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11 Projects, page 1 of 3
assignment_turned_in ProjectFrom 2016Partners:JGU, UCA, ZU, EHESS Centre détudes des modes dindustrialisation, EHESS Centre d'études des modes d'industrialisation +1 partnersJGU,UCA,ZU,EHESS Centre détudes des modes dindustrialisation,EHESS Centre d'études des modes d'industrialisation,Centre M. HalbwachsFunder: French National Research Agency (ANR) Project Code: ANR-16-MRS3-0009Funder Contribution: 29,970 EURThis project will analyze the modes of development of multinational companies or in the process of internationalization of African or Arab origin in the South. The project questions 1 / their relations of cooperation and competition, 2 / the circulation of knowledge on the conduct of business at the intersection of local cultures and globalization, 3 / professional business leaders (local elites formed in the North and expatriates) and 4 / doing business in highly regulated environments where the rules of law and formal legal institutions are more or less ineffective. Globalization is not a convergent model of management. Local ways of achieving the underlying business to transnational corporate control standards remain largely under-analyzed. This project will analyze the hybridization process in these large African companies where a new generation is changing business practices. The investigation will focus on companies located in four countries of the South (Morocco, Ivory Coast, South Africa and the United Arab Emirates and mobilize financial and statistical data, analysis of economic news, case studies of two companies located in the five different countries, semi-structured interviews with executives, managers and business schools professors and the exploitation of local researchers' surveys.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in ProjectFrom 2023Partners:Université Toulouse 3 - Paul Sabatier, UCA, LPL, ISRA, Institut national de recherche pour l'agriculture, l'alimentation et l'environnement +2 partnersUniversité Toulouse 3 - Paul Sabatier,UCA,LPL,ISRA,Institut national de recherche pour l'agriculture, l'alimentation et l'environnement,Sorbonne University,UAAFunder: French National Research Agency (ANR) Project Code: ANR-22-CE01-0022Funder Contribution: 658,390 EURNitrogen, N, represents 78% of the air we breathe, under the stable and inert form of N2, and once N2 is converted into reactive forms (Nr), it becomes a key nutrient that strongly influences ecosystem functioning and food production. The quantification of N budgets (N inputs and outputs) between the surface and the atmosphere is a prerequisite to understand the N biogeochemical cycle. In Africa, the increase in demography and the associated increased fertilizer inputs (to supply growing food and energy demands) will lead to increased emissions from amended soils, which will increase atmospheric N deposition and induce feedbacks to the ecosystems and the atmosphere. In Sub Saharan Africa, Low N contents in soils make natural ecosystems very vulnerable to the potential increase of N deposition induced by large scale anthropogenic activity development. Indeed, N in excess may lead to changes in biodiversity. But West African research institutes lack resources and ecosystems have not been as well monitored as in temperate regions. In this context, the overall objective of NitroAfrica is to study –coupling field experiments and different modelling approaches– the relationships and retroactions between atmospheric N deposition, N cycling in the soil-vegetation system, emissions of reactive N forms by the surface to the atmosphere, atmospheric chemistry and regional climate. NitroAfrica will focus on wet N deposition, because in Africa it is expected that N deposition on ecosystems, particularly in wet form, will increase by 50% by 2100. We will test two main hypotheses: (1) an increase in wet N deposition, as already observed in some regions of SSA and predicted in the future for many regions of SSA will significantly affect the ecosystem functioning (including agro-ecosystems), in terms of N processes in the soil (nitrification, denitrification, mineralization), and subsequent N compound emissions; and (2) these changes in emissions of N chemical compounds to the atmosphere will significantly impact regional atmospheric chemistry and regional climate over West Africa, ultimately influencing further N. The project is highly original because there is for now no such study for Africa addressing these feedbacks in a comprehensive way, linking N deposition, ecosystem processes, surface atmosphere N compound exchanges, atmospheric chemistry and climate, allowing to link alterations of local ecosystem processes to modifications of atmospheric chemistry at the regional scale. A French-Senegalese-Ivorian multidisciplinary consortium will bring expertise on atmospheric physical chemistry, microbiology, biogeochemistry and ecology in the soil-plant-atmosphere continuum. The project is based on a close interconnection between experimental and modeling tasks, at the local and regional scales. Experiments will take place in 3 representative West African biogeographic zones (savanna and cropland sites located in Sudanian, Guinean and Sahelian zones). Local scale modelling will be performed to capture relevant soil-vegetation N-C processes leading to emissions, and surface atmosphere nitrogen fluxes will be upscaled to study the impacts at the regional climatic scale. The impacts of NitroAfrica will be measurable in terms of academic research, communication to different publics (large public, stakeholders, policy makers), training and education, and capacity building.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euOpen Access Mandate for Publications and Research data assignment_turned_in Project2025 - 2028Partners:SPOTLAB, FM, IRCCS SACRO COURE DON CALABRIA, ISCIII, UCA +4 partnersSPOTLAB,FM,IRCCS SACRO COURE DON CALABRIA,ISCIII,UCA,JU,Hutzpa Innovaions,ISGLOBAL,ABUFunder: European Commission Project Code: 101190741Overall Budget: 4,999,270 EURFunder Contribution: 4,999,270 EURA new generation of diagnostic systems available at the point of care (POC) could save lives and reduce the spread of infectious diseases worldwide through early detection and treatment. Optical microscopy remains the gold standard for the diagnosis of many parasitological diseases; however, its accuracy is dependent on the availability and expertise of the analyst at the POC. This limitation is increased by the dependence on labour-intensive examination processes, lack of standardization, high interobserver variability, insufficient precision in sample quantification and, as a consequence, a high misdiagnosis rate. This project introduces an AI diagnostic system leveraging existing microscopes and mobile technology providing a comprehensive and holistic sample analysis rather than just detecting individual pathogens. MultiplexAI is a scalable, low-cost, autonomous AI diagnostic system for the POC that upgrades any optical microscope into an AI agent able to accurately identify any parasite in a sample. We will collect data, train, deploy and evaluate the integrated system to detect multiple diseases including malaria and parasitic Neglected Tropical Diseases. The project will pursue the following objectives and methodological steps: 1) To design a trustworthy AI system, ensuring technical and social robustness, and adherence to WHO AI ethical principles of safety, transparency, explainability, accountability, equity, and sustainability; 2) To develop AI foundational models for microscopy analysis capable of automating the detection, differentiation and quantification of multiple parasites causing disease and integrate them into an automatic mobile microscopy system; 3) To validate the system in laboratory settings; 4) To undertake a performance evaluation study in clinical workflows of four countries in SSA; 5) To assess usability, acceptability and feasibility with end-users and evaluate the cost-effectiveness of its implementation; 6) To model and evaluate the health impact of introducing our system to improve diagnosis and surveillance at both local and national level; and 7) To execute a regulatory roadmap for compliance in EU and SSA, and determine a path to market. Overall, this project aims to unleash the AI revolution leveraging mobile technologies and upgrading millions of optical microscopes into a network of intelligent POC devices, capable of performing high-throughput sample analysis to provide reliable and ubiquitous diagnostics and medical knowledge for everyone, everywhere.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euOpen Access Mandate for Publications and Research data assignment_turned_in Project2025 - 2029Partners:AFRICAN PHARMACEUTICAL TECHNOLOGY FOUNDATION, LSHTM, LG, UNIVERSITY OF HEALTH AND ALLIED SCIENCES, BNITM +4 partnersAFRICAN PHARMACEUTICAL TECHNOLOGY FOUNDATION,LSHTM,LG,UNIVERSITY OF HEALTH AND ALLIED SCIENCES,BNITM,UCA,INRB,EURICE EUROPEAN RESEARCH AND PROJECT OFFICE GMBH,KAMUZU UNIVERSITY OF HEALTH SCIENCESFunder: European Commission Project Code: 101190584Overall Budget: 5,036,360 EURFunder Contribution: 5,036,360 EURWINGS-4-FGS addresses pressing needs for tackling Female Genital Schistosomiasis (FGS) in Africa, with the objective of improving case management and therapeutic access while integrating care into sexual and reproductive health strategies. FGS, a consequence of schistosomiasis caused by the parasite Schistosoma haematobium, affects millions of women and girls in sub-Saharan Africa, leading to significant morbidity and reproductive health issues. Current treatment barriers include limited knowledge, associated stigma, a lack of effective treatment, and inadequate diagnostic tools. WINGS-4-FGS proposes a multifaceted, holistic approach and aims to: i) investigate the efficacy of anti-inflammatory medications as add-ons to praziquantel; ii) implement training programs to increase awareness and medical care competency; iii) implement a community-based, two-step, self-sampling diagnostic strategy; iv) assess barriers and facilitators for integrating FGS into existing health services. WINGS-4-FGS aims to generate evidence-based recommendations, enhance local capacity, and engage stakeholders and policymakers to integrate FGS care into African countries’ healthcare systems effectively. Success will lead to improved treatment guidelines and practices that will enable patients and healthcare workers to recognize, diagnose, and treat the disease before symptoms spread, as well as foster affordable local access to treatment and reduce associated stigma. The transdisciplinary consortium brings together 11 renowned partners with expertise in tropical disease research, coming from 3 European (Germany, Switzerland and United Kingdom) and 6 African countries: Democratic Republic of Congo, Côte d’Ivoire and Malawi, where the clinical trials will be conducted, as well as Ghana, Madagascar and Rwanda. WINGS-4-FGS will forge sustainable solutions for future generations of women and girls so they can feel empowered to manage their own reproductive health and overall well-being.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in ProjectPartners:UCL, University of Bucharest, CERAPS, UL, UAA +6 partnersUCL,University of Bucharest,CERAPS,UL,UAA,UJLog,CONFERENCE INTERNATIONALE DES RESPONSABLES DES UNIVERSITES ET INSTITUTIONS A DOMINANTE SCIENTIFIQUE ET TECHNIQUE DEXPRESSION FRANCAISE SCIEN,UCA,UNIVERSITE PAUL SABATIER TOULOUSE III,LPL,UKFunder: European Commission Project Code: 597999-EPP-1-2018-1-FR-EPPKA2-CBHE-JPFunder Contribution: 999,918 EURFrench-speaking partnership composed of 5 universities of West Africa (Ivory Coast and Togo), 5 universities in the member states of the EU (France, Romania and Belgium) and networks such as CIRUISEF, AUF, CDUS and CAMES. The PULSE project targets two objectives for the students: support the continuation of studies in Master’s degree at the international level, and encourage professional integration for license graduates. It will involve innovative hands-on teaching supported by shared digital resources and strong links with businesses. This will be carried out through two types of actions:-The implementation of practical exercises (TP) with digital support in the African universities. The selected experiments will illustrate the laws of physics, chemistry and biology, and will use new digital tools for the phases of preparation, revision and edition of reports. In the first year of licenses, these TP of numerical simulations will replace the real TPs, and in the 2nd and 3rd years, they will provide support for the realization of the experiments. Digital tools will help rationalize the time of the students and teachers, and optimize the use of equipment and rooms. The real TPs will be implemented with easy maintenance equipment. The teachers will be trained and will ensure the durability of these practical exercises. -The creation of digital resource platforms that will be modular and mutualisable. In addition to academic disciplinary modules, transversal professionalization modules will be developed in collaboration with local businesses. A template module will include courses, assessment activities and multimedia resources. A digital manual (toolkit) based on the project results will be developed and disseminated on the international scale, to help universities to duplicate the resources and use them on their own curricula.
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