From Popular Science – New Technology, Science News, The Future Now: Satellite Photos Reveal Forced Relocation Of Tibetans

Bagkarshol, Taktse county, 2012

Human Rights Watch/ DigitalGlobe 2013

Before-and-after images show how Chinese officials have destroyed Tibetan villages and forced residents into government housing. More than 2 million Tibetans have been forcibly moved to new housing since 2006, according to a new report from Human Rights Watch. The Chinese government has demolished villages and replaced them with substandard living conditions, the nonprofit organization says. New before-and-after satellite images show the destruction of original villages and their replacement with government housing:

“The scale and speed at which the Tibetan rural population is being remodeled by mass rehousing and relocation policies are unprecedented in the post-Mao era,” says Sophie Richardson, Human Rights Watch’s China director. “Tibetans have no say in the design of policies that are radically altering their way of life, and-in an already highly repressive context-no ways to challenge them.”

According to the 115-page report, Chinese authorities in the Tibet Autonomous Region plan to relocate more than 900,000 people by the end of 2014. The Chinese government denies that it has forcibly evicted residents and claims that the rehousing program respects “the will of the Tibetan farmers and herders.” But the report says that relocated Tibetans struggle with financial difficulties after being forced to move, reduce their herds, or demolish and rebuild their homes.

Human Rights Watch has called for authorities to end the rehousing program and permit an independent evaluation of the policies. Read more about this story, including testimony from Tibetan villagers, over at Human Rights Watch.

Satellite imagery is helping humanitarian groups identify rights abuses around the world. Last week, near-infrared images revealed attacks on villages in Darfur, and in May, satellite photos undermined the Nigerian Army’s claim that it had only destroyed 30 homes, showing instead that 2,300 houses had been burned.

Watch a video about the rehousing program in Tibet, including analysis of the satellite images, below:

    

from Popular Science – New Technology, Science News, The Future Now

From Popular Science – New Technology, Science News, The Future Now: This Goofy-Looking Helmet Is Made Of Old Newspapers

Paper Pulp Helmet

Tom Gottelier, Bobby Petersen and Ed Thomas

Recycled newspapers: Good for the planet, good for preventing head injury.

Most safety gear isn’t exactly fashionable, and these helmets are no exception. As a consolation, though, at least you’re saving the environment in addition to your bean: They’re made of recycled newspaper.

The concept for the Paper Pulp Helmet was designed by a group of artists to potentially be a safety side dish to London’s bike share program. It could be sold in vending machines or stores near the docking stations for just £1, the designers say (though the city’s mayor, Boris Johnson, has said in the past that he has no intentions of making helmets available for the program, and that evidence of the “usefulness of cycle helmets is mixed.”)

Creators Tom Gottelier, Bobby Petersen and Ed Thomas, all graduates of the Royal College of Art in London, seem to think more helmets would be plenty useful. To put together the headgear, they made a pulp out of newspapers they gathered in the city’s public transportation network. They mixed in an adhesive, some pigment and organic additive to make the gloop water resistant for up to six hours in the rain, and voila!–molded it into a vaguely fruit-bowl shaped helmet. (Though if you’re biking in the rain for six hours, you’re probably too intense for a newspaper helmet.)

The paper mache head-bowls come in at least two fashionable colors (that correspond to different sizes) and are held in place by a strap that grips the grooves in the structure and snaps in place under your chin. Once they’ve been worn, they can be recycled and made back into pulp for a new helmet.

Cheap, readily available helmets are great if you’re seized with the unexpected urge to grab a Citibike, and presumably any cranium shielding is better than nothing at all. But it’s not entirely clear if this crafty headwear has gone through full safety testing. Creator Bobby Peterson told Metro “We have done some initial drop tests which indicate they are safe,” and the paper writes “the headgear meets stringent European safety standards.” From the pictures, they still look a bit flimsy. Give me a high-impact crash test video and I’ll strap one on happily.

See more of the process in the video below:

Paper Pulp Helmet from Bobby Petersen on Vimeo.

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from Popular Science – New Technology, Science News, The Future Now

Satellite Photos Reveal Forced Relocation Of Tibetans

Before-and-after images show how Chinese officials have destroyed Tibetan villages and forced residents into government housing. More than 2 million Tibetans have been forcibly moved to new housing since 2006, according to a new report from Human Rights Watch.

via Pocket http://www.popsci.com/science/article/2013-06/satellite-photos-reveal-forced-relocation-tibetans

This Goofy-Looking Helmet Is Made Of Old Newspapers

Recycled newspapers: Good for the planet, good for preventing head injury. Most safety gear isn’t exactly fashionable, and these helmets are no exception. As a consolation, though, at least you’re saving the environment in addition to your bean: They’re made of recycled newspaper.

via Pocket http://www.popsci.com/technology/article/2013-06/strap-paper-pulp-helmet-make-your-bike-ride-even-more-eco-friendly