracleion, lost for 1200 years below Mediterranean sea, set to go on display. With map, video and pics. Daily Mail http://dailym.ai/16M0lMP 

    Ancient Egpyt (and T-Rex) in Chicago: The Field Museum and the Oriental Institute Museum. Egyptian Archaeology blog http://bit.ly/16RxNBF 

    Antiquities ministry employees closed Cairo’s Egyptian Museum to tourists in protest re pay, contracts. Ahram Online http://bit.ly/1b0fLcR 

    Smuggling and repatriation


    Director-general of Repatriation, Antiquities Department, resigns citing poor cooperation at Ministry of Antiquities http://bit.ly/ZtFGHW 

    Egypt asks UN to help stop auction of rare Quran manuscript that vanished from Al-Azhar mosque in 18thC. Ahram Online http://bit.ly/13ec8ia 


    Free online articles


    A brief journey into medical care and disease in ancient Egypt by Richard Sullivan. http://bit.ly/19j4GVt . Via @historyancient

    Did the Ancient Egyptians of the Old, Middle & New Kingdom ever reach Malta and the Central Mediterranean? http://ow.ly/maA9s 

    Article in Spanish: Antes de Tutankhamon. Ushebtis http://bit.ly/17E7TAS 

    Rule and Revenue in Egypt and Rome: Political Stability and Fiscal Institutions http://ow.ly/lHzO0 


    Journals and Magazine  


    The new issue of the British Museum Studies in Ancient Egypt and Sudan (Issue 20, May 2013) is available free online http://bit.ly/169qXDH 

    Cahiers de Karnak 14, english summaries : http://www.cfeetk.cnrs.fr/index.php?page=karnak-14-resumes …


    Digital Projects


    Official launch of the Karnak project (v. 0.) based on a comprehensive inventory of documents + inscriptions. CFEETK http://bit.ly/1168es0 

    Historians and Digital History: Why Do Academics Shy Away from Digital History? ActiveHistory http://bit.ly/13zEWBM 

    Travel and Tourism


    Travel and tourism: “Come to Egypt – you’ll have the place practically to yourself.” The Independent http://ind.pn/148urEE 

    US embassy in Cairo instructs nationals to avoid Giza Plateau, citing recent ‘criminal conduct’ in area. Ahram Online http://bit.ly/15p82UC

    More re concerns about uncontrolled behaviour of some vendors and parking attendants at Giza plateau. Al Ahram Weekly http://bit.ly/17rvpSr 

    Ahram Online has more on the outcry over Luxor’s newly appointed governor, a story that has been taken up worldwide. http://bit.ly/11QI2O3 

    Concerns for tourism as new governor is member of militant group responsible for 1997 Luxor massacre. The Guardian http://bit.ly/13VaErX 

    Luxor tourism workers protested re new Islamist governor linked to a group responsible for 90s terror shooting. ABC http://abcn.ws/127mHzB 

    Tourism insiders voice misgivings over new Luxor governor, a leading member of a formerly-violent group. Ahram Online http://bit.ly/17TEh2s 

    New governor appointed to Luxor, good choice or the last nail in the coffin? Luxor Times http://bit.ly/1bMFVjU 

    Another new committee, this time to address harassment at the Giza pyramids. Ahram Online http://bit.ly/13O3Aii 

    Exploring the Fayoum Oasis. Egyptian Gazette http://bit.ly/10XGR3z 

    Minister of Antiquities says US embassy warning over Giza pyramids is baseless. Ahram Online http://bit.ly/16yU86O 

    Avec 14,6% de touristes en plus par rapport au premier trimestre 2012 le début de l’année semble positif. Ahram Hebdo http://bit.ly/18NiY06 

      
    Job Opportunities


    New opportunity for training in risk management at World Heritage sites. UNESCO http://bit.ly/16QLopl 

    Obituary


    Obituary: Kew botanist Nigel Hepper, author of Pharaoh’s Flowers: the Botanical Treasures of Tutankhamun (1990) http://ind.pn/16CjyRd 

    Miscellaneous 


    An “insanely rare” pottery seal mold from Tutankhamun’s workshop up for auction at Antiquities Saleroom. Art Daily http://bit.ly/17i3DXJ 

    Following in the footsteps of a British woman who believed she was the reincarnation of a priestess. Thailand Nation http://bit.ly/11nadZb 

    Congratulations to UCLA Egyptology for the NEH grant in Digital Humanities http://tinyurl.com/lokjme8 

    Call for submissions: The 2014 edition of *The Archaeology Channel* International Film and Video Festival. http://bit.ly/12LCP19 

    Interview with Zahi Hawass, who is clear of legal charges, free to travel and plans a comeback tour. Live Science http://fxn.ws/10Vx5yJ 

    Architect Hassan Fathy is perhaps Egypt’s most renowned architect from the 20th century, but why? Cairobserver http://bit.ly/15H5cef 

    Doing more in Egypt. Latest blog post from Egypt Exploration Society Director Chris Naunton.EES Director’s Blog http://bit.ly/16B0nqW 

  • Messaging for Engineering: From Research to Action

    Final Book Now Available

    For those in the broad engineering community those who employ, work with, and/or educate engineers, and engineers themselves there is no need to explain the importance and value of engineering. They understand that engineers help make the world a better place for all, that they regularly grapple with important societal and environmental issues, and that the engineering process is every bit as creative as composing a symphony or crafting a piece of art. But the situation outside the engineering community is quite different. Studies have shown that most K 12 students and teachers have a limited appreciation of all the ways that engineering makes their lives better and, furthermore, that they have little understanding of what engineers do or of the opportunities that an engineering education offers.

    Messaging for Engineering supports efforts by the engineering community to communicate more effectively about the profession and those who practice it. This report builds on the 2008 NAE publication, Changing the Conversation: Messages for Improving Public Understanding of Engineering (CTC), which presented the results of a research-based effort to develop and test new, more effective messages about engineering.

    The new messages cast engineering as inherently creative and concerned with human welfare, as well as an emotionally satisfying calling. This report summarizes progress in implementing the CTC messages, but also recognizes that there is potential to galvanize additional action and thus suggests specific steps for major players in the engineering community to continue and build on progress to date. Many of the report’s recommendations resulted from discussion at a December 2010 committee workshop that involved several dozen high-level decision makers representing key stakeholder groups in the engineering community.

    [Read the full report]

    Topics: Engineering and Technology

  • Innovative intervention program improves life for rural women in India living with HIV/AIDS

    A multidisciplinary team of researchers from UCLA and India has found that a new type of intervention program, in which lay women in the rural Indian province of Andra Pradesh were trained as social health activists to assist women who have HIV/AIDS, significantly improved patients’ adherence to antiretroviral therapy and boosted their immune-cell counts and nutrition levels.
     
    The lay women were trained by the research team to serve as accredited social health activists, or ASHA, and their work was overseen by rural nurses and physicians. These ASHA then provided counseling and support to the women with HIV/AIDS, as well as assistance aimed at removing the barriers they face in accessing health care and treatment.
     
    “For rural women living with AIDS in India, stigma, financial constraints and transportation challenges continue to exist, making lifesaving antiretroviral therapy difficult to obtain,” said lead researcher Adey Nyamathi, distinguished professor and associate dean of international research and scholarly activities at the UCLA School of Nursing.
     
    In India, 2.47 million people are affected with HIV/AIDS, and more than half are women. The epidemic is shifting from urban to rural areas, and the rice-producing Andhra Pradesh district in southeastern India is at the epicenter; this area has the highest total number of HIV/AIDS cases of all states in the country, with nearly 20 percent of the population infected.
     
    For the intervention study, women with HIV/AIDS in Andra Pradesh were randomly selected to participate either in the intervention, called AHSA-LIFE (AL), or in a control group.
     
    Over a six-month period, the ASHA visited the women in the AL group to monitor the barriers they faced in accessing health care and adhering to their antiretroviral therapy and provided assistance to help mitigate these barriers. The ASHA also provided counseling to help women develop coping strategies to deal with discrimination. The intervention group also received monthly supplies of high-protein foods, such as black gram and pigeon pea.
     
    In addition, the women in the AL group participated in six education sessions covering a variety of topics, including learning about HIV and AIDS, adhering to antiretroviral therapy, overcoming barriers and dealing with the illness. The courses also focused on improving coping, reducing the stigma of the disease, caring for family members and children, the basics of good nutrition and benefits of participating in a life-skills class. 
     
    Women in the control group also attended the education sessions, but they did not receive visits and supportive services from the ASHA. They received only standard protein supplementation, not the high-protein supplements of the intervention group.
     
    Among the women in the AL group, the researchers found significant increases in therapy adherence and CD4+ T-cell levels, as well as significant reductions in internalized stigma, avoidance coping and depressive symptoms, compared with the control group. The women in the AL group also showed significant increases in body mass index, muscle mass and fat mass, compared with the other women.
     
    The pilot study holds promise for rural women and other populations afflicted by HIV/AIDS, Nyamathi said.
     
    “The findings of our study lay the groundwork for a national model related to the benefits of training and working with ASHA in rural India in an effort to improve antiretroviral therapy adherence and reduce stigma and depression, as well as improve nutritional status,” she said.
     
    Findings from the study are currently available on online in two journals: the Western Journal of Nursing Research, and AIDS Education and Prevention. The study was funded by the National Institute of Mental Health, part of the National Institutes of Health.

    Other researchers on the ASHA-LIFE project were Catherine Carpenter Ph.D., a faculty member with the UCLA School of Nursing and the UCLA Nutrition Center; Sanjeev Sinha M.D., AIDS director from the All India Institute of Medical Sciences in Delhi; and Kalyan Ganguly, Ph.D., a behavioral scientist from Indian Council for Medical Research in Delhi; and Maria Ekstrand Ph.D., a clinical psychologist from the Center for AIDS Prevention Studies at UC San Francisco.
     
    The UCLA School of Nursing is redefining nursing through the pursuit of uncompromised excellence in research, education, practice, policy and patient advocacy.
     
    For more news, visit the UCLA Newsroom and follow us on Twitter.

  • Scam artist targets UCLA Health System job candidates online

    UCLA police are investigating an alleged online incident in which a person pretending to represent the UCLA Health System in a hiring capacity financially scammed an individual seeking employment. UCLA was informed of the incident on June 17 by the alleged victim.
     
    “To our knowledge, the potential candidate posted a resume on a non–UCLA-affiliated site and was contacted by a scam artist posing as an employment recruiter via email,” said Robin Epstein Ludewig, director of human resources planning and talent acquisition for the UCLA Health System. “We treat such abuses seriously and refer them to law enforcement agencies as appropriate.”
     
    After receiving the email, the potential candidate participated in an online chat with the recruiter, who provided false information about UCLA Health System job opportunities. The candidate completed an online interview with the recruiter, was “hired” and was asked to provide the recruiter with $300 to purchase computer materials to support the newly landed job from home. After paying this amount, the candidate determined that the recruitment had been fictitious and contacted UCLA to report the crime.
     
    Reports of similar attempts at this type of fraud have been received by UCLA since late April. UCLA does not require — and has never required — anyone seeking employment to pay any fees during its hiring process. 
     
    Anyone with information about this or similar incidents is urged to contact the UCLA Police Department at 310-825-9371. 
     
    The UCLA Health System encourages all applicants to visit its website, www.uclahealthcareers.org, and apply online for positions that meet their background and qualifications.

  • High cost of raising a child challenges state’s most vulnerable caregivers: grandparents

    Raising a child is not cheap. Now try raising one on a fixed income and long past the age one associates with parenthood: 65 years and older.
     
    More than 300,000 grandparents in California have primary responsibility for their grandchildren, and of this group, almost 65,000 are over the age of 65. More than 20,000 care for their grandkids without any extended family assistance at home.
    A new study from the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research and the Insight Center for Community Economic Development shows that these families —older adults raising grandchildren alone — may be among the most vulnerable residents in California, due to the state’s high cost of living and low levels of public assistance.
    “California’s high cost of living turns the loving act of caring for a grandchild into a desperate financial risk,” said the UCLA center’s D. Imelda Padilla-Frausto, lead author of the study. “And older grandparents, many on fixed incomes and with limited mobility, are often the least able to advocate for, and access, public assistance.”
    The brief’s new calculations — based on the true cost of living in every California county — show that nearly half of custodial grandparents who are 65 and over in California do not have enough income to cover the most basic needs of the grandchildren placed in their care. Yet public programs that might provide benefits that could help grandparents cope, such as the state foster-care program, are often difficult to access or off-limits altogether for family caregivers.
    “There is a hypocrisy built into how assistance is allocated to children and their caregivers in California,” said Susan E. Smith, director of the California Elder Economic Security Initiative at the Insight Center. “We preach the importance of keeping families together yet deny grandparents essential assistance because they are ‘family.’ This is an injustice that policymakers could easily address by making more benefits available, and accessible, to grandparents.”
    Many older adults in California are ineligible for public programs like Medi-Cal, housing subsidies and food benefits because they have incomes that are above, often just slightly, the federal poverty level (FPL), which is the official federal definition of poverty. Yet this definition — $18,530 for a family of three and $14,710 for a family of two in 2011 — is considered by many experts to be inadequate, largely because it does not take into account variations in the cost of living from state to state and county to county.
    Grandparents whose incomes leave them above the FPL but below the income needed to cover their basic needs may struggle in a high-cost county such as Los Angeles or San Francisco. The costs involved in caring for a grandchild (or two) far exceed the FPL in every California county. For example, in 2011, an older couple with one grandchild who lived in a two-bedroom rental needed an income as high as $49,942 if they lived in Santa Cruz County and as low as $32,965 if they lived in Kern, the “lowest-cost” county. (See county breakdown below.)
    Among the study’s recommendations, the authors suggest raising the eligibility criteria for certain public programs to 200 percent of the FPL; extending state foster-care benefits to kinship caregivers; and limiting the frequency of cumbersome and bureaucratic benefit renewals (since most older adults live on fixed incomes and thus do not experience income fluctuations that require regular documenting).
    The data on the costs of raising a grandchild are part of a larger release of 2011 Elder Index data on the true cost of living for older Californians. See all Elder Index 2011 data here.
    Updated every two years by the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research, in partnership with the Insight Center for Community Economic Development, the Elder Index quantifies the cost of basic necessities like food, clothing and shelter for each county of California and is part of a national movement to improve the way poverty is measured in the U.S. The methodology for the basic amounts was developed by the Gerontology Center at the University of Massachusetts–Boston and Wider Opportunities for Women in Washington, D.C.

    Learn more about how the Elder Index is calculated.

    See county-by-county information on the Elder Index and on the Elder Index for Grandparents Raising Grandchildren.
     

    The Insight Center for Community Economic Development
    is a 44-year-old national research, legal and consulting organization dedicated to building economic health in vulnerable communities.
     
    The UCLA Center for Health Policy Research is one of the nation’s leading health policy research centers and the premier source of health-related information on Californians.
     
    For more news, visit the UCLA Newsroom and follow us on Twitter.

  • Effects of U.S. Tax Policy on Greenhouse Gas Emissions

    Final Book Now Available

    The U.S. Congress charged the National Academies with conducting a review of the Internal Revenue Code to identify the types of and specific tax provisions that have the largest effects on carbon and other greenhouse gas emissions and to estimate the magnitude of those effects. To address such a broad charge, the National Academies appointed a committee composed of experts in tax policy, energy and environmental modeling, economics, environmental law, climate science, and related areas.

    For scientific background to produce Effects of U.S. Tax Policy on Greenhouse Gas Emissions, the committee relied on the earlier findings and studies by the National Academies, the U.S. government, and other research organizations. The committee has relied on earlier reports and studies to set the boundaries of the economic, environmental, and regulatory assumptions for the present study. The major economic and environmental assumptions are those developed by the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) in its annual reports and modeling. Additionally, the committee has relied upon publicly available data provided by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, which inventories greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from different sources in the United States.
    The tax system affects emissions primarily through changes in the prices of inputs and outputs or goods and services. Most of the tax provisions considered in this report relate directly to the production or consumption of different energy sources. However, there is a substantial set of tax expenditures called “broad-based” that favor certain categories of consumption—among them, employer-provided health care, owner-occupied housing, and purchase of new plants and equipment. Effects of U.S. Tax Policy on Greenhouse Gas Emissions examines both tax expenditures and excise taxes that could have a significant impact on GHG emissions.

    [Read the full report]

    Topics: Industry and Labor | Environment and Environmental Studies

  • Timely treatment after stroke is crucial, UCLA researchers report

    For years, the mantra of neurologists treating stroke victims has been “time equals brain.” That’s because getting a patient to the emergency room quickly to receive a drug that dissolves the stroke-causing blood clot can make a significant difference in how much brain tissue is saved or lost.
     
    But specific information has been limited on just how the timing of giving the intravenous drug — known as a tissue plasminogen activator, or tPA — influences outcomes for victims of ischemic (clot-caused), stroke, the most common type of stroke.
     
    Now, a team led by UCLA researchers has conducted a major study on the importance of the speed of treatment when using tPA, analyzing outcomes for more than 50,000 stroke patients and determining just how critical the time between the onset of stroke and the administering of treatment is.
     
    “We found that treatment time has a profound influence on outcome,” said the study’s first author, Dr. Jeffrey Saver, a professor of neurology and director of the UCLA Stroke Center. “The sooner treatment is started, the better. Beginning treatment earlier resulted in an improved ability to walk, the ability to remain living independently, less bleeding in the brain and reduced mortality.”
     
    The team’s findings are reported in the June 19 issue of the JAMA, The Journal of the American Medical Association.
     
    Previous research had demonstrated that administering tPA intravenously up to 4.5 hours after a stroke occurs benefits patients with moderate to severe acute ischemic stroke. Data pooled from a number of small, randomized clinical trials showed that the benefit of tPA was greatest when given very early after stroke, and that the benefit declined throughout the first 4.5 hours.
     
    But the available data from these clinical trials was small — just 1,850 tPA-treated patients from eight trials — limiting precision in delineating the influence of time-to-treatment, as well as researchers’ ability to determine whether the benefits could be generalized to a wider population. To address this need, the current study used a large national registry to determine more precisely the association of time-to-treatment and the resulting outcomes.
     
    The team, which included UCLA’s Dr. Gregg C. Fonarow, a professor of cardiovascular medicine and the director of the Ahmanson–UCLA Cardiomyopathy Center, analyzed data from the national stroke care quality-improvement database maintained by the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association’s Get With the Guidelines–Stroke program (GWTG–Stroke). They looked at the relationship between the time of treatment and in-hospital outcomes for 58,353 acute ischemic stroke patients treated with tPA within 4.5 hours of stroke onset.
     
    The data was obtained from 1,395 hospitals between April 2003 and March 2012. The median age of patients, who were evenly divided between males and females, was 72. The average time from stroke onset to the beginning of treatment was 144 minutes, or roughly 2.5 hours. The extensive GWTG–Stroke database included information on each patient’s medical history, stroke onset time, arrival time at a hospital, the time tPA treatment began, and other treatments and procedures.
     
    Distilling this information, the researchers were able to confirm precisely how critical the time gap is between when a stroke occurs and when treatment begins.
     
    “We know from brain-imaging studies that in humans, the volume of irreversibly injured tissue in the brain from an ischemic stroke expands rapidly over time, consuming 2 million additional neurons every minute until blood flow to the brain is restored,” Saver said.
     
    In examining the data from the GWTG–Stroke database, the researchers found that for every 15-minute faster interval of treatment, going home was 3 percent more likely, walking at the time of discharge was 4 percent more likely, having symptoms of hemorrhaging in the brain was 4 percent less likely to occur, and death was 4 percent less likely.
     
    The findings underscore the important public health message that “time lost is brain lost in acute stroke,” Saver said. “These results support the importance of the American Heart Association’s “Target: Stroke” campaign, and the ongoing worldwide efforts to get stroke patients to a hospital and begin clot-busting treatment as soon as possible.”
     
    Please see the full JAMA paper for other authors and institutions that participated in the study, as well as for all author disclosures.
     
    The GWTG–Stroke program is provided by the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association and is currently supported in part by a charitable contribution from Janssen Pharmaceutical Companies of Johnson & Johnson. The program has been funded in the past through support from Boehringer–Ingelheim, Merck, the Bristol–Myers Squibb/Sanofi Pharmaceutical Partnership, and the AHA Pharmaceutical Roundtable.
     
    The UCLA Stroke Center is certified as a comprehensive stroke center by the Joint Commission and the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association and is recognized as one of the world’s leading centers for the management of cerebral vascular disease. It treats simple and complex vascular disorders by incorporating recent developments in emergency medicine, stroke neurology, microneurosurgery, interventional neuroradiology, stereotactic radiology, neurointensive care, neuroanesthesiology and rehabilitation neurology. Part of the UCLA Department of Neurology, the program is unique in its ability to integrate clinical and research activities across multiple disciplines and departments.
     
    For more news, visit the UCLA Newsroom and follow us on Twitter

  • Stop hyperventilating, say energy efficiency researchers

    A single advanced building control now in development could slash 18 percent — tens of thousands of dollars — off the overall annual energy bill of the average large office building, with no loss of comfort, according to a report by researchers at the Department of Energy’s Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.

    “An 18-percent boost in building energy efficiency by modifying a single factor is very, very good,” said team leader Michael Brambley. “The savings were much greater than we expected.”

    The report is based on extensive simulations of the impact of one type of advanced building control now in the offing in the building industry. The device is capable of customizing the level of ventilation by sensing the number of people in different areas or zones of a building and then adjusting fan speed and air movement accordingly.

    That’s a big change from the way most sensor-based ventilation systems operate now: Currently, if there is even a single person in a room, ventilation runs full blast, as if the room is full.

    But a room with just a few people doesn’t need nearly as much ventilation as a crowded room. Why have a fan pushing around air for ventilation for 100 people if there’s only one individual in the room? It’s like airing out your house completely because there’s one small whiff of bacon still in the kitchen.

    “This is the reason you often feel cold when you’re in a big space like a conference room or cafeteria without a lot of people,” said engineer Guopeng Liu, the lead author of the report. “Technology available today doesn’t detect how many people are in a room, and so air flow is at maximum capacity nearly constantly. That creates a big demand to re-heat the air before it enters the rooms. It takes a lot of energy to keep you comfortable under those circumstances.”

    Current occupancy sensors have helped the nation save significant amounts of energy by automatically turning off lights when they’re not needed. But the team estimates that the more advanced versions still to come — which count the number of people in rooms — will save approximately 28 times as much energy, when used both for lighting and ventilation, compared to current sensors.

    The project began three years ago when Liu began exploring the idea of adjusting air flow to different zones of a building based on the precise number of people in a room. That “decision” of how much air to move takes place in a piece of equipment known as a variable air volume terminal box. The new sensors that count people are likely to become available within the next few years. While they are currently very expensive, the technology is improving rapidly and the cost is expected to come down, Brambley noted.

    “We undertook this study to try to determine if this is a technology worth pursuing vigorously. The answer, clearly, is yes. Using the number of people in a room as a factor in determining the level of air flow offers great promise for saving energy and money,” said Brambley.

    To do its study, the team focused on a prototypical large commercial office building whose footprint is 160 feet by 240 feet — about 80 percent the size of a football field. The model building is 12 stories and also has a basement, giving it a total of about 500,000 square feet. Such buildings in the United States take up more than 4.4 billion square feet. To visualize the size, think of the land area covered by Seattle — and a little bit of its suburbs — as a giant one-story building.

    Brambley’s team programmed the simulation to heat a building if temperatures dipped below 70 degrees Fahrenheit and to provide cooling at temperatures beginning at 75 degrees. Numbers were set back 10 degrees on the evenings and weekends. Occupancy patterns were estimated based on past studies.

    In 13 of the nation’s 15 climate regions, the PNNL team estimates that the advanced controls would save at least $40,000 annually for each building similar in size to the one modeled in the study. In two cities, Baltimore and Fairbanks, the savings stretch to more than $100,000 each year, because of the greatly reduced need to heat new air being pumped in from the cold outdoors. Even in the two cities where the savings would be the least, El Paso and Miami, estimated savings come to $33,400 and $23,500, respectively.

    “While buildings have gotten much more efficient in the last two decades, there are still huge gains to be had,” noted Brambley.

    Since just a small percentage of office buildings in any given year are newly built, Brambley and Liu say a prime target for these advanced controls is retrofitting existing buildings. Liu notes that technology has leaped forward since 1989 — the year the average large office building was built – offering huge energy gains even with the expense of retrofitting.

    Since heating and cooling and related equipment usually draw much more energy than lighting, those systems offer a greater opportunity for savings. The team found that advanced controls for ventilation offer about eight times as much savings as advanced controls for lighting, where lights are turned off more quickly than is now common after everyone leaves a room. When the HVAC (heating, ventilation, and air conditioning) system alone is considered, the advanced controls cut energy usage of the HVAC system by nearly 40 percent.

    A stumbling block to the new technology is that certain advanced controls might require modification to some building codes. For instance, current codes require some ventilation at all times no matter how many people are present. Brambley thinks the options are worth considering, given the energy savings at stake.

    In addition to Brambley and Liu, mechanical engineer Jian Zhang and engineer Robert Lutes contributed to the project. The work was support by DOE’s Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy.


    Reference: J. Zhang, R.G. Lutes, G. Liu and M.R. Brambley, Energy Savings for Occupancy-Based Control (OBC) of Variable-Air-Volume (VAV) Systems, funded by the U.S. DOE’s Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, through the Building Technologies Program.

  • News story: G8 2013: action agreed on international tax issues

    G8 leaders have committed at the G8 summit in Lough Erne to agree to further transparency on the sharing of tax information – and bring the international tax rules into the modern age.

    As the summit closed the G8 leaders’ communiqué announced that they will move to establish the automatic exchange of information between tax authorities as the new global standard and will work with the OECD to develop a model for this.

    The G8 leaders stated their support for the OECD’s work to tackle tax avoidance by multinational companies, and announced that they will draw up a template for global corporations to report to tax authorities where they make their profits and pay taxes around the world.

    This will give governments a new tool against tax avoidance by multinationals and will be particularly helpful to the governments of developing countries.

    The G8 will provide support to developing countries to collect the tax they are owed.

    Following the UK’s announcement that it will establish a register of company ownership, the G8 agreed to publish action plans to require companies to obtain and hold information on who really owns and controls them, and ensure this information is available to tax authorities and law enforcement, including through central registries.

    Earlier this year Prime Minister David Cameron identified tax as one of the three areas he wants to concentrate on during the UK’s presidency of the G8 – alongside trade and transparency.

    The government has also announced further plans to assist developing countries in strengthening their tax systems – also known as capacity building – in order to help them claim the tax which they are owed and benefit from information exchange.

    The Department for International Development (DfID) will fund a programme of international tax seminars where HMRC tax experts will share their experience and expertise on negotiating information exchange agreements with counterparts in developing countries and support them in joining in the Multilateral Convention on the sharing of tax information.