Saturday, February 13, 2021

Protected areas see continued 

deforestation but at a reduced rate, 

OSU research shows

OREGON STATE UNIVERSITY

Research News

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CREDIT: OREGON STATE UNIVERSITY

CORVALLIS, Ore. - A survey of more than 18,000 land parcels spanning 2 million square miles across 63 countries shows that a "protected area" designation reduces the rate of deforestation but does not prevent it.

Published today in Nature Ecology and Evolution, the findings are important because most terrestrial species live in forests and because the study suggests that just 6.5% of the Earth's woodlands are truly protected, well below the 2020 target of 17% set by the United Nations' Convention on Biological Diversity.

The findings are also timely given President Biden's recent executive order on climate change, which calls for protecting 30% of the United States' land and waters, up from the current 12%, and developing "a plan for promoting the protection of the Amazon rainforest and other critical ecosystems that serve as global carbon sinks."

"Evidence indicates that we're in the middle of a mass extinction event the likes of which the planet has seen only five times before," said study leader Christopher Wolf, a postdoctoral researcher in the Oregon State University College of Forestry. "Formally protected areas have been proposed as a primary tool for reducing deforestation, and therefore stemming species extinctions and slowing reductions in carbon storage."

In research believed to be the first comprehensive look at how effective protected areas are at limiting forest loss, Wolf and collaborators used the World Database on Protected Areas and forest change maps to estimate rates of change within protected areas. The rates were then compared to those of control areas with similar characteristics such as elevation, slope and proximity to densely populated areas.

They found protected areas' deforestation rate is 41% lower than that of unprotected areas. They also found that earlier estimates suggesting 15.7% of the Earth's forest were protected from deforestation were much too optimistic.

"It's clearly not enough just to call a forest area 'protected' and assume that it really is," Wolf said. "When you look at conservation effectiveness, you can't simply rely on the amount of officially protected land as a metric. Nearly one-third of all protected areas are actually under intense human pressure."

Protected area deforestation rates were highest in Africa, Europe and South America and lowest in Oceania - Australia, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea and nearby island chains.

Among the 63 nations studied, 34 have at least 17% of their forest area protected - i.e., are in line with the target percentage established by the Convention on Biological Diversity.

New Zealand ranked No. 1 in percentage of area protected when effectiveness was factored in, and China ranked last. South Africa's protected areas were the most effective, with deforestation rates eight times lower than those of control sites. Sierra Leone, Malaysia and Cambodia were the three nations losing their forest cover the fastest.

"Protected area effectiveness is limited by varying levels of monitoring and enforcement and the money available for them," Wolf said. "Unfortunately, our research shows that protected areas rarely if ever do more than slow down deforestation. And in general, the larger the protected area, the higher the rate of forest loss."

That has important implications for the 17% target set by the Convention on Biological Diversity, says co-author Matt Betts, director of the Forest Biodiversity Research Network in OSU's Department of Forest Ecosystems and Society.

"If you take into account imperfect protected areas' effectiveness, it could require a near doubling of this original target," he said.

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Collaborating with Wolf and Betts were College of Forestry colleague William Ripple plus Taal Levi of OSU's College of Agricultural Sciences and Diego Zarrate-Charry of Bogota, Chile's Proyecto de Conservacio?n de Aguas y Tierras (Water and Land Conservation Project), who earned a Ph.D. in the College of Forestry.

Phoebe Bridgers Smashed Her Guitar During Her "SNL" Performance And It Was Awesome

Despite one critic who thought it was "extra," people are rallying behind the musician because it was, in fact, very awesome.

 ng Backlash For Her...

A PETER TOWNSEND/WHO FLASHBACK TO THE ED SULLIVAN TV SHOW


Posted on February 7, 2021, 

NBC

Phoebe Bridgers was the musical guest on Saturday Night Live this weekend. At the end of her performance of "I Know the End," she smashed her guitar. And it was beautiful and cathartic.

Bridgers' salute to ~rock 'n' roll~ instantly became a meme. First, because her guitar put up a good fight trying not to get smashed.

And then, and mostly, because people were cheering her on. And feeling as if they needed to watch her smash that guitar for their own healing.

The performance did cause some friction online after one person openly questioned why Bridgers would break her guitar onstage. "I mean, I didn't care much for the song either, but that seemed extra," user BrooklynDad_Defiant! said.

People on Twitter responded swiftly and came to Bridgers' defense. Many people pointed out that the guitar smash has been venerated as a rock 'n' roll tradition for decades — when male musicians do it, anyway.

One person simply responded, "cause its fuckin cool!!!!!"

And the verdict stands: It is fucking cool. Thank you, Phoebe, for smashing that guitar.

Amanda Gorman Wowed The Super Bowl With A Poem Honoring Essential Workers

"Poetry at the Super Bowl is a feat for art & our country, because it means we're thinking imaginatively about human connection even when we feel siloed," said Gorman.

Amber Jamieson BuzzFeed News Reporte
Posted on February 7, 2021

CBS
Poet Amanda Gorman performing at the Super Bowl



Poet Amanda Gorman, who captured the world's attention at President Joe Biden's inauguration last month, delivered a poem honoring essential workers at Sunday's Super Bowl.

The 22-year-old from Los Angeles performed just moments before the coin toss between the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and Kansas City Chiefs.

Her poem was written to honor the three everyday heroes picked as honorary captains for this year's Super Bowl coin toss: educator Trimaine Davis, nurse manager Suzie Dorner, a nurse, and Marine veteran James Martin.


Kevin C. Cox / Getty Images
Honorary Super Bowl captains, nurse Suzie Dorner, educator Trimaine Davis, and veteran James Martin react on the field before Super Bowl LV between the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and the Kansas City Chiefs at Raymond James Stadium on Feb. 7, 2021, in Tampa.


"Poetry at the Super Bowl is a feat for art & our country, because it means we're thinking imaginatively about human connection even when we feel siloed," wrote Gorman on Twitter.





"I also can't reiterate how exciting it is for me that others are excited to see poetry at a football game," tweeted Gorman just hours before her recorded performance was played. "What a time to be alive."

Gorman garnered international attention for her powerful poem "The Hill We Climb" (and her incredible yellow coat) at Biden's inauguration last month, where she became the breakout star of the day.


CBS Gorman performing on Sunday

On Sunday afternoon, Gorman posted a snippet from an interview she did with Trevor Noah. She spoke about how even she was surprised at the appearance of poetry at the Super Bowl, but how critical it is for the art form.

“It’s not an extant possibility that a poet will be at something like the Super Bowl, it’s just nothing I have really heard about before," said Gorman. "And so these are the moments I strive for in my lifetime, which is to bring poetry into the spaces that we least expect it, so that we can fully kind of grapple with the ways in which it can heal and kind of resurrect us."


instagram.com


Here's Gorman's Super Bowl poem in full:


Today we honor our three captains
For their actions and impact in a time of uncertainty and need.
They've taken the lead,
Exceeding all expectations and limitations,
Uplifting their communities and neighbors
As leaders, healers, and educators.
James has felt the wounds of warfare,
But this warrior still shares his home with at-risk kids.
During COVID, he's even lent a hand,
Livestreaming football for family and fans.
Trimaine is an educator who works nonstop,
Providing his communities with hot spots, laptops, and tech workshops
So his students have all the tools they need to succeed in life and in school.
Suzie is the ICU nurse manager at a Tampa hospital.
Her chronicles prove that even in tragedy, hope is possible.
She lost her grandmothers to the pandemic
And fights to save other lives in the ICU battle zone,
Defining the frontline heroes risking their lives for our own.
Let us walk with these warriors,
Charge on with these champions,
And carry forth the call of our captains.
We celebrate them by acting with courage and compassion,
By doing what is right and just,
For while we honor them today,
It is they who every day honor us.


MORE ON THIS
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Amber Jamieson is a reporter for BuzzFeed News and is based in New York.
Secret Documents Show How Terrorist Supporters Use Bitcoin — And How The Government Is Scrambling To Stop Them

After a decade of concerns, the US government is pushing for stronger regulation.



FINCEN FILES Posted on February 8, 2021

Ben Kothe / BuzzFeed News; Getty Images (3)

The propagandist who called himself Azym Abdullah didn’t need much money to set up a website for ISIS that would broadcast gruesome beheading videos. What he needed was secrecy, so in 2014 he reportedly turned to cryptocurrency.

He paid a little more than 1 bitcoin, approximately $400 at the time, to register the domain name in Iceland and host it on servers around the globe. His site asked visitors for donations to help pay for the upkeep. Those, too, were in bitcoin.

Sending donations that way allowed his donors to shield their identities behind a string of letters and numbers — a favored technique that is making it harder for banks, law enforcement authorities, and the US Treasury Department to track and slow the flow of money supporting terrorism.

Abdullah’s reliance on bitcoin is documented in a 2017 Treasury Department intelligence assessment, which was received by BuzzFeed News as part of a cache of documents that includes internal emails and reports about cryptocurrency. The intelligence assessment also reveals evidence of nine other incidents where terrorist supporters used cryptocurrency to fund their activities, from purchasing airline tickets to defacing a political website to arranging travel to Syria.

The vast majority of crypto transactions are used for legitimate purchases. But the documents provide insight into the US government's ongoing, sometimes lagging, battle to counteract the use of crypto technology to foster terrorism and crime, as well as the variety of ways that crypto — with its presumed anonymity and ease of transfer around the globe — can be used for nefarious purposes.

In 2016, for instance, analysts at the US Treasury Department’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, or FinCEN, raised alarms about so-called mixers — companies that break up crypto transactions into smaller pieces to further shield the identity of the owner. When those companies operate in the US, they are supposed to register with FinCEN and provide information about suspicious clients and transactions. But the report, which is among the documents received by BuzzFeed News, found that “of the 30 largest mixing services, none have registered … or shown any evidence of a compliance program.”

It wasn’t until nearly four years later that the government took action. Last year, FinCEN fined one of the mixers $60 million for failing “to collect and verify customer names, addresses, and other identifiers on over 1.2 million transactions.” Those transactions, the government found, aided criminals involved with illegal narcotics, fraud, counterfeiting, and child exploitation as well as neo-Nazi and other white supremacist groups. FinCEN said it tracked transactions worth more than $2,000 from the mixer to a website called Welcome to Video that hosted child sexual abuse materials.

The documents examined by BuzzFeed News trace the Treasury Department’s concerns about crypto technology back at least 10 years. FinCEN is now trying to change its rules so that any company dealing with cryptocurrency will have to get clearer information about their customers and their transactions.

FinCEN and the Department of Justice did not respond to messages seeking comment.


Alex Fradkin for BuzzFeed News
The office of the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, part of the US Treasury Department, in Vienna, Virginia


Yaya Fanusie, a former CIA analyst and an expert on the national security implications associated with cryptocurrencies, said he believes that US officials are ahead of their European counterparts in addressing the issue. But, like other experts contacted by BuzzFeed News, he said he sees a need for a new class of financial investigators to stop cryptocurrency from being misused by terrorists, narcotraffickers, and other criminals.

“For people on the ground, crypto is harder to understand when compared with more traditional means of money laundering,” said Fanusie, now a senior fellow at the Center for a New American Security. “Only recently are the skills and resources getting deployed at the field level."

As regulators and the industry slowly adjust, the allure of crypto remains strong, with terrorists finding they can use it to solicit donations to fund operations. Last August the Department of Justice announced that an investigation conducted in cooperation with the Treasury Department had seized millions of dollars as part of the "largest ever seizure of terrorist organizations' cryptocurrency accounts."

One of the indictments described how al-Qaeda and affiliated groups ran a money laundering operation that solicited donations in crypto over social media accounts. They then used that network for donations “to further their terrorist goals." One of the al-Qaeda associated networks tracked by the government received more than 15 bitcoins, worth thousands of dollars, in 187 transactions between Feb. 5, 2019, and Feb. 25, 2020.

Crypto technology is pressing the same weak spots in the financial system first explored by the FinCEN Files, a global project by BuzzFeed News and the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists in late 2020. The news organizations found that major Western financial institutions allowed dirty money to course across the globe in plain view of US authorities. As with traditional currencies, bitcoin and other crypto can test the ability of financial institutions to track their transactions, and the ability of US authorities to thwart crime.

At her nomination hearing before the Senate Finance Committee, incoming Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said that cryptocurrency has the potential “to improve the efficiency of the financial system.”

“At the same time,” she said, “it can be used to finance terrorism, facilitate money laundering, and support malign activities that threaten US national security interests and the integrity of the US and international financial systems.”


Pool / Getty Images
Janet Yellen during a Senate Finance Committee hearing, Jan. 19


Cryptocurrency is much easier to move than other financial instruments, allowing criminals to quickly shift assets to different parts of the globe — an advantage when trying to avoid scrutiny by US law enforcement or when detection seems imminent.

“You can run away to jurisdiction or entities that don't care," said Pawel Kuskowski, the CEO of Coinfirm, a cryptocurrency analytics and compliance firm. "It's a designed mechanism to protect themselves knowing that they're going to receive illicit funds."

There are currently thousands of different virtual currencies being traded in a still-evolving market marked by secrecy. Typically, cryptocurrency owners acquire these funds on an exchange and store them in virtual wallets with addresses that are designated only by unique arrangements of letters and numbers — another layer of anonymity that obscures who truly owns the funds.

Just as banks are responsible for monitoring the transactions of their customers, the crypto exchanges have legal obligations to meet. They even send the government suspicious activity reports, or SARs, the same forms banks use when they encounter a transaction that suggests criminal activity.

But some exchanges are pushing back against FinCEN’s proposal for tighter regulations, describing the requirements as more onerous than what the banking industry faces. Square, the payments company founded by Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey, and investment firms such as Andreessen Horowitz have also said the new rules would be burdensome and might violate the privacy rights of clients.

The Electronic Frontier Foundation wrote in a public comment letter earlier this year that it thought FinCEN’s proposed regulations would “undermine the civil liberties of cryptocurrency users” and “give the government access to troves of sensitive financial data.” ●


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    John Templon is a data reporter for BuzzFeed News and is based in New York. His secure PGP fingerprint is 2FF6 89D6 9606 812D 5663 C7CE 2DFF BE75 55E5 DF99

    Contact John Templon at john.templon@buzzfeed.com.


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    Anthony Cormier is an investigative reporter for BuzzFeed News and is based in New York. While working for the Tampa Bay Times, Cormier won the 2016 Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting.

    Contact Anthony Cormier at anthony.cormier@buzzfeed.com.

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    Contact Jason Leopold at jason.leopold@buzzfeed.com.

A group of top environmental scientists have urged Boris Johnson to have the courage to bring forward the UK's carbon net zero target to 2030.

In 2019, the government pledged the UK would cut greenhouse gas emissions to almost zero by 2050.
The UK has pledged to cut greenhouse gas emissions to almost zero by 2050. File pic

However, in an open letter Scientists Warning Europe (SWE) has urged the prime minister to show much stronger leadership ahead of it hosting COP26.

The letter is supported by 20 eminent scientists and academics including the government's ex science adviser Sir David King and leading Dutch climate scientist Pier Vellinga.

Ed Gemmell, SWE managing director, said: "We know from the scientific community that we need the earliest target possible for the UK and the world to get to net zero to avoid the worst effects of climate change. Many feel this should be 2030.

"Our current politicians are the last ones with the chance to take the necessary actions required by the British public, 81% of whom believe there is a real climate emergency according to the UNDP.

"We believe Boris Johnson has the courage to bring forward the net zero target and then initiate the emergency action needed to reach it."

Prof Vellinga, added: "In limiting climate change the world is finally taking action, but we are late; Boris Johnson can lead the world by catching up.



How does the UK's new green drive compare to the rest of the world?


"All generations after him will be grateful when he does in the lead to Glasgow COP26."

Professor Mark Baldwin, of the University of Exeter, said countries must "stop the tax breaks, incentives, and subsidies for fossil fuels".

"Redirect that support to the green energy industry - wind, solar, and the infrastructure needed for electric transport - to accelerate the transition to net zero," he said.

COP26 is the annual climate change forum attended by world leaders being held in Glasgow later this year, after it was postponed last year due to the coronavirus pandemic.

It will bring together representatives from nearly 200 countries to agree new climate ambitions.



Britain's biggest polluters


Its success is critical if the objectives set out five years ago in the Paris Agreement are to be met to reduce global emissions.

Scientists Warning Europe aims to drive science-led action on the climate and biodiversity crisis.
Manchester University students urge vice-chancellor to quit


Students’ union calls vote of no confidence in Nancy Rothwell over handling of Covid crisis

Nancy Rothwell. The students’ union wants a replacement vice-chancellor to be democratically elected by staff and students. 
Photograph: Joel Goodman/Lnp/Rex/Shutterstock


Rachel Hall
THE GUARDIAN
Thu 11 Feb 2021 

Students at Manchester University have launched a revolt against their vice-chancellor over the university’s mishandling of the coronavirus pandemic and have demanded she step down over her “complete failure of management”.

The Manchester students’ union will hold a vote of no-confidence in the vice-chancellor, Nancy Rothwell, the first time in its nearly 200-year history such a motion has been triggered. If the vote in March is successful, it will be reported to the university’s board of governors, which will decide whether to take further action.

The vote’s organisers said it was in response to a series of high-profile disasters on campus, including fences erected around halls of residence during lockdown, an alleged racial profiling incident and reports of heavy-handed policing.

Ben McGowan, one of the student organisers of the Nancy Out campaign, said: “The frequency and volume of mistakes and complete disregard for students make clear it’s not a one-off thing, it’s a complete failure of management.”


McGowan described a “tense atmosphere” on campus with groups of police officers arriving almost daily. Students believe the university is granting the police an unusually high level of access, which may breach their tenancy rights. “They’ve been conducting random flat searches without having a reason,” he said.

McGowan said students had to obtain 400 signatures to launch the referendum, which was reached within hours. If more than 50% of students vote in favour of Rothwell’s removal, the vote will move to the board of governors.

The Nancy Out campaign wants Rothwell’s replacement to be elected by staff and students, after the vice-chancellor received a vote of no-confidence from staff who are members of the University and College Union in December.

A University of Manchester spokesperson said: “We have all worked very hard to provide all our students with the best possible learning and student experience in these unprecedented and challenging circumstances. We have not got everything right, but we are committed to working closely with student representatives to address concerns and meet student needs.

“Since the start of the academic year, Greater Manchester police have been operating an initiative across the city, which has targeted reports of large gatherings both on and off university campuses. This has included responding to such reports in our Fallowfield halls of residence – many made by students – as well as in private accommodation.”

Separately, students in Cardiff University halls of residence have complained of being told there should not be more than four people at a time in communal areas including kitchens. The university said its policy was in line with Welsh government guidance, which recommends “the use of rotas” in student flatshares.


Former Tory MP in row over appointment as head of Office for Students

A university email said students had a collective responsibility for their flatmates’ behaviour, and warned: “If you fail to report a breach of the rules you will be deemed collectively responsible with those who host parties.” It further requested that students on campus obtain Covid-19 tests on a weekly basis.

Gurpal Sahota, a student in Talybont North halls, said the policy meant he and his five flatmates could not all be in the kitchen at the same time, a situation shared by lots of other students.

He said: “It just wouldn’t be fair and if one of us gets Covid we all have to isolate regardless. The university can’t expect us to police our flatmates’ behaviour.”

Another student, Tom Doe, reported “constant patrols” of private security guards throughout the day, with guards manning gates in the evening.

At Bangor University, one student complained about students arriving in halls from abroad, which he worried could result in the spread of new coronavirus variants. An email from the university’s head warden recommended that he “avoid contact with them and minimise the time you spend in shared spaces”.

In Scotland, students at the University of St Andrews have been told that face-to-face teaching will not resume for the rest of the academic year, apart from for a small number of exempt courses. As face-to-face teaching has been suspended for most students since the end of the autumn term, most will receive less than three months of on-campus learning this academic year.

Sally Mapstone, the principal of St Andrews, said: “I know that this will be a big disappointment to many students, and staff. We are acting now, however, to provide you with as much certainty as early as we can, having listened carefully to student leaders and our staff, and considered all the evidence available to us on the predicted course of the pandemic.”

Universities in Scotland typically end their term earlier than other UK institutions, meaning that others may follow St Andrews’ example. Edinburgh University said teaching would remain online until the Easter holidays, and its vice-chancellor told undergraduates there would be little or no face-to-face teaching for the rest of the year.
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Why Covid-19 should finally end the UK’s outsourcing mania

The success of the vaccine roll-out and the failure of Test and Trace is proof that politicians have put too much faith in private companies.


BYJONN ELLEDGE 
 
New Statesman
5 FEBRUARY 2021

MARK KERRISON/IN PICTURES VIA GETTY IMAGES
A walk-in testing centre run by Serco on 4 October 2020 in Slough.


Correlation is not causation, but all these things are nonetheless true: Dido Harding has a degree from Oxford University in politics, philosophy and economics; Dido Harding is a Tory peer, married to a Tory MP; under Dido Harding's leadership, test and trace has been an utter disaster. One might argue that most of Dido Harding's attempts to explain this failure have also been an utter disaster – earlier this week she managed to give the impression, surely wrong, that she had no idea viruses did anything so wacky as mutate. But that latter view is more subjective, and only tenuously connected to today's topic, so I’ll leave it as a piece of parenthetical snark and move on.

There are many things that could plausibly explain why the government did not spend the first lockdown building a test and trace system that worked well enough to prevent the need for a second lockdown. The reluctance to close the borders. Rishi Sunak’s insistence on subsidising evenings out, and his reputation-wrecking failure to adequately fund people to self-isolate. (Harding also, bafflingly, seemed to suggest that giving people money to self-isolate could have consequences worse than not doing so and letting them wander off into the community, coughing all the while.) Then again, perhaps, it was just pure, unadulterated incompetence.

But a big reason for the government’s failure is surely the people it hired to implement the programme. Harding’s Harvard MBA was followed by stints with the management consultancy McKinsey, the holiday firm Thomas Cook, the professional services company Manpower and a number of retailers. She later became CEO of TalkTalk in 2010 where, on her watch, a cyber-attack cost the company £60m and 95,000 customers. Her sterling leadership through this crisis earned her the magnificent headline “TalkTalk boss Dido Harding's utter ignorance is a lesson to us all” in Campaign magazine.

How well she performed in those roles, however, is not the issue. The point is there was nothing on her CV suggesting an interest or expertise in healthcare until October 2017, when the government appointed her chair of NHS Improvement, which oversees NHS trusts and other health service providers in England. Her skills and experience are in business and administration. She’s a generalist.

In this, she mirrors some of the companies to which NHS Test and Trace outsourced its work. Bits of the programme were performed by Public Health England, Randox Laboratories, the pharmacist Boots, and companies with specific expertise in logistics. But many went to a litany of more generalised services companies, whose names will be familiar to anyone who has watched the British state try to outsource itself over the past 20 years: Serco, Mitie, G4S, Deloitte. Sodexo, one of the companies tasked with running community testing centres, started out life as a French catering firm.

These companies have taken on hundreds of government functions over the years and, if only through the law of large numbers, have performed quite well in some of them. But the reason they have thrived is less because of the quality of their services than because of their world-class abilities in negotiating profitable contracts. They too are generalists, whose success stems less from their sectoral expertise than from their general business and administrative skills.

But the ability to successfully manage a contract, and the ability to deliver the services the public actually want, are not always the same thing. In normal times, this lack of alignment is annoying. These are not normal times.

There is another way. The vaccination research programme has been led by the Jenner Institute at Oxford University, a partnership between government, academia and the private sector. The roll-out has been led by medics and NHS managers. These are bodies that understand the sector they’re working in and measure their success through metrics other than contractual goals or shareholder value.

Again, correlation is not causation, but it’s nonetheless striking that this programme has been one of the most successful in the world. It’s certainly gone a whole lot better than Test and Trace.

For decades now there’s been a consensus, on parts of the left as well as the right, that a smaller government is a better one: that, whenever something can be outsourced, it should be. But that has often meant favouring private-sector generalists – who answer first and foremost to their shareholders – over publicly employed specialists, who have other, more publicly minded, motivations.

The events of the last year are a reminder that a contractual relationship is often a poor substitute for real expertise. Smaller is not always better. We have not had enough of experts.