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China s Use of U S Satellite Communications Technology in the South China Sea

China’s Use of U.S. Satellite Communications Technology in the South China Sea Publication: China Brief Volume: 21 Issue: 3 February 11, 2021 06:13 PM Age: 1 month Image: Cover page of the contract that the Sansha City Comprehensive Law Enforcement Zhidui and Sansha Highlander signed in August 2017 (Image Source: Author’s records). Introduction In recent years, the maritime law enforcement (MLE) forces of the People’s Republic of China (PRC) have dominated the contested waters of the South China Sea (AMTI, December 4, 2020). While the exponential growth and increasing assertiveness of the China Coast Guard (CCG) have captured headlines, the evolving role of technology in China’s MLE operations has received less attention. New communications infrastructure and monitoring systems, for example, help Chinese MLE forces monitor and control contested maritime space in the South China Sea (CMSI, January 2021). These investments align with China’s broader pursuit of informati

Local knowledge and community resilience integral for natural disaster response

Australian Dental Research Foundation grants and scholarships now open

Date Time Australian Dental Research Foundation grants and scholarships now open As a profession, dentistry is based on a body of knowledge that can only be reliably acquired through high quality research. Australian dental academics, researchers and clinicians have a strong history and reputation in clinical, epidemiological and population oral health research. The evolution of dentistry is directly related to advancements made through research. Can we imagine dentistry today without high speed drills, fluoride, dental implants, cone beam CT, enamel remineralisation or advanced aesthetic dental materials. All of these came about as a result of dental research? Research has the capacity to impact on all areas of dentistry leading to improved delivery of care for our patients, reduction of risk factors and the burden of oral disease on individuals, the broader health system and the economy.

Stem cells in hyperdrive : Monash University researchers breakthrough in the hunt for a healing secret

Advertisement A team of Melbourne-based researchers believe they have taken a significant step towards unlocking the regenerative power of the stem cells in our muscles, after six years of experiments on fish isolated a signal that turns on the cells. In mice, a dose of the signalling chemical prompts stem cells to begin knitting together otherwise-unrepairable wounds. Peter Currie in the fish lab at Monash University’s Clayton campus. Credit:Australian Regenerative Medicine Institute / Supplied The team’s discovery is published on Thursday in Nature, and talks are already under way with pharma companies to test it as a treatment for muscular dystrophy – and ageing.

Pharmaceuticals in waterways pose risk to fish

Date Time Pharmaceuticals in waterways pose risk to fish Fish populations around the world are at risk due to growing levels of pharmaceutical contamination in waterways, according to an international team of researchers from The University of Western Australia, Monash University, the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, and New York University. The findings, published in Proceeding of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, reveal that water pollution by the antidepressant fluoxetine (Prozac) compromises resilience in fish populations by dramatically reducing differences in the behaviour of individuals. “For fish populations to thrive in the face of environmental change, members of a group need to behave differently from each other.”

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