cord-011023-eahx37cy 2019 cord-011903-zqt6vu6d 2020 Poor mental health, including depressive disorders and stress, contributes significantly to the burden of disease in South Africa, and other parts of sub-Saharan Africa, and is also associated with negative sexual and reproductive health (SRH) outcomes for women, such as ''unintended'' or early pregnancy, and increased risk behaviours for HIV [1] [2] [3] . In the accounts of AGYW, poor mental health, including depression and suicidal risk were linked to sexual/ romantic relationship challenges, early pregnancy and child-bearing, parenting responsibilities, experiences of violence/abuse, HIV status, and lack of emotional support. Building on previous research that has found associations between depressive symptoms and psychological distress related to pregnancy, combined with a lack of social support amongst South African women [16] , our findings provide rich descriptive data on the lived reality of the interconnected psychosocial risks including stress, emotional isolation, feelings of depression and suicidal ideation, with ''unintended'' pregnancy and HIV that AGYW in South Africa face, from their own perspectives. cord-016593-t0dn27bc 2009 cord-017741-5apdhf2e 2007 cord-018332-893cckyz 2017 Where some thinkers espouse an animal rights perspective, this chapter argues that postcolonial desire is vital to protecting communities in ways that rights discourse and the law cannot in the context of the biopolitical workings of the state and globalized capitalism. Since capitalism bombards us with its definition of desire constantly, portrayals of what I''d like to call "postcolonial desire" in these novels offers a line of flight away from capitalist logic: a field of desire which can reorient one''s sense of self and relationships to others, animals, and the environment Woodward argues that animals can be focused on in literature and writing because human rights have been secured in South Africa. Like Morris and the assemblage of characters who work against the business proposal to "develop" the land and remove the baboons from their home in The Reluctant Passenger, Camagu, the outsider to the village of Qolorha-by-Sea and protagonist of Zakes Mda''s The Heart of Redness (2000), works to protect the community and environment of the village. cord-021224-dqfmrm6m 2017 A different model of "thin globalisation" led by knowledge-intensive high-tech, biotech and cleantech with prodigious financialization is characteristic of the new fast-growth regions and countries elsewhere, notably Israel, Silicon Valley and Cambridge. However, because of its emphasis on "imitating" the Japanese "developmental state" model of rapid industrialisation by major investment in heavy industry, notably steel and shipbuilding, followed by light engineering in consumer goods (automotives and electronics) South Korea experienced a somewhat asymmetrical "financialization" if indeed that is a correct descriptor. Typically, this way of operating has characterised the SME platform ecosystems of the Quaternary activities pronounced in the Silicon Valley, Cambridge and Israeli set-ups and in the global financial "superhubs, "biomedical megacentres" that are nowadays the leading "frame" for learning innovative organizational "(non)governance" (Nadivi, 2017) . cord-024077-7o3qhfk3 2020 They assert, "priority for limited resources should aim both at saving the most lives and at maximizing improvements in individuals'' post-treatment length of life".(2) Given the lack of time and information in this pandemic, they go on to claim that it is "justifiable to give priority to maximizing the number of patients that survive treatment with a reasonable life expectancy and to regard maximizing improvements in length of life as a subordinate aim".(2) Several recent publications broadly agree with this position.(3-6) Emanuel et al. Allocation of scarce critical care resources during the COVID-19 public health emergency in South Africa.