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Zoo Animals – PEOPLE.com

Glamping with goats and the eclipse. Pet safety and the eclipse. Have you reached peak eclipse yet? If your answer is Nope! well, weve got some more pertinent eclipse information for the animal lovers in the audience.

Zoos across the country have been curiously preparing for Aug. 21. These wildlife sanctuaries all agree that the eclipse will be a learning opportunity, and many are enthusiastically opening their gates and inviting the public to watch the solar event.Most are unsure how their wards will react to the phenomenon, but some have offered predictions about which animals may exhibit the most unusual behavior.

According to the Little Rock Zoo in Arkansas, some drama may ensue among five species in particular. Education Curator Katie Holloway tells THV11 they include barn owls, armadillos, sloths, elephants and chimps. PEOPLE rounded out the list with five more compelling species.

1. Barn Owls (and other birds, especially song birds)

Although theyre usually asleep in the afternoon, these nocturnal birds might awaken and start looking for food. The Wausau Daily Herald says nocturnal birds, including a variety of owls and nighthawks, have reportedly become active, taken flight or called out during total eclipses. Starlings and other birds may return to their evening roosts, as will fowl and pigeons.

2. Three Ringed (or Three Band) Armadillos

The Little Rock Zoos expert says these armadillos can jump up to three or four feet vertically and its likely to occur!

3. Sloths

Good morning!

A post shared by Krista (@yellowkray) on Jun 19, 2016 at 6:22am PDT

These slow-moving sweethearts might get hungry and go on a feeding frenzy, although it will take up to 30 days for sloths to digest whatever they happen to eat during the eclipse. (We suggest watching the eclipse along with them at Oregons Zoological Wildlife Conservation Center.)

4. Chimps (and other primates)

The Little Rock Zoo says that chimps (and primates in general) are capable of overreacting to all kinds of things, so it expects these guys to go bananas. However, Sean Putney, the Senior Director of Zoological Operations at the Kansas City Zoo,predicts the more intelligent and intellectual animals will respond in ways that are more human-like: Will they be smart enough to know that this is going to be over in a couple of minutes? Or will they start to move towards their evening quarters as well thinking its time for bed? Itll be interesting to see.

The Mother Nature Network recounts a story about chimps who climbed to the top of their structure and turned their heads skyward during a 1984 eclipse.

5. Elephants

Our countdown to the New Year continues with Nos. 4, 3 and 2 of our #Top10 Best of 2016 list. Landing at No. 4, the opening of #AlaskanAdventure back in June. The splashgrounds 18-foot-tall humpback whale, 75 bronze sculptures, including jumping salmon, puffins, orcas and brown bears, and 200-plus misters and water spray nozzles were one of the highlights of our summer AND yours! The critically endangered #SaltCreektigerbeetle, one of #NorthAmericas most endangered insects, finds itself at No. 3. Our Butterfly and Insect Pavilion crew have been helping this local since 2011, working with the @usfws, the @negameandparks and other partners to collect adult #beetles in the wild, shepherd them through the egg-laying process at the Zoo and fish their newly hatched larvae from tiny burrows in a custom sand mixture. Our crew produced 27 larvae for reintroduction into the wild at the start of the project. Numbers have since soared to more than 1,300 larvae, enough to boost reintroduction numbers and establish a Zoo-based assurance colony. At No. 2, the most highly anticipated animal arrival at the Zoo, probably ever: the arrival of six African #elephants in Omaha. On March 11, the world watched as 17 African elephants flew across the globe to the United States in a joint mission to rescue the animals from drought-stricken Swaziland. One male and five females call the African Grasslands at our Zoo home, six at Wichitas @sedgwickcountyzoo and five at @dallaszoo. Just look at them now! #OmahaZoo #2016

A post shared by Omaha's Zoo & Aquarium (@theomahazoo) on Dec 30, 2016 at 3:13pm PST

The Little Rock Zoo predicts that elephants will make the most noise during the eclipse. They tend to trumpet when things are out of the ordinary, so they may sound off on Monday. Dan Cassidy, the general curator at Omahas Henry Doorly Zoo and Aquarium, suggests watching the elephants as well. He says if its dark enough, they may go back into their barns. Dr. Joel Parrott, president and CEO of the Oakland Zoo, seems to agree. He says that the smarter animals, like elephants, will be more interesting to watch. Dr. Don Moore of the Oregon Zoo is on board with this, too. He says the pachyderms mightthink its dinnertime and start looking for food.

6. Giraffes

The Henry Doorly Zoo and Aquarium in Omaha says the giraffes may behave similarly to elephants and head back to their barns, thinking that nighttime has descended.

7. Whales and 8. Dolphins

Once again, the Henry Doorly Zoo and Aquarium predicts unusual behavior, this time amongst sea mammals like whales and dolphins. To test the waters, so to speak, Tradewinds Charters out of Depoe Bay, Oregon (known for its year-round pod of gray whales), is offering a two-hour whale-watching tour during the eclipse. And according to Time, Dr. Douglas Duncan of the Fiske Planetarium at the University of Colorado says he witnessed whales and dolphins act strangely in the Galapagos during a 1998 eclipse. He told Time thatas the sky darkened, about 20 of the marine mammals surfaced, arching in and out of the water.

9. Llamas

#llamasofinstagram

A post shared by Derek Verzuh (@derek_verzuh) on Jun 14, 2017 at 7:02pm PDT

Dr. Duncan also told Time that hes witnessed llamas act strangely during a 1994 total solar eclipse in Bolivia. He says a pack of llamas suddenly seemed to show interest in the sky, claiming that there were none of the animals around while a group of people observed the event, when out of nowhere, about 15 llamas gathered around them during the partial phase of the eclipse and gazed at the sky along with the humans during the totality of it. For the life of me, I cant tell you where they came from, he said. When the total eclipse ended, the llamas kind of got themselves into a rough line and they marched away.

10. Lions (and other big cats)

Dr. Don Moore of the Oregon Zoo thinks that during the eclipse, lions may act more predatory or start looking to be fed. Then again, lions and tigers spend up to 18 hours a day sleeping, so they may never even notice.

In general, many zoos are inviting people to visit during the eclipse and just see what happens.Nashville Zoo invites visitors to watch its new rhinos in particular, using the #NashvilleZoo or #NZooEclipse hashtags. According to WKRN,the rhinos are the zoos newest animals and they have a schedule they go by, coming out of their barn at 9 a.m. and returning at 6 p.m. Before they came here, they were in Africa in a reserve where they spent most of their time outside day and night, so does that change with their behavior? Does it change with light level? Or are they going to be affected by this kind of experience or are they not? Itll be really interesting to see, said Jim Bartoo, the zoos marketing director.

Finally,Jeff Bullock, Director of the Greenville Zoo says this,[The eclipse] just throws everybody off. Animals that are on a diurnal structure will go to bed (during the eclipse). Animals that are used to being up at night will get more active We get a lot of owls, bats, rats and possums, he said of the local wildlife. We may see some of those that we dont usually see when the sun is out.

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Zoo Animals - PEOPLE.com

The Electric-Bike Conundrum – The New Yorker

It was nighttime, a soft summer night, and I was standing onEighty-second Street and Second Avenue, in Manhattan, with my wife andanother couple. We were in the midst of saying goodbye on the smallisland between the bike lane and the avenue when a bike whooshed by,soundless and very fast. I had been back in New York for only a week. Asis always the case when I arrive after a period of months away, I wastuned to any change in the citys ambient hum. When that bike flew past,I felt a shift in the familiar rhythm of the city as I had known it. Iwatched the guy as he travelled on the green bike path. He was speedingdown the hill, but he wasnt pedalling and showed no sign of exertion.For a moment, the disjunction between effort and velocity confused me.Then it dawned on me that he was riding an electric bike.

Like most of the guys you see with electric bikes in New York, he was afood-delivery guy. Their electric bikes tend to have giant batteries,capable of tremendous torque and horsepower. They are the vanguard, thevisible part of the iceberg, but they are not indicative of what is tocome. Their bikes are so conspicuously something other than a bike, forone thing. For another, the utility of having a battery speed up yourdelivery is so straightforward that it forecloses discussion. What liesahead is more ambiguous. The electric bikes for sale around the city now havebatteries that are slender, barely visible. The priority is not speed somuch as assisted living.

I grew up as a bike rider in Manhattan, and I also worked as a bikemessenger, where I absorbed the spartan, libertarian,every-man-for-himself ethos: you need to get somewhere asfast as possible, and you did what you had to do in order to get there.The momentum you give is the momentum you get. Bike messengers were oncefaddish for their look, but its this feeling of solitude andself-reliance that is, along with the cult of momentum, the essentialelement of that profession. The citywith its dedicated lanes andgreenwaysis a bicycle nirvana compared with what it once was, and I havehad to struggle to remake my bicycle life in this new world of goodcitizenship. And yet, immediately, there was something about electricbikes that offended me. On a bike, velocity is all. That guy on theelectric bike speeding through the night was probably going to have tobreak hard at some point soon. If he wanted to pedal that fast to attaintop speed on the Second Avenue hill that sloped down from the highEighties, then it was his right to squander it. But he hadnt worked togo that fast. And, after he brakedfor a car, or a pedestrian, or aturnhe wouldnt have to work to pick up speed again.

Its a cheat! my friend Rob Kotch, the owner of Breakaway CourierSystems, said, when I got him on the phone and asked him about electricbikes. Everyone cheats now. They see Lance Armstrong do it. They seethese one-percenters making a ton of money without doing anything. Sothey think, why do I have to work hard? So now its O.K. for everyone tocheat. Everyone does it. It took me a few minutes to realize thatKotchs indignation on the subject of electric bikes was not coming fromhis point of view as a courier-system owneralthough there is plenty ofthat. (He no longer employs bike messengers as a result of the cost ofworkers compensation and the competition from UberEATS, which doesnthave to pay workers comp.) Kotchs strong feelings were drivenso tospeakby his experience as someone who commutes twenty-three miles on a bicycle eachday, between his home in New Jersey and his Manhattan office. Hehas been doing this ride for more than twenty years.

There is this one hill just before the G. W. Bridge that is a goodsix-degree grade, and it goes for half a mile, he told me. If youcommute to Manhattan on your bike, you have to find a way to get up thathill. A lot of people are just not willing to commit to that muchexercise on their way to work.

Recently, though, he has noticed a lot of people cruising effortlesslyup the hill on electric bikes.

Its a purely pragmatic decision for them, he said. Its just a muchcheaper and faster way of getting to work than a car. So they use anelectric bike.

He described a guy on one of those one-wheeled, Segway-like things.

He passed me going up that hill, then took the long way around to thebridge. I use a shortcut. I thought I got rid of him, but when I got tothe bridge, there he washe was going that fast!

I laughed and told him about a ride I took across the Manhattan Bridgethe previous night, where several electric bikes flew by me. It was not,I insisted, an ego thing about who is going faster. Lots of people whoflew by me on the bridge were on regular bikes. It was a rhythm thing, Isaid. On a bike, you know where the hills are, you know how to time thelights, you calibrate for the movement of cars in traffic, other bikes,pedestrians. The electric bike was a new velocity on the streets.

And yet, for all our shared sense that something was wrong with electricbikes, we agreed that, by any rational measure, they are a force forgood.

The engines are efficient, they reduce congestion, he said.

Fewer cars, more bikes, I said.

We proceeded to list a few other Goo-Goo virtues. (I first encounteredthis phraseshort for good-government typesin Robert Caros The PowerBroker,about Robert Moses, the man who built New York for the automobile.)

If its such a good thing, why do we have this resentment? I asked.

He wasnt sure, he said. He confessed that he had recently tried a friends electric bike and found the experience appealing to thepoint of corruption.

Its only a matter of time before I get one, he said ruefully. Andthen Ill probably never get on a real bike again.

In some ways, the bike-ification of New York City can be seen as theultimate middle finger raised to Robert Moses, a hero for building somany parks who then became a crazed highway builder who wanted todemolish part of Greenwich Village to make room for a freeway. But areall the bikes a triumph for his nemesis, Jane Jacobs, and her vision ofcohesive neighborhoods anchored by street life, by which she meant theworld of pedestrians on the sidewalk?

The revolution under Bloomberg was to see the city as a place wherepedestrians come first, a longtime city bike rider and advocate I know,who didnt wish to be named, said. This electric phenomenonundermines this development. The great thing about bikes in the city isthat, aesthetically and philosophically, you have to be present and awareof where you are, and where others are. When you keep introducing moreand more power and speed into that equation, it goes against thephilosophy of slowing cars downof traffic calmingin order to makethings more livable, he said.

Some bicycle-advocacy groups are cautiously optimistic about electricbikes, or even cautiously ecstatic. E-bikes have the potential todemocratize bikes for millions of Americans, Paul Steely White, theexecutive director of Transportation Alternatives, said, adding that hewas bullish on e-bikes, though it has to be done right. I get hislogic. Think of all the people who will be drawn onto bicycles by thepromise of an assist when going uphill. The most important factor forbike safety, more than bikes lanes or helmets or lights, is the numberof cyclists on the streets. The more people who ride bikes, the saferthe conditions for everyone on a bike. (Hence the name of the bikeadvocacy group Critical Mass.) In this equation, bikes are the rarespecies that can be introduced into an urban ecosystem for the purposeof discouraging cars.

I went into a bike shop and asked about the electric bikes for sale: twothousand and change each.

We dont call them electric, the salesman said. We call it pedalassist.

I asked if he had tried one. He gave me a huge smile. He had, and heloved it.

Why? I asked.

It looks like youre pedalling, but you are not doing nothing.

A few weeks after this exchange, Iwas in Paris. There are bikes everywhere, often in the lanereserved for buses, and cars proceed with great civility toward peopleon two wheels or two feet, at least compared to New York. The other day,while pedalling down Boulevard Saint-Germain on a Vlibthe Parisversion of a Citi Bikea woman in a dress with short blond hair cruisedpast me, her stylish bag flung over her shoulder. I immediately thoughtof that sense of joyous stealth or imposture implied by the bikesalesman in New York. She was pedalling, but there was no question thather speed and momentum derived from something other than her effort. Westopped together at a red light. When it turned green, she placidlysailed ahead and out of sight.

I immediately searched out an electric bike to rent. I found a store onthe Rue des coles that sold stately Holland bikes, both electric andregular. The guy agreed to rent one to me, and I began sailing aroundtown. I found the effect narcotic and delightful: on a flat road, Imoved faster than I did on a normal bike, with less exertion. Downhillswere no different than a normal bike. Uphill, I maintained speed, withjust a tiny bit more exertion. Now and then I could feel the happy bumpof electric power. Assisted living was so pleasant! The only problem wasthat, like some mouse in a cognitive-behavior experiment, I began tocrave that bump. It was the effect of the assist I wanted; it was thefeeling of being assisted.

This is an issue of shared values and perspectives, my bike-advocatefriend said. This whole thing is about attentiveness. How do you dealwith technology and the frailties of being a human being? Bicycles aremechanical augmentation of walking, really. It gets pretty etherealwhyis it bad to have a motor when you are already using gears? Who gives ashit if you are using a motor?

But, I feel there is a clear line between human power and non-humanpower, he added. I think there should be a very simple classification:human-powered or not human-powered. And if you are not human-powered,you should not be using human-powered infrastructure. You should be inthe street. E-bikes being licensed as motorized vehicles is good.E-bikes being in human-powered infrastructure is no good. . . .

At which point we arrive at the insidious genius of our iPhone, Google,A.I. era, in which the distinction between human behavior that is andisnt assisted becomes almost impossible to detect, and thereforeto enforce.

This parallel found expression one afternoon in Paris, while I was on the electricbike in route along the Seine, way at the edge of town. The road wasmostly deserted, the riverfront lined with shrubs and trash. I took outmy phone to take a picture of the scene as I cruised along and then,creature of my era, I pressed the little icon that brought my own faceonto the screen. I took a selfie. When I lowered the phone, I saw anolder man walking along the river, waving at me in a strange way.

He had white hair, wore a rumpled suit, and held his waving hand in apeculiar position that I now realize is how one would hold a pocketmirror if you were trying to make it reflect a beam of light. At thetime, I only noticed that there was something patronizing about his bodylanguage and wave, like he was trying to get the attention of a child.Before I had to time to even consider waving back, he turned his palmtoward himself. With impeccably expressive poise, he mimed an orangutanstaring sadly at his own reflection. I sailed onward, chastised andfrozen-faced, moving a bit faster than I otherwise would have. I didnthave time to react. He is still vivid to me in this pose, his bodylanguage and mopey face indelible. You always remember the picture youdidnt get to takebecause its preservation in memory depends entirelyon you.

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The Electric-Bike Conundrum - The New Yorker

Orlando Health revamping pediatric neurology services – Orlando Sentinel

Orlando Health is revamping its pediatric neurology and neurosurgery programs at its Winnie Palmer and Arnold Palmer hospitals in downtown Orlando, aiming to offer state-of-the-art procedures, such as fetal surgery.

To lead the multiyear effort, the health system has brought on board pediatric and fetal neurosurgeon Dr. Samer Elbabaa, who specializes in repairing spinal anomalies in unborn babies.

Our goal is to add expertise to treat the most complex conditions, in addition to focusing on coordination of care and research and education, said Elbabaa who arrived here three months ago from St. Louis, Mo.

The initiative adds another layer to the competition among the three childrens hospitals in Orlando, which, just by their sheer existence in a city this size, are an anomaly.

Florida Hospital currently boasts one of the most robust childrens neuroscience programs in the Southeast with the highest epilepsy surgery volume in Florida.

Nemours Childrens Hospital in Lake Nona has been recognized for its unique Muscular Dystrophy Association Clinic, led be world-renowned neurologist, Dr. Richard Finkel.

Elbabaas ultimate goal is for Winnie Palmer Hospital for Women & Babies to become a destination for spina bifida fetal surgery.

The condition is a neural tube anomaly. Each year, about 1,500 babies are born with it with various degrees of severity. Fetal surgeons like Elbabaa fix the defect in the fetus by opening moms pregnant belly.

Winnie Palmers program is at least a year away from accepting its first patient, but when open, it would be one of a first in Florida and one of the few in the Southeast, after Childrens Hospital at Vanderbilt in Tennessee.

In the meantime, Elbabaa has been working on establishing a coordinated system of care for kids with medical and surgical needs, ranging from brain tumors and epilepsy to autism and developmental delays.

He recently helped launch the Children Neuroscience Center of Excellence at Arnold Palmer Hospital for Children, bringing together various disciplines of pediatric neuroscience under one umbrella.

To further build the program, Arnold Palmer Hospital is planning to bring on board more pediatric specialists, including neuropsychiatrists, neurologists, psychologists and therapists for inpatient rehab. The center will eventually have its own physical space and an outpatient neurology clinic.

Creating a comprehensive multi-disciplinary approach to treating different conditions is a national trend. Florida Hospital and Nemours said they too have multi-disciplinary neurology programs.

Such programs can lead to better-coordinated care for patients. The model also allows hospitals to hire their own specialists, which can create competition for smaller, independent physician practices.

But thats not likely to happen for pediatric neurologists here because they are in short supply.

Orlando Health expands trauma center

There is a high demand and need for such specialized care, said Dr. Germano Falcao, a local independent pediatric neurologist. Its an underserved area, so they would be bringing additional resources here, said Falcao, who has privileges at Arnold Palmer Hospital.

Elbabaa is also gradually increasing the complexity level of pediatric surgeries to include skull-based and minimally invasive neurosurgeries at Arnold Palmer Hospital and eventually fetal surgery at Winnie Palmer Hospital, where more than 14,000 babies are delivered each year.

Im coming to a center with high volume of delivery, and this community deserves to have a fetal surgery program, he said.

Treating the fetus in the womb is a field thats constantly changing, spurred by individual innovators, hospitals and competition, according to the Society of Maternal-Fetal Medicine.

There are currently about two dozen institutions in the U.S. and Canada that perform more complex fetal procedures, many of which are part of North American Fetal Therapy Network. But there are other centers that perform basic fetal procedures, such as transfusions and shunts. Taken together, it would be reasonable to estimate that there approximately 50 programs across the country, according to Society of Maternal-Fetal Medicine.

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Similar to complex procedures like organ transplantation, parents usually have to travel to another state for fetal surgery.

Port Orange resident Elizabeth Watkins, for instance, decided to go to Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia last October, shortly after she found out that her unborn child had spina bifida.

The financial resources are a challenge, said Watkins, a social worker. She spent a month in Philadelphia, and after returning home, she was on bed rest until she delivered Scout six months ago at Winnie Palmer Hospital via Cesarean section.

Scout is a happy, healthy baby now, but she still needs close monitoring. Watkins has been driving regularly to Arnold Palmer Hospital to go to the Spina Bifida Clinic, where Elbabaa now cares for Scout.

We totally lucked out in getting him, she said. Having everyone together under the same roof benefits the parents and the patient, because everyone is on the same page.

Elbabaa also has his eye on the next generation of doctors and surgeons. He is planning to create learning opportunities for University of Central Florida medical students and eventually hopes to establish fellowships in pediatric neurology and neurosurgery.

We want to be a destination in which parents have confidence, he said. The community really deserves this.

nmiller@orlandosentinel.com, 407-420-5158 or @naseemmiller

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Orlando Health revamping pediatric neurology services - Orlando Sentinel

White Supremacists Are Using Genetic Ancestry Tests For A Creepy Purpose – HuffPost

Its a marketing trope often repeated in viral,feel-good commercials for genetic ancestry tests: If we only knew just how related we all were, even distantly, then prejudice and racism would cease to exist.

But new research at the University of California, Los Angeles, finds the opposite: White supremacists do not especially care what their genetic ancestry tests show, if they reveal anything that doesnt conform with their claimed white heritage. At the same time, these genetic tests may actually be exciting to white supremacists because it gives them a scientific argument for the diversity of the European race, which helps them appropriate the language of diversity and multiculturalism for hateful purposes.

The findings, presented at the American Sociological Association this week and to be published in a forthcoming journal article, are a sober reminder that it takes a lot more than genetic proof of multiethnic ancestry to dissuade hard-core racists from their hateful ideology. In fact, the tests may bolster some of their beliefs.

We cant rely on genetic information to turn white nationalists away from their views, researcher Aaron Panofsky wrote in an email to HuffPost. I saw a tweet that said we should crowdfund [genetic ancestry tests] for these guys and that would end the movement. I think that is completely wrong and the genetics cant save us.

In a video posted on the Ancestry.com YouTube page, one participant says, There would be no such thing as, like, extremism in the world if people knew their heritage like that.

Genetic ancestry tests require people to spit into tubes and send the saliva samples to a lab for analysis. A few weeks later, they are directed to a website that reveals their genetic heritage. All genetic ancestry companies compare a persons genome with a proprietary database of reference populations, and show percentages of DNA defined racially, ethnically, continentally, or by modern nation-states. So, a person may be 87 percent East Asian in one companys test, but 67 percent Chinese in another companys test. The services also analyze mitochondrial DNA passed down from the mother and father to assess how ancestors may have migrated over time.

For genealogy hobbyists, its a good way to search for long-lost relatives to complete the family tree. Recent news articles, however, have highlighted a dark side of these tests, as they can also reveal long-hidden genetic secrets, like true paternity or the fact that babies may have been switched at birth.

While genetic ancestry tests have the veneer of scientific accuracy, they have come under attack by scientists. As Panofsky and Donovan put it in their forthcoming paper, the tests trade on the authority of science but do not adhere to scientific standards of openness and accountability. Further, there are no industry standards or uniformity. Each company has their own trademarked panel of population samples, algorithms and DNA markers, and consumers may get different or even conflicting results from company to company. And this confusion doesnt even get into the messiness of the history of human civilization: What would 75 percent Spanish mean with the nation-state of Spains history of invasions, wars and immigration patterns?

To examine how white supremacists use these tests, Panofsky and co-author Joan Donovan scoured the discussion boards of Stormfront, the oldest online forum for white supremacists, and identified 153 people who had posted the results of their genetic ancestry tests for comment.

Fifty-three of the people who posted were happy about good news that confirmed their European heritage, 49 posted their results because they were confused or disappointed, and 51 posted results without comment, although other forum members were free to discuss them.

Panofskys first observation was that, despite the promises of those sappy viral videos, not a single person renounced their hateful beliefs in reaction to their test results. He also was surprised that Stormfront members were willing to post their bad news results, even though the rules of membership are that people must have all-white, non-Jewish ancestry.

For some white supremacists who found links to Jewish or other non-European people groups, feedback from the forum ranged from never breed, to more gentle assurances that as long as they didnt see Jew when they looked in the mirror, they could claim whiteness.

Finally, Panofsky observed that members were having in-depth discussions in an attempt to explain away undesirable ancestry by suggesting the test itself was either invalid (a Jewish conspiracy to confuse white people, for example) or the tests methodology and statistical analysis were flawed.

They have very sophisticated interpretations that are based on statistical, genetic, and historical reasoning, Panofsky said. The conclusions and interpretations they make are often not the ones professional geneticists, biological anthropologists, and historians would make, but these interpretations are not ignorant or uneducated.

Perhaps most disturbing, some white supremacists are taking news of their heritage from multiple European countries and using it to create a pallete of diversity that doesnt include people of color.

A persons test might come back 30 percent English, 20 percent Danish, 40 percent German, etc., and this looks like great diversity within Europeans without people of color being involved, Panofsky explained. Already some white nationalists portray white people as the true people of color (red hair, blond, brown, and black hair; blue, green, and brown eyes; pale to olive skin etc.), while seeing non-whites as all the same.

Regardless of how white supremacists see it, the historical definition ofwhiteness is a socially constructed, ever-shifting categorization. In the 19th century, superior whites were of Saxon stock, and didnt include the Irish, Italian or Eastern European Jews. Over time, some of these groups gained entry into whiteness,while others didnt.

Now, it appears that genetic ancestry tests complicate whiteness even further and not in the way that genetic ancestry testing companies anticipated.

America does not do a good job of tracking incidents of hate and bias. We need your help to create a database of such incidents across the country, so we all know whats going on. Tell us your story.

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White Supremacists Are Using Genetic Ancestry Tests For A Creepy Purpose - HuffPost

What is Genetics?

Genetics is the study of heredity. Heredity is a biological process where a parent passes certain genes onto their children or offspring. Every child inherits genes from both of their biological parents and these genes in turn express specific traits. Some of these traits may be physical for example hair and eye color and skin color etc. On the other hand some genes may also carry the risk of certain diseases and disorders that may pass on from parents to their offspring.

The genetic information lies within the cell nucleus of each living cell in the body. The information can be considered to be retained in a book for example. Part of this book with the genetic information comes from the father while the other part comes from the mother.

The genes lie within the chromosomes. Humans have 23 pairs of these small thread-like structures in the nucleus of their cells. 23 or half of the total 46 comes from the mother while the other 23 comes from the father.

The chromosomes contain genes just like pages of a book. Some chromosomes may carry thousands of important genes while some may carry only a few. The chromosomes, and therefore the genes, are made up of the chemical substance called DNA (DeoxyriboNucleic Acid). The chromosomes are very long thin strands of DNA, coiled up tightly.

At one point along their length, each chromosome has a constriction, called the centromere. The centromere divides the chromosomes into two arms: a long arm and a short arm. Chromosomes are numbered from 1 to 22 and these are common for both sexes and called autosomes. There are also two chromosomes that have been given the letters X and Y and termed sex chromosomes. The X chromosome is much larger than the Y chromosome.

The genes are further made up of unique codes of chemical bases comprising of A, T, C and G (Adenine, Thymine, Cytosine and Guanine). These chemical bases make up combinations with permutations and combinations. These are akin to the words on a page.

These chemical bases are part of the DNA. The words when stringed together act as the blueprints that tells the cells of the body when and how to grow, mature and perform various functions. With age the genes may be affected and may develop faults and damages due to environmental and endogenous toxins.

Women have 46 chromosomes (44 autosomes plus two copies of the X chromosome) in their body cells. They have half of this or 22 autosomes plus an X chromosome in their egg cells.

Men have 46 chromosomes (44 autosomes plus an X and a Y chromosome) in their body cells and have half of these 22 autosomes plus an X or Y chromosome in their sperm cells.

When the egg joins with the sperm, the resultant baby has 46 chromosomes (with either an XX in a female baby or XY in a male baby).

Each gene is a piece of genetic information. All the DNA in the cell makes up for the human genome. There are about 20,000 genes located on one of the 23 chromosome pairs found in the nucleus.

To date, about 12,800 genes have been mapped to specific locations (loci) on each of the chromosomes. This database was begun as part of the Human Genome Project. The project was officially completed in April 2003 but the exact number of genes in the human genome is still unknown.

Reviewed by April Cashin-Garbutt, BA Hons (Cantab)

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What is Genetics?

Seattle Genetics’ Adcetris Granted Priority Review by FDA – Nasdaq

Seattle Genetics, Inc. SGEN announced that the FDA has accepted its supplemental Biologics License Application (BLA) for Adcetris (brentuximab vedotin) in patients with cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (CTCL). Additionally, the FDA granted Priority Review for the application and has set a target action date of Dec 16, 2017.

Adcetris is the only marketed product at Seattle Genetics. The drug is approved for relapsed Hodgkin lymphoma and relapsed systemic anaplastic large cell lymphoma (sALCL) in the U.S., the EU and Japan. It is also approved in the U.S. for the treatment of patients suffering from classical Hodgkin lymphoma, who are at high risk of relapse or progression as post-autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (auto-HSCT) consolidation.

Notably, shares of the company have declined 11.4% against the Zacks classified industry's gain of 7.4% on a year-to-date basis.

The submission of the supplemental BLA was mainly based on positive data from the phase III trial, ALCANZA and two phase II investigator-sponsored trials in patients with CTCL. Interestingly, the ALCANZA study achieved both the primary and secondary endpoints.

The study showed that CTCL patients treated with Adcetris had superior outcomes across all primary and secondary endpoints compared with patients in the control arm, who were treated with either methotrexate or bexarotene standard of care agents.

Furthermore, the FDA granted Breakthrough Therapy Designation (BTD) to Adcetris for the treatment of patients with CD30-expressing mycosis fungoides and primary cutaneous anaplastic large cell lymphoma, who require systemic therapy and have received one prior systemic therapy in November 2016.

Adcetris, generated revenues of $74.3 million, up 12.3% year over year in the second quarter of 2017 and is expected to generate sale in the range of $290 million to $310 million in the U.S. and Canada in 2017. Seattle Genetics is also working on expanding the drug's label which will be a further boost for the company's revenues.

Seattle Genetics, Inc. Price

Seattle Genetics, Inc. Price | Seattle Genetics, Inc. Quote

Zacks Rank & Stocks to Consider

Seattle Genetics currently holds a Zacks Rank #3 (Hold). Some better-ranked stocks in health care sector include Alexion Pharmaceuticals, Inc. ALXN , Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Inc. REGN and Sanofi SNY . While Alexion and Regeneron sport a Zacks Rank #1 (Strong Buy), Sanofi holds Zacks Rank #2 (Buy). You can see the complete list of today's Zacks #1 Rank stocks here .

Alexion Pharmaceuticals' earnings per share estimates have moved up from $4.55 to $4.77 for 2017 and from $5.49 to $6.43 for 2018 over the last 30 days. The company delivered positive earnings surprises in three of the trailing four quarters, with an average beat of 12.26%. The share price of the company has increased 11.7% year to date.

Regeneron's earnings per share estimates have increased from $10.52 to $13.81 for 2017 and from $12.10 to $14.54 for 2018 over the last 30 days. The company pulled off positive earnings surprises in two of the trailing four quarters, with an average beat of 6.29%. The share price of the company has increased 27.6% year to date.

Sanofi's earnings per share estimates have moved up from $3.20 to $3.31 for 2017 and from $3.36 to $3.38 for 2018 over last 30 days. The company came up with positive earnings surprises in three of the trailing four quarters, with an average beat of 5.10%. The share price of the company has increased 19.7% year to date.

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The views and opinions expressed herein are the views and opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of Nasdaq, Inc.

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Seattle Genetics' Adcetris Granted Priority Review by FDA - Nasdaq

Fluidigm Licenses CFTR Next-Generation Sequencing Assay From Baylor Genetics for Use With the Juno System – GlobeNewswire (press release)

SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO, Calif., Aug. 17, 2017 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Fluidigm Corporation (NASDAQ:FLDM) and Baylor Genetics today announced that they have entered into a licensing agreement to offer a next-generation sequencing (NGS) library prep assay that enables efficient sequencing of the CFTR (cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator) gene.

Under the agreement, Fluidigm obtains the rights to commercialize the CFTR library prep assay developed by Baylor Genetics for research use with the Juno automated microfluidic system. The targeted NGS library prep assay enables accurate identification of variants from each of the 27 exons in the CFTR gene and selected intronic regions. When combined with Fluidigm microfluidics, this solution has the potential to significantly simplify complex labor-intensive laboratory workflows and improve the efficiency of CFTR sequencing.

Cystic fibrosis (CF) is a complex multisystem disease that is caused by mutations in the CFTR gene and affects over 70,000 individuals worldwide. Over 2,000 variants have been identified within the CFTR gene. The detection frequency of these variants has been shown to vary by ancestry. Traditional genotyping methods typically focus on a subset of these variants and are limited in their ability to identify less common and new CFTR variants across large, diverse populations.

Next-generation sequencing offers a more comprehensive approach to CFTR genetic analysis by allowing a more complete view of the sequence. Targeted sequencing library prep workflows, however, can be very labor-intensive. With the application of Fluidigm automated microfluidics technology, NGS library preparation can be streamlined to provide significant efficiencies.

The combination of a rapid, accurate library prep workflow, followed by NGS, has allowed us to create a streamlined, cost-effective approach for CFTR sequencing. We realized the benefit of the microfluidic technology, and our agreement with Fluidigm has allowed us to move forward quickly. Our work with Fluidigm microfluidic technology will help us to further enhance our offerings and capabilities, said Shashikant Kulkarni, Chief Scientific Officer of Baylor Genetics.

Baylor Genetics is an industry leader in the development of high-quality genetic assays. We are excited at the opportunity to bring the benefits of this CFTR library prep assay to the larger community, said Chris Linthwaite, President and CEO of Fluidigm. This agreement represents a great example of how we are developing an expanding menu of high-value genetic assays for use with Fluidigm microfluidic systems to improve the future of health care.

About Baylor Genetics

Baylor Genetics has been helping health care providers solve the most complex cases of genetic disease for over 35 years and we are proud to be affiliated with the #1 NIH-funded genetics program at the Baylor College of Medicine. By bridging academic and operational excellence, Baylor Genetics offers the medical community a vast testing menu, the most thorough interpretations, access to experts, and the confidence to provide patients with answers. Baylor Genetics is located in Houstons Texas Medical Center with over 200 employees and over 3,000 tests available to clients in all 50 states and internationally. Our lab is well-equipped with cutting-edge diagnostic equipment, allowing us to efficiently generate the most accurate clinical genetic data. Through rigorous quality assurance, daily and monthly conferences, and close relationships with clinical partners, Baylor Genetics continuously improves diagnostic precision.

About Fluidigm Fluidigm (NASDAQ:FLDM) develops, manufactures, and markets life science analytical and preparatory systems for markets such as mass cytometry, high-throughput genomics, and singlecell genomics. We sell to leading academic institutions, clinical research laboratories, and pharmaceutical, biotechnology, and agricultural biotechnology companies worldwide. Our systems are based on proprietary microfluidics and multiparameter mass cytometry technology and are designed to significantly simplify experimental workflow, increase throughput, and reduce costs while providing excellent data quality. Fluidigm products are provided for Research Use Only. Not for use in diagnostic procedures.

We use our website (www.fluidigm.com), corporate Twitter account (@fluidigm), Facebook page (https://www.facebook.com/fluidigm), and LinkedIn page (https://www.linkedin.com/company/fluidigm-corporation) as channels of distribution of information about our products, our planned financial and other announcements, our attendance at upcoming investor and industry conferences, and other matters. Such information may be deemed material information, and we may use these channels to comply with our disclosure obligations under Regulation FD. Therefore, investors should monitor our website and our social media accounts in addition to following our press releases, SEC filings, public conference calls, and webcasts.

Fluidigm, the Fluidigm logo, and Juno are trademarks or registered trademarks of Fluidigm Corporation.

Forward-Looking Statement for Fluidigm

This press release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, including, among others, statements regarding anticipated development of sequencing productsand the potential impact of such products. Forward-looking statements are subject to numerous risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from currently anticipated results, including but not limited to, risks relating to uncertainties in contractual relationships and international regulated markets; challenges inherent in developing, manufacturing, launching, marketing, and selling new products; the uncertain regulatory environment; potential product performance and quality issues; intellectual property risks; competition; interruptions or delays in the supply of components or materials for, or manufacturing of, Fluidigm products; and risks associated with international operations. Information on these and additional risks, uncertainties, and other information affecting Fluidigm business and operating results are contained in Fluidigms Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2016, and in its other filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including Fluidigms Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended June 30, 2017. These forward-looking statements speak only as of the date hereof. Fluidigm disclaims any obligation to update these forward-looking statements except as may be required by law.

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Fluidigm Licenses CFTR Next-Generation Sequencing Assay From Baylor Genetics for Use With the Juno System - GlobeNewswire (press release)

Researchers Use Genetics and Electromagnetism to Control the Movements of Mice – Futurism

In BriefResearchers have established a new method of controlling the movements of mice in an attempt to better understand the workings of the brain. Genetic engineered mouse brains respond to temperature and electric current with the flick of a switch. This research could help people with mental health issues.

A team of researchers at the University of Buffalo has used magneto-thermal stimulation to control the movements of mice.

These results were achieved working with mice that had been genetically engineered such that targeted neurons would produce ion channels sensitive and even receptive to temperature. Nanoparticles consisting of a cobalt-ferrite core coated in manganese ferrite were injected into the brain, attaching themselves to neurons.

Applying an alternating magnetospherecauses the magnetization of these nanoparticles to switch back and forth, raising their temperature. As a result, the ion channels open up, causing the associated neurons to fire.

This research isnt really about bossing mice around its about linking specific parts of the brain to the movements and behaviors they control. Understanding how the brain works in this respect could help develop treatments for conditions that affect particular groups of neurons, including Parkinsons disease, dystonia, and traumatic brain injuries.

There is a lot of work being done now to map the neuronal circuits that control behavior and emotions, said Professor of Physics Arnd Pralle, the lead researcher. The technique we have developed could aid this effort greatly.

Techniques like transcranial magnetic stimulation already allow us to tinker with the brain, and research has shown that Optogenetics can be used to make major changes to the behavior of mice in a lab setting. However, magneto-thermal stimulation is considered less invasive than these other methods. No evidence of brain damage was found in the mice used during testing.

The researchers hope to expand their studies by figuring out how to stimulate multiple parts of the brain at the same time.

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Researchers Use Genetics and Electromagnetism to Control the Movements of Mice - Futurism

Re AK, Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 2008 [2017] EWHC 1154 (Fam)-1 – Family Law Week

Home > Judgments

Case summary coming soon

This judgment was handed down in open court

Case numbers omitted Neutral Citation Number: [2017] EWHC 1154 (Fam)

IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICEFAMILY DIVISIONRoyal Courts of JusticeStrand, London, WC2A 2LL

Date: 28 July 2017

Before :

SIR JAMES MUNBY PRESIDENT OF THE FAMILY DIVISION- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

In the Matter of the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 2008(Case AK)- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Mr Dorian Day (instructed by Jennings Solicitors) for the applicantMs Marlene Cayoun (instructed by DAC Beachcroft LLP) for Care Fertility Northampton

Hearing date: 21 July 2017 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Judgment Sir James Munby, President of the Family Division : 1.Since I handed down judgment in In re A and others (Legal Parenthood: Written Consents) [2015] EWHC 2602 (Fam), [2016] 1 WLR 1325, I have had to consider a number of cases raising issues very similar to the issue which confronts me here. The most recent judgment was Re the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 2008 (Cases AD, AE, AF, AG and AH) [2017] EWHC 1026 (Fam). They were the thirtieth to thirty-fourth of these cases in which I have given a final judgment. This judgment relates to another case, Case AK. Two other cases, Cases AI and AJ, are pending. That makes thirty-seven cases in all.

2.For the purposes of this judgment I shall take as read the analysis in In re A and the summary of the background to all this litigation which appears in Re the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 2008 (Case O) [2016] EWHC 2273 (Fam). The facts3.For reasons which will by now be familiar, I propose to be extremely sparing in what I say of the facts and the evidence in this case.

4.The applicant is a woman. She was neither in a civil partnership with nor married to the respondent mother. The case relates to treatment provided by Care Fertility Northampton, a clinic regulated by the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority. I shall refer to the applicant as X, the respondent as Y and the child as C. X seeks a declaration pursuant to section 55A of the Family Law Act 1986 that she is, in accordance with sections 43 and 44 of the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 2008, the legal parent of C. Although they are now separated, Y is wholeheartedly supportive of X's application. The clinic, the HFEA, the Secretary of State for Health and the Attorney General have all been notified of the proceedings. None has sought to be joined, though the clinic attended the hearing in the person of its "person responsible" and was represented by counsel. Given the nature of the issue (see below) I decided that there was no need for C to have a guardian appointed.

5.I heard the case on 21 July 2017. X was represented by Mr Dorian Day, the clinic by Ms Marlene Cayoun. Y was not present but had sent a handwritten letter to the court dated 18 July 2017 "to confirm my support for the applicant, in the hearing to obtain parental status for our [child]." The letter, having explained why she could not be present, went on:

"[X] has my full support and backing in this case. I hope in court on Friday this terrible error by Care Northampton is rectified and we can start to move on from all the stress and upset it has caused."

6.X was present in court. There was, in view of the conclusion I had come to, no need for X to give oral evidence but in accordance with my invariable practice in these cases (see Re the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 2008 (Cases AD, AE, AF, AG and AH) (No 2) [2017] EWHC 1782 (Fam), para 12) I asked X if she wanted to speak. She did so from the well of the court I saw no need for her to be sworn. Her words, though brief, were powerful and very moving; for some of the time she was in tears, and I can well understand why.

7.I need at this point to go back a little. On 27 June 2017, the "person responsible" at the clinic made a witness statement, in the course of which she offered "my unreserved apology to [X] and [Y] for this error both personally and on behalf of Care Fertility Northampton" and went on "to express my sincerest apologies on behalf of Care Fertility Northampton and Care Fertility Group generally, for the distress that this matter has inevitable caused [X, Y and C]."

8.X responded in a witness statement dated 13 July 2017. I deliberately do not set out the more personal matters it deals with, but there are two aspects to which I think I should draw attention. The first relates to the impact on X of discovering that there was a question over her parentage of C:

" when I was made aware of the fact that I legally had no rights in respect of [C] due to a significant error by the CARE Fertility Group Limited (CFGL), my whole world was turned upside down and this obviously had a significant effect on me and my ability to cope with life generally on a day to day basis.

I was completely unable to deal with being told that I had not legal rights of parentage in respect of my [child]. I know that [C] wouldn't understand this or wouldn't view me any differently but that didn't change how it had made me feel. I felt that I was an inferior person in [C]'s life so far as the outside world was concerned. I felt that the confidence that I had been given in the change in the law to allow same sex couples to have children and be considered legal parents had been snatched away from me. I simply felt that I was no more than a step parent to [C] rather than [C's] actual parent who had been involved in every part of [C's] life from deciding to have [C], the fertility process, [C's] birth and then upbringing.

A declaration from the court cannot take away the hurt and distress that I have felt from the moment that I found out about this issue until it will have been resolved, it also cannot undo the ongoing effects that this situation has caused "

9.The second relates to her reaction to the witness statement from the clinic:

"Despite all that I have been through emotionally in this matter I felt that the CFGL empathised and understood how their negligent error had effected me and that they only wanted to assist me in putting matters right. However, having read the statement prepared on behalf of the clinic by , I don't believe that they have any understanding whatsoever about how this has affected me or the gravity of their mistake. Yes they accept in the statement that they made a mistake but they seem to somewhat try to pass it off as insignificant and non consequential in terms of the effect that this has had on me. I felt sick to my stomach when I read the statement because I felt that they, of all people, would have at least recognised the harm and upset that they would have caused."

10.She concluded:

"The reality is that this has had a massive traumatic and financial effect on my life."

In the light of the rest of her evidence, I am quite satisfied that this is no exaggeration on X's part.

11.Before me, in court, X explained the effect all this had had on her relationship with Y, on her job and, worst of all, on her relationship with C.

12.I draw attention to these matters not so much to criticise the clinic, whose attitude throughout this case has been very significantly better than in a number of other cases where criticism has been merited, but to bring out not for the first time, I have to say the devastating effects these errors and the subsequent litigation have on the parents blamelessly and unwillingly caught up in the process. I am not surprised that X should have used the word "traumatic." It describes, unhappily but all too accurately, the impacts on them which have been described to me by so many parents in these cases. I venture to repeat again what I said in Re the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 2008 (Case G) [2016] EWHC 729 (Fam), para 32:

"If ever there was a situation calling for empathy, understanding, humanity, compassion and, dare one say it, common decency, never mind sincere and unqualified apology, it is surely this."

13.At the end of the hearing I indicated that I was making the order sought. I now (28 July 2017) hand down judgment explaining my reasons.

14.Although I am acutely conscious of the stress, worry and anxiety burdening parents in these cases, and of the powerful human emotions that are inevitably engaged, this case is, in terms of the applicable legal analysis, straight-forward and simple, though on the facts it raises a novel point. The evidence, which there is no need for me to rehearse in detail, is compelling. The answer, at the end of the day, is, in my judgment, clear.

15.Just as in each of the other cases I have had to consider, so in this case, having regard to the evidence before me, I find as a fact that:

i)The treatment which led to the birth of C was embarked upon and carried through jointly and with full knowledge by both the woman (that is, Y) and her partner (X).

ii)From the outset of that treatment, it was the intention of both X and Y that X would be a legal parent of C. Each was aware that this was a matter which, legally, required the signing by each of them of consent forms. Each of them believed that they had signed the relevant forms as legally required and, more generally, had done whatever was needed to ensure that they would both be parents.

iii)From the moment when the pregnancy was confirmed, both X and Y believed that X was the other parent of the child. That remained their belief when C was born.

iv)X and Y, believing that they were entitled to, and acting in complete good faith, registered the birth of their child, as they believed C to be, showing both of them on the birth certificate as C's parents, as they believed themselves to be.

v)The first they knew that anything was or might be 'wrong' was when, some years later, they were contacted by the clinic.

16.I add that there can be no suggestion that any consent given was not fully informed consent. Nor is there any suggestion of any failure or omission by the clinic in relation to the provision of information or counselling.The issue17.Adopting the terminology I have used in previous cases, the problem in this case is very shortly stated. The Form WP was correctly completed by Y. There is no Form PP that can be found. It is not clear whether this is because there never was a Form PP or because the Form PP has been lost, but the case is not put forward on the basis that I can find that a properly completed Form PP has been lost. Nor does there seem ever to have been a Form IC.

18.The Form WP was, as I have said, properly completed by Y. Y's name and date of birth appear in section 1 ("About you"). X's name and date of birth appear in section 2 ("About your partner"). The consent box in section 3 on the second page ("Your consent to your partner being the legal parent") was ticked. Y signed the declaration in section 4.

19.Immediately following that signature, and the date of signature, the printed form contains the following text:

"If signing on behalf of the person consenting

If the person consenting is unable to sign for themselves because of illness, injury or physical disability, someone else representing the person can sign the form on their behalf. There must also be a witness confirming that the person consenting is present when the representative signs the form.Representative's declaration

I declare that the person named in section 1 of this form is present at the time of signing this form."

Adjacent to the words "Representative's name" there is a box in which Y had written X's name. Adjacent to the words "Representative's signature" there is another box which contains X's signature. Adjacent to the words "Relationship to the person consenting" there is another box in which Y had written the word "Partner". This part of the form bears the same date as the previous part. Both parts were obviously completed and signed on the same day. At the foot, the form is witnessed by a member of the clinical team.

20.As In re A demonstrates, the ultimate question is whether X has, within the meaning of sections 44(1)(a) and 44(2) of the 2008 Act, "given a notice [in writing .. signed by [X]] stating that [X] consents to [X] being treated as the parent of any child resulting from treatment provided to [Y]." Now X has signed the Form WP, so the question reduces itself to this: in these circumstances, is the Form WP signed by both Y and X effective both as a notice given by Y in accordance with section 44(1)(b) to which the answer is plainly Yes and as a notice given by X in accordance with section 44(1)(a)?

21.This is not a question which in this precise form has arisen before. There is, unlike in many of the more recent cases I have had to consider, no case directly in point. So it has to be determined having regard to the principles to be extracted from the previous case-law, In re A in particular.

22.It is quite obvious that there has been a mistake. Whatever else X was doing, she was not signing the Form WP as Y's "representative". Y, after all, had signed herself. So what was X doing, what did she and Y and the witness think she was doing, when she signed the Form WP, if not to acknowledge and record that she was to be a legal parent?

23.The answer, in my judgment, is clear and obvious: X was signing the form, as Y's "partner" the word which in the relevant part of section 5 describes the capacity in which she was signing, and the word which appears in sections 2 and 3 and that can only have been to signify that, as section 3 spelt out, she (X) was to be a "legal parent." What otherwise, looking at the matter from Y's point of view, was the point of her partner X signing the document along with Y, what, looking at the matter from X's point of view, was the point of her signing the document along with Y, if not to record their joint acknowledgment that X was to be a parent? If X was not to be a parent, why did she sign the Form WP at all?

24.X is entitled to the declaration she seeks.

Outcome25.It was for these reasons that, at the conclusion of the hearing, I made a declaration in the terms sought by X.Costs26.The clinic has very properly agreed to pay X's reasonable costs. There is a dispute as to the appropriate amount. Both parties are content that I proceed immediately to a summary assessment.

27.The costs claimed by X's solicitors amount in all to some 25,000 net of VAT, the solicitors' costs amounting to 11,500 (being 46 hours charged at 250 per hour), counsel's fees amounting to some 13,360 (including some 36 hours work out of court), and other disbursements to 515.

28.Challenge is mounted to the solicitors' costs under three heads: (i) first, it is said that the Grade A Partner's hourly rate of 250 should be reduced to 217, the National grade 1 rate (the effect of this would be to reduce the sum of 11,500 to 9,982); (ii) next, it is said that a total of 6 hours should be charged at a Grade C rate of 161 (the effect of this would be to reduce the amount claimed by a further 364); (iii) finally, it is said that a number of letters and emails have been charged a full hour each. Counsel's fees are challenged on three points: (i) first, in relation to 8 hours spent researching and reading the authorities; (ii) next, in relation to 6 hours spent compiling the index to and preparing the bundle of authorities; (iii) finally, in relation to 4 hours drafting the case summary and skeleton argument.

29.Putting these specific points in context, Ms Cayoun says that the experience of those instructing her is that in cases such as this (they have been involved before me in Cases P, Q, R, S, T and U) the costs associated with such applications are "routinely" in the region of 10,000 15,000 (inclusive of VAT). She suggests that on this basis the clinic would have expected the costs to be about 12,500 (inclusive of VAT). As against that, it is to be noted that the costs in these cases are sometimes much higher: see, for example, Re the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 2008 (Cases F and H) (No 2) [2017] EWHC 964 (Fam) and Re the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 2008 (Case N) (No 2) [2017] EWHC 965 (Fam).

30.Despite Ms Cayoun's attractively, and moderately, presented submissions, I propose to assess the cost summarily in the sums claimed.

31.Given the enhanced degree of 'client care' that all these cases require, and this case, in particular, demanded, the solicitor's hourly charging rate of 250 was, in my judgment, entirely reasonable. Having regard to all the circumstances, and to the realities of practice in a small firm, the fact that the partner did various things which in a larger firm (probably charging significantly more) would have been delegated to a Grade C is not, in my judgment, any reason for reducing this part of the bill. So far as concerns the basis of charging in relation to letters and emails, the bill, as I read it, records not the number of letters (emails) but the number of hours' work involved. No doubt there is an element of 'rounding' here but nothing, in my judgment, which requires adjustment to the bill.

32.So far as concerns counsel's fees, it is important to emphasise, as I have already noted, that this case raised a point which had not arisen before; this was not, as in many of the other cases I have had to consider, a case 'on all fours' with some previous case. In these circumstances, it was obviously necessary for counsel to examine, with care, what is now a substantial volume of decisions, in order (a) to be sure that there was not, in fact, any case directly in point and (b) to marshall the best arguments in favour of his client's case. Whilst not going so far as to suggest that 'no stone should be left unturned', the issues in these cases, and the potential life-long implications for both parent and child, are so important, so grave, that there can be no question of cutting corners. And the fact that, in the event, the judge has come to a conclusion without hesitation, cannot be read back to support any suggestion that much work was not required on the part of counsel, both in researching the law and in preparing a proper bundle of authorities for the assistance of the court. In all the circumstances there is, in my judgment, no justification for any adjustment.

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Re AK, Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 2008 [2017] EWHC 1154 (Fam)-1 - Family Law Week

Anatomy of terror: What makes normal people become extremists … – New Scientist

Who and what are we fighting?

Reuters

By Peter Byrne

VERA MIRONOVA rides Humvee shotgun through Mosuls shattered cityscape. It is late January 2017. Iraqi prime minister Haider al-Abadi has just declared east Mosul liberated from three years of rule by Islamic State, or ISIS. Most jihadist fighters are dead or captured, or have crossed the Tigris to the west, digging in for a final stand. Left behind, biding their time, are snipers and suicide bombers.

Much of the population has fled to refugee camps on the outskirts. Those who stayed look lost and dazed. Men pull corpses out of houses destroyed by air strikes. Others cobble together street-corner markets, selling meat and vegetables imported from Erbil, 80 kilometres and another world away.

Few women are visible. Mironova stands out, dressed in combat trousers and a Harvard sweatshirt, wisps of blonde hair escaping her blue stocking hat. Despite travelling in an armoured car, shes clearly not a combatant. Shes a social scientist, and her job is not to fight, but to listen, learn and record.

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We stop for breakfast at My Fair Lady, a ramshackle restaurant that was a favoured eatery of ISIS fighters. The Iraqi special forces soldiers accompanying us say it has the best pacha in town steaming bowls of sheep brains and intestines stuffed with rice, with slices of black, fatty tongue and boiled oranges. Mironova orders a pizza.

A week later, a suicide bomber detonates himself at the entrance to the packed restaurant, killing the owner and several customers.

The United States does not have a real counter-terrorism strategy, says Martha Crenshaw. Faced with continued waves of jihadist terror attacks, in the conflict zones of Syria and Iraq but also closer to home, the West seems at a loss to know what to do. Crenshaw is something like the doyenne of terrorism studies, with a half-century career studying the roots of terror behind her. She occupies an office at Stanford University just down the hall from Condoleezza Rice, the former US national security advisor who was an architect of the global war on terror declared after the attacks of 11 September 2001. There is a vast amount of money being thrown into the counter-terrorism system and nobody is in charge, Crenshaw says. We do not even know what success might look like. We are playing a dangerous game of whack-a-mole: terrorists pop up. We try to beat them down, hoping they will give up.

In July, al-Abadi was back in Mosul, this time to declare the final liberation of Iraqs second city. Near-saturation bombardment of the centre by the US Air Force and a casualty-heavy, house-by-house offensive led by Iraqi forces had eliminated most of the fighters holding the city where the leader of ISIS, Ab Bakr al-Baghdadi, had proclaimed its caliphate in 2014. The liberation came at a huge price. Mosul lies in ruins, and tens of thousands of civilians are dead or wounded. Almost one million residents have been displaced from their homes.

The price has been paid not just in Mosul. In June, 206 civilians were killed in bombings and other attacks carried out or inspired by ISIS in Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, Egypt, Iran, Australia, Pakistan and the UK, where radicalised ISIS supporters murdered eight in an attack near London Bridge on 3 June. A couple of weeks earlier, on 22 May, a 22-year-old British Muslim named Salman Ramadan Abedi detonated an improvised bomb laden with nuts and bolts at the entrance to the Manchester Arena, killing himself and 22 others, many of them children.

Why? Religious fanaticism? Groundless hate? Perverted ideology? Victory in the war on terror requires us to know what and who exactly we are fighting.

After breakfast, we accompany Iraqi commandos into abandoned houses that had been used by ISIS, wary of booby traps. We stare into darkened, steel-barred rooms used as jails for sex slaves and kafirs, Muslims who fell afoul of ISIS. We inspect the labels on tin cans, torn cookie packaging and empty bottles of Scotch whisky.

The soldiers scoop up photographs, checkpoint passes and slips of paper with names and phone numbers. Mironova bags religious tracts written in Arabic and Russian. Many of ISISs foreign fighters in Iraq and Syria are Chechnyans and Tajiks. Someone hands Mironova a diary written in Russian. She reads out loud, translating a letter written by a woman to her jihadist lover.

We are made only for each other, our marriage is sealed in heaven, we are together in this life and the afterlife, God willing. When you left, I counted the days until I got you back, my beloved. Now you are going to the war again; you may be gone forever. I will count the days until we meet again, my beloved Zachary. Following the letter, the woman had penned a recipe for a honey cake that requires a creamy milk not obtainable in Iraq. Jihadists dream of comfort food, too.

During the 1980s, Marc Sageman worked as a case officer for the CIA, operating armed cells resisting the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan. Now a forensic psychiatrist specialising in criminality and terrorism, he has been investigating what makes a terrorist for decades.

In his 2004 book Understanding Terror Networks, Sageman examined the motivations of 172 jihadist terrorists as revealed primarily in court documents. His conclusions fitted with decades of jail interviews and psychological studies showing that terrorism is neither solely reducible to ideological or religious motivations, nor to personality disorders. Terrorism is not a personality trait, says Sageman. There is no such thing as a terrorist, independent of a person who commits an act of terror.

That presents a problem for efforts to profile, identify and interdict individuals at risk of turning to terrorism, a central plank of anti-radicalisation programmes such as the UKs Prevent strategy (see Nip it in the bud). Democratic societies cannot keep an eye on everyone, and what they are looking for may not even give any obvious sign of its existence.

Crenshaws influential paper The causes of terrorism, published in 1981, summed up decades of observations of terrorists and their organisations, ranging from 19th century Russian anarchists to Irish, Israeli, Basque and Algerian nationalists. The outstanding common characteristic of individual terrorists, she concluded, is their normality. In her 1963 book Eichmann in Jerusalem, political theorist Hannah Arendt noted the same thing about the banal Nazi concentration camp bureaucrat Adolf Eichmann.

The unremarkable Nazi bureaucrat Adolf Eichmann embodied the banality of evil

People who commit terrorist acts are usually embedded in a network of familial and friendship ties with allegiance to a closed group, be that tribal, cultural, national, religious or political. Historically, the conditions for the murder of innocents by terrorism or genocide have occurred when one group fears extinction by another group. Ordinary people are motivated to kill people by category through their own group identity.

Viewed from inside the group, that can seem rational: terrorists are brave altruists protecting the group from harm by powerful outsiders. Terrorist acts are warnings to the out-group, demanding that certain actions be taken, such as withdrawing a military occupation or ending human and civil rights abuses. Terrorism is a militarised public relations ploy to advance a grander scheme a political tactic, not a profession or an overarching ideology.

But the vast majority of people who might share the same sense of grievance or political goals are not motivated to kill and maim the innocent. Criminologist Andrew Silke at the University of East London has conducted many interviews with imprisoned jihadists in the UK. When I ask them why they got involved, the initial answer is ideology, he says. But if I talk to them about how they got involved, I find out about family fractures, what was happening at school and in their personal lives, employment discrimination, yearnings for revenge for the death toll of Muslims.

Yet this is not a popular view with counter-terrorism agencies, he says. The government does not like to hear that someone became a jihadist because his brothers were beaten up by police or air strikes blew up a bunch of civilians in Mosul. The dominant idea is that if we concentrate on, somehow, defeating the radical Islamicist ideology, we can leave all of the messy, complicated behavioural stuff alone.

Mironova trained as a mathematician, game theorist and behavioural economist. A fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School, she is one of few researchers to venture directly into combat zones to examine the roots of jihadist terror. Her work has been funded variously by the US National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism (START), George Soross Open Society Foundations, the United Nations and the World Bank.

During extended stays in Syria, Iraq and Yemen over the past five years, Mironova has built up trust networks in a politically diverse spectrum of insurgents, including radical and moderate jihadists and ISIS members and defectors. She moves easily through the clogged frontline check points surrounding Mosul with the permission of the Iraqi military. She stays close to her protectors, careful not to cross the ethical line of doing no harm that separates academic research from intelligence gathering.

We are playing a dangerous game of whack-a-mole with the terrorists

By seeing things through the eyes of the fighters, Mironova aims to model what drives them, and how their individual motivations affect group behaviours and vice versa. She reads Arabic, but employs local translators in the field. She interviews fighters and civilians in hospitals, refugee camps and on the front lines face to face and via telephone or Skype.

Iraq as a whole is mainly Shia, but Mosul is largely Sunni; ISIS practices an apocalyptic form of the Sunni faith in a region wracked by social and economic catastrophe. Many civilians in the areas under their control collaborate, willingly and unwillingly, with ISIS. Some share their houses with fighters. Some work in ISIS factories, building homemade rockets, cutting and welding steel for jail bars and armour plates for tanks. Some escape into refugee camps. Some marry fighters. Some join sleeper cells.

In The causes of terrorism, Crenshaw observed that it is often the children of social elites who first turn to terrorism, hoping to inspire the less-privileged masses to approve a radical change in the social order. Many Jihadist organisations are led by upper middle class intellectuals, often engineers. Al Qaedas leader Ayman al-Zawahiri is a medical doctor; Ab Bakr al-Baghdadi reportedly has a doctorate in Islamic studies.

But the work of Mironova and others shows that the local ISIS rank and file is more down-to-earth: disenfranchised people struggling to eke out a living for their families in war zones. Foreign fighters tend to be more ideologically driven, and most motivated by factors beyond group identity to make the ultimate sacrifice (see Devoted to the cause).

REUTERS/Alkis Konstantinidis

Some militants seek to avenge the deaths of friends and relatives from US drone attacks, Shia militias, Iraqi police or US and British special operations forces. But as the sex slaves and Scotch suggest, jihadist fighters do not focus exclusively on heavenly rewards, or even hatred or revenge. Not everyone wants to die. Jihadist brigades in Iraq seize oil and vehicles, which they transport to high demand markets in Syria seeking to maximise profits. They often distribute gains from their looting and business operations communally.

Many of their adherents are purely economic actors, recruited with offers of competitive salaries, health insurance and benefits paid to their families should they be killed in battle. Mironova surveyed a cohort of Iraqi women who had encouraged their husbands and sons to join ISIS in order to get better family living quarters. Some recruits just need a job.

In Iraq and Syria, there are more than 1000 radical Islamist, moderate Islamist, and non-sectarian brigades seeking to recruit militants to their brand of insurgency. In Mironovas models, their behaviour is determined by resource constraints, much as capitalist enterprises thrive and die. Groups compete to attract the best fighters. Those with low budgets may choose a radical religious line to attract foreign fanatics who are not as professional as fighters motivated by money, but will work for just room and board. Such models suggest that although the roots of violent jihadism might be expressed as religious fervour, they are anchored in more mundane, utilitarian and perhaps solvable causes.

When the politicians demonise ISIS as evil, hormones flood the brain with danger signals, says Hriar Cabayan. We forget how to think scientifically. We need to get inside the heads of ISIS fighters and look at ourselves as they look at us.

Cabayan runs the Pentagons Strategic Multilayer Assessment (SMA) programme. His counter-terrorism unit taps the expertise of a volunteer pool of 300 scientists from academia, industry, intelligence agencies and military universities. They convene virtually and physically to answer classified and unclassified questions from combatants, including special operations forces fighting ISIS in Syria and Iraq. The result is a steady stream of white papers largely concluding that the US counter-terrorism strategy decapitating insurgency leadership, bombing terrorist strongholds is counter-productive.

Reliable information on terrorist attacks and the effectiveness of counter-terrorist actions is hard to find. STARTs Global Terrorism Database, based at the University of Maryland, records details of terrorist incidents as reported by English-language media. It does not record counter-terrorist actions. Crunching event-based data from STARTs media sources can reveal statistical patterns in terrorist attacks, including how frequently certain groups attack, numbers of fatalities and types of targets and weapons involved. The Mapping Militant Organizations database, hosted at Stanford University, includes data relevant to the political environments that nurture terrorism, but also relies on English-only news reports and selected academic journals.

Neither database includes acts of terror committed by states, except for Islamic State. The definitional boundaries between insurgency and terrorism and state repression are vague. Militant actions directed against soldiers can be recorded as terrorism, while lethal police actions or government-initiated attacks on civilians are regarded as acts of war, or collateral damage, and so ignored.

Classified data is no more comprehensive: about 80 per cent of top-secret intelligence is drawn from open sources, including media reports. Raw data that contradicts policy or that tarnishes the military is often under-reported or ignored by field officers who are more concerned with living to fight another day. There is censorship, too: a recent investigation by Military Times reports that since 9/11, the Pentagon has failed to publicly report about a third of its air strikes in Iraq, Syria and Afghanistan, omitting an estimated 6000 strikes since 2014.

Relying on such imperfect sources can obscure the real motivations and root causes behind events. The problem is that the press usually has a completely wrong narrative about the perpetrators that is only corrected in the evidence presented at the trials, says Sageman. National Security Agency files leaked by Edward Snowden reveal that the NSA has trouble hiring Arabic and Pashtu speaking intelligence analysts who understand the cultures they monitor. Military intelligence agencies focus more on locating and killing terrorist suspects than on understanding sociological motivations.

Cabayan praises Mironovas brave style of research, and the data from the ground that it brings. At the SMA meeting in March this year, the question was whether the physical defeat of ISIS in Mosul would eliminate the threat. Sixty scientists, including Mironova, examined the problem from a variety of perspectives. Their unequivocal answer was no. Events so far bear out that prediction.

There is no easy solution to the problem of terrorism, says Cabayan, because neither terrorists nor counter-terrorists are entirely rational operators. The words rational and irrational make no sense, he says. People behave emotionally, illogically. Human societies are complex, adaptive systems with unpredictable, emergent properties.

Many strands of evidence now suggest that terrorist and counter-terrorist systems are a single system governed by feedback loops; the actions and tactics of one side continually evolve in response to the actions of the other, as in a wrestling match. From this perspective, ISISs trajectory can be calculated only retrospectively, in response to events.

It is an agile trajectory. Statistical models built around what is known of the frequency and casualty counts of insurgent and terrorist incidents in Syria and Iraq show the jihadists as Davids and conventional armies as lumbering Goliaths. The extremist groups can fragment and coalesce with relative ease: they are anti-fragile, strengthening under attack. They are not wedded to charismatic leaders, but are self-organising networks that can operate independently of a single node of control, and have a ready source of new personnel.

The complex, evolving nature of the groups suggests that the US strategy of increasing troop numbers in Iraq, Syria and Afghanistan wont protect against jihadism. That conclusion is borne out by studies of the effects of troop surges in Iraq in 2007 and Afghanistan in 2012, both of which appear to have increased terrorism. Real complex systems do not resemble static structures to be collapsed; they are flexible, constantly respun spider webs, in the words of a 2013 SMA study of insurgency.

Drone strikes aimed at decapitating terrorist cells are likely to fail too. A 2017 study by Jennifer Varriale Carson at the University of Central Missouri concluded that killing high-profile jihadists is counter-productive, if its main intention is a decrease in terrorism perpetrated by the global jihadist movement. In July 2016, The Georgetown Public Policy Review reported a statistically significant rise in the number of terrorist attacks [in Pakistan] occurring after the US drone program begins targeting a given province.

Human societies are complex, unpredictable, adaptive systems

The drone strikes follow laws of unintended consequences, says Craig Whiteside of the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California. Killing a charismatic leader may inspire a potent posthumous charismatic appeal, or cause splintering that results in otherwise suppressed extreme factions rising in prominence.

The effects are felt in Manchester as well as Mosul. In her most recent book, Countering Terrorism, Crenshaw writes, Western military engagement has reinforced the jihadist narrative that Muslims everywhere are targeted. It may have made ISIS more determined to inspire rather than direct terrorism. Nor has military action blocked jihadist organisations [in Iraq and Afghanistan] from regrouping, regenerating, and expanding.

The evolving nature of the message means it is difficult to combat by broadcasting counter-narratives. Social networks ensure the message feeds back rapidly to disenfranchised sympathisers in the West (see Network effects). Data scientists from the Naval Postgraduate School have studied Twitter feeds from ISIS strongholds before and after the US began bombing them in late 2014. Before the bombing campaign, the tweets focused ire on near enemies: local mayors, imams, police and soldiers. As the bombs dropped, the tweets went international, calling for the destruction of Western governments and civilians.

During the next three years, ISIS fighters or ISIS-inspired lone wolves targeted innocents in Brussels, Paris, Orlando, San Bernardino, Nice, Manchester and London. Atmospheric changes in social media reflect changes in the ground-level politics of insurgency, and specifically a willingness to export terrorism abroad. In the words of the sister of Abedi, the Manchester attacker, he saw the explosives America drops on [Muslim] children in Syria, and he wanted revenge.

Terrorist groups are seldom defeated by military force; they either achieve political solutions, or they wither away because grievances are solved or dissipate, or they alienate their supporters through excess brutality. Conversely, the US-led bombings of civilians in Fallujah and Mosul in Iraq and Raqqa in Syria, and the atrocities now being committed by the Iraqi liberators against ISIS suspects and their families, risk creating a new round of Sunni grievances.

Peter Byrne

According to a Pentagon-funded meta study of public opinion polls taken during 2015 and 2016, the vast majority of Muslims in Iraq and Syria do not support ISIS. But those who do cite religion or ideology far less than social, economic and governance grievances. And in Mosul, the study said, 46 per cent of the population believed coalition air strikes were the biggest threat to the security of their families, while 38 per cent said ISIS was the greatest threat.

If Iraqs economic and social infrastructure continues to deteriorate, a global war on terror that has to date cost $4 trillion will continue and more civilian lives will be lost to jihadist attacks in the countries involved and the West. The Sunnis in Iraq have a genuine grudge, says Cabayan. They were left out of the Shia-dominated government that we set up; they are under attack, nobody is protecting them. We can and should provide off-ramps for defeated ISIS members safety, jobs, civil rights. If not, after the fall of Mosul, we will be facing ISIS 2.0.

The counter-productive strategies go both ways. The immediate effect of civilian casualties in terror attacks is generally to undermine the ability of the attacked population to perceive the grievances of the attacking group as genuine, and to strengthen the political desire to hit back militarily. Retired US Navy captain Wayne Porter was naval chief of intelligence for the Middle East from 2008 to 2011. He is convinced that the only solution to terrorism is to deal with its root causes.

The only existential threat to us from terrorist attacks, real or imagined, is that we stay on the current counter-productive, anarchically organised, money-driven trajectory, says Porter, who now teaches counter-terrorism classes to military officers at the Naval Postgraduate School. Our current counter-terrorism strategy, which is no strategy, will destroy our democratic values.

When ISIS is driven from west Mosul in July, Mironova is back on the battlefield, gathering more data about the fate of families accused of collaborating. Extrajudicial punishment of Sunnis by Shia and Kurdish forces is causing fear and resentment, and fuelling ISIS, which is far from defeated.

ISIS is like H2O. It can be in several states: ice, water and vapour, she says. In Mosul, it was ice. We melted it. Now it is water, flowing into the countryside, seizing towns. It can vaporise to live and fight another day.

ZUMA/REX/Shutterstock

What makes someone prepared to die for an idea? This is a question that concerns anthropologist Scott Atran of the University of Oxfords Centre for Resolution of Intractable Conflicts. Research he has led in some of the most embattled regions of the world, including in Mosul, suggests the answer comes in two parts. Jihadists fuse their individual identity with that of the group, and they adhere to sacred values.

Sacred values are values that cannot be abandoned or exchanged for material gain. They tend to be associated with strong emotions and are often religious in nature, but beliefs held by fervent nationalists and secularists, for example, may earn the label too. Atran has found that people in fighting groups who hold sacred values are perceived by other members of their group as having a spiritual strength that counts for more than their physical strength. Whats more, sacred values trump the other main characteristic of extremists: a powerful group identity. When push comes to shove, these fighters will desert their closest buddies for their ideals, he says.

Atran argues that individuals in this state of mind are best understood, not as rational actors but as devoted actors. Once theyre locked in as a devoted actor, none of the classic interventions seem to work, he says. But there might be openings. While a sacred value cannot be abandoned, it can be reinterpreted. Atran cites the case of an imam he interviewed who had worked for ISIS as a recruiter, but had left because he disagreed with their definition of jihad. For him, but not for them, jihadism could accommodate persuasion by non-violent means.

As long as such alternative interpretations are seen as coming from inside the group, Atran says, they can be persuasive within it. He is now advising the US, UK and French governments on the dynamics of jihadist networks to help them tackle terrorism. Laura Spinney

Deradicalisation programmes are the bedrock of counter-terrorism strategies in many countries. They aim to combat extremism by identifying individuals who have become radicalised, or are in danger of becoming so, and reintegrating them to the mainstream using psychological and religious counselling as well as vocational training.

In the UK, some 4000 people are reported to the governments anti-terror programme Prevent every year. The majority 70 per cent are suspected Islamic extremists, but about a quarter are far-right radicals, and that number is growing.

Critics fear that these programmes criminalise and stigmatise communities, families and individuals. In addition, there are questions about who governments collaborate with for information and whether public servants should be obliged to report potential radicals.

There is also very little evidence that the programmes work. Most fail to assess the progress of participants, and rates of recidivism are rarely studied. In a recent report, the UK parliaments human rights committee warned that the governments counter-extremism strategy is based on unproven theories and risks making the situation worse.

The key to combating extremism lies in addressing its social roots, and intervening early, before anyone becomes a devoted actor willing to lay down their lives for a cause, says Scott Atran at the University of Oxfords Centre for Resolution of Intractable Conflicts (see Devoted to the cause). Until then, there are all sorts of things you can do. One of the most effective counter measures, he says, is community engagement. High-school football and the scouts movement have been effective responses to antisocial behaviour among the disenfranchised children of US immigrants, for example.

Another promising avenue is to break down stereotypes, says social psychologist Susan Fiske at Princeton University. These are not necessarily religious or racial stereotypes, but generalised stereotypes we all hold about people around us. When we categorise one another, we are particularly concerned with social status and competition, viewing people of low status as incompetent, and competitors as untrustworthy. Throughout history, violent acts and genocides have tended to be perpetrated against high-status individuals with whom we compete for resources, and who therefore elicit our envy, says Fiske.

Fiskes group has found ways to disrupt stereotypes by making people work together to achieve a common goal, for example. Trivial contact involving food, festivals and flags wont cut it, she says. It has to be a goal people care about and are prepared to invest in, such as a work project or community build. Here, success depends on understanding the minds of your collaborators rehumanising them.

Changing perspectives Tania Singer of the Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences in Leipzig, Germany, thinks brain training could achieve similar effects. Social neuroscientists have identified two pathways in the brain by which we relate to others. One mobilises empathy and compassion, allowing us to share another persons emotions. The second activates theory of mind, enabling us to see a situation from the others perspective.

Singers group recently completed a project called ReSource, in which 300 volunteers spent nine months doing training, first on mindfulness, and then on compassion and perspective taking. After just a week, the compassion training started to enhance prosocial behaviours, and corresponding structural brain changes were detectable in MRI scans.

Compassion evolved as part of an ancient nurturing instinct that is usually reserved for kin. To extend it to strangers, who may see the world differently from us, we need to add theory of mind. The full results from ReSource arent yet published, but Singer expects to see brain changes associated with perspective-taking training, too. Only if you have both pathways working together in a coordinated fashion can you really move towards global cooperation, she says. By incorporating that training into school curricula, she suggests, we could build a more cohesive, cooperative society that is more resilient to extremism. Laura Spinney

A key feature of jihadist groups is their use of social networks to propagate their ideas. If you can disrupt those connections, thats probably your best shot at stopping people from becoming terrorists, says J. M. Berger at the International Centre for Counter-Terrorism in The Hague and co-author of ISIS: The state of terror.

He believes that the advent of social media has not only increased the number of people extremist groups can reach, but also the potency of their message, because it allows them to circumvent safeguards against revisionism and hate speech. Those most susceptible to the propaganda, his research suggests, are not the chronically poor or deprived, but people experiencing uncertainty in their lives recent converts, young people who have just left the family home, those with psychiatric problems.

Extremist groups are adept at fomenting collective uncertainty, for example by provoking hostility between ethnic groups. At the same time, they present themselves as upholders of clear and unwavering values, an attractive message to individuals who are undergoing potentially destabilising transformations. Through social networks, those experiencing uncertainty can learn about and even enter into contact with extremist networks.

The G7 recognised this with its recent statement that it will combat the misuse of the internet by terrorists. But this is easier said than done, says Berger. Its easy to demand social media companies do something about extremism, but much harder to define what they should do in a way that is consistent with the values of liberal democracies. Laura Spinney

This article appeared in print under the headline Roots of terror

Leader: To tackle extremism, we need to know the enemy

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Anatomy of terror: What makes normal people become extremists ... - New Scientist