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Selfie areas and pop-up clinics used in bid to boost the North s youth vaccination rates

); Regional mass vaccination centres in Northern Ireland are closing for first doses 31st July By Emma Taggart Friday 30 Jul 2021, 6:00 AM 3 hours ago 5,307 Views 16 Comments Image: PA Image: PA ON SUNDAY 25 July, Northern Ireland surpassed the milestone of 70% of the adult population having been fully vaccinated. As most of those who wanted the vaccine have already come forward to receive it, there are now worries about the vaccination rate of younger age cohorts. The head of Northern Ireland’s vaccination programme, Patricia Donnelly, told Stormont yesterday that vaccination uptake among the 18-29 age cohort has been “incredibly slow”. She said it was a cause of “enormous concern” that the pace of the vaccination programme “went off a cliff” in June when it opened to this younger age group.

Engineering Digitised Borders - Designing and Managing the Visa Information System | Georgios Glouftsios

Engineering Digitised Borders Authors: Enriches understandings of the digitisation of border security Challenges conventional understandings of IT systems as mere security instruments or tools by providing an empirically grounded diagnosis of their ontology and agency Contributes theoretically and conceptually to an understanding of technoscience not as an independent or externalized variable in international politics and practices, but as something that deeply entangled with a multitude of other elements on many levels Draws on the intersections of STS and IR and thus contributes to an area that has in recent years been vibrant and innovative – both in terms of methodology and in terms of how to draw political and normative conclusions from the study of complex sociotechnical systemssee more benefits

Invasive species causing severe damage to farmland

Invasive species causing severe damage to farmland 30 July 2021 | Invasive rabbits are causing severe damage to UK agricultural areas due to overgrazing, researchers say Invasive species such as European rabbit have cost the UK economy over £5bn over the past four decades, with the majority of costs due to farmland damage. The grey squirrel, European rabbit and Japanese knotweed are among invasive species that have cost the economy billions over the past 40-50 years. The startling figure makes the cost one of the highest totals in Europe, according to scientists at the Queen’s University Belfast. The new study, published in

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