203 results
Search Results
2. Regional-scale cultural conservation planning and policy in the United States: an appeal for improvement.
- Author
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Goldberg, Lacey and Bose, Mallika
- Subjects
CULTURAL property ,LANDSCAPE architecture ,CULTURAL landscapes ,LANDSCAPE changes ,REGIONAL planning ,CULTURAL policy - Abstract
Pennsylvania's (PA) processes and policies for landscape-scale cultural and visual resource conservation are lacking. In PA, like much of the United States (US), landscape change policies are prescriptive and concerned mainly with ecology, health, safety, and welfare issues. These factors combined relegate cultural and scenic aspects to ancillary matters, often leading to their degradation. Culturally focused fields, such as landscape architecture, archaeology, and planning call for rescaling cultural conservation planning to regional scale. Rescaling would treat cultural resources like other environmental and ecological resources, giving cultural resources equal weight in conservation evaluations. The United Kingdom (UK) has policies specifically for visual impact assessment required for development projects. This paper discusses scale issues and political processes within regional visual and cultural resource conservation in PA, US, compares nascent regional-scale planning efforts in PA and the UK, and proposes improvements to PA and, by extension, US cultural landscape conservation policy implementation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Mapping the field of physical therapy and identification of the leading active producers. A bibliometric analysis of the period 2000- 2018.
- Author
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Carballo-Costa, Lidia, Quintela-Del-Río, Alejandro, Vivas-Costa, Jamile, and Costas, Rodrigo
- Subjects
- *
BIBLIOMETRICS , *CITATION analysis , *RESEARCH funding , *PHYSICAL therapy research , *DATA analysis software , *THEMATIC analysis , *DATA mining - Abstract
The objectives of the study were: 1) Describe the thematic structure and evolution of the field of physical therapy; 2) identify the main research producers (i.e. countries and institutions); and 3) compare their research output and citation impact. Papers related to physical therapy indexed in Web of Science (2000–2018) were identified to delineate the field, using keywords, journals, and citation networks. VOSviewer software, advanced bibliometric text mining, and visualization techniques were used to evaluate the thematic structure. We collected data about the country and institutional affiliation of all the authors and calculated production and citation impact indicators. 85,697 papers were analyzed. Eleven thematic clusters were identified: 1) "health care and education"; 2) "biomechanics"; 3) "psychosocial, chronic pain and quality of life outcomes"; 4) "evidence-based physical therapy research methods"; 5) "traumatology and orthopedics"; 6) "neurological rehabilitation"; 7) "psychometrics and cross-cultural adaptation"; 8) "gait-balance analysis and Parkinson's disease"; 9) "exercise"; 10) "respiratory physical therapy"; and 11) "back pain." The United States, the United Kingdom, and Australia were the most productive countries. Netherlands, Norway, and Sweden had the highest citation impact. Our bibliometric visualization approach makes it possible to comprehensively study the thematic structure of physical therapy. The ranking of producers has evolved and now includes China and Brazil. High research production does not imply a high citation impact. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Research collaboration on community health worker programmes in low-income countries: an analysis of authorship teams and networks.
- Author
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Maleka, Elma Nelisiwe, Currie, Paul, and Schneider, Helen
- Subjects
AUTHORSHIP ,COMMUNITY health services ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,MEDICAL care research ,WORLD health ,CITATION analysis ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,MIDDLE-income countries ,LOW-income countries - Abstract
Background: Global health research partnerships, which promote the exchange of ideas, knowledge and expertise across countries, are considered key to addressing complex challenges facing health systems. Yet, many studies report inequalities in these partnerships, particularly in those between high and low-and-middle-income countries (LMICs). Objective: This paper examines global research collaborations on community health worker (CHW) programmes, specifically analysing the structures of authorship teams and networks in publications reporting research on CHW programmes in low-income countries (LICs). Methods: A sub-set of 206 indexed journal articles reporting on CHW programmes in LICs was purposefully selected from a prior review of research authorship on CHW programmes in all LMICs over a five year period (2012–2016). Data on country and primary organisational affiliation and number of publications for all individual authors, programme area (e.g. maternal child health) and total citations per paper were extracted and coded in excel spreadsheets. Data were then exported and analysed in Stata/ICV.14 and Gephi. Results: The 206 papers were authored by 1045 authors from 299 institutions, based in 43 countries. Half (50.1%) the authors came from LIC-based institutions, 43.8% from high-income country (HIC) institutions, 2.9% from middle-income country (MIC) institutions and 3.2% had different first affiliations in different publications. Authors based in the USA (302) and UK (68) accounted for just over a third (35.4%) of all authors. Partnership patterns revealed a primary mode of North–South collaboration with authors from the US, and to a lesser extent the UK, playing central bridging roles between institutions. Strong network clusters of multiple-affiliated authors were evident in research on MCH and HIV/TB aspects of CHW programmes. Conclusion: Knowledge production on CHW programmes in LICs flows predominantly through a pool of connected HIC authors and North–South collaborations. There is a need for strategies harnessing more diverse, including South–South, forms of partnership. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Mental health of ethnic minorities: the role of racism.
- Author
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Ricci, Fabiana, Torales, Julio, Bener, Abdulbari, Castaldelli-Maia, João Mauricio, Chumakov, Egor, Bellomo, Antonello, and Ventriglio, Antonio
- Subjects
RACISM ,MINORITIES ,HEALTH services accessibility ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,ANTI-racism ,PSYCHOSES ,MENTAL health ,DISEASE prevalence ,MENTAL depression ,MENTAL illness - Abstract
Racism and racial discrimination heavily impact on health and mental health of ethnic minorities. In this conceptual paper and narrative review, we aim to report on relevant evidence from the international literature describing the prevalence and the qualitative aspects of mental illness due to racism and ethnic- discrimination in different settings and populations. Some variables related to racism, such as cultural, institutional, interpersonal factors, as well as the concepts of perceived and internalised racism will be described and discussed. These are relevant characteristics in the explanatory model of the relationship between racism and mental health. Epidemiological data on the prevalence of depressive and psychotic symptoms as well as substance abuse/misuse among ethnic minorities in large catchment areas, such as United States and United Kingdom, will be represented. We conclude that anti-racism policies are essential in order to address racism and racial discrimination around the world. Pluralistic societies should be promoted in order to understand mental illnesses among ethnic and cultural minorities. Also, anti-racism programs should be delivered in the educational and health-care settings and their impact evaluated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Reflections on ten years of using economics games and experiments in teaching.
- Author
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Guest, Jonathan and Elliott, Caroline
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL games ,ECONOMICS education ,EXPERIMENTAL methods in education ,LEARNING - Abstract
In this paper, the author reflects on his 10 years' experience of using games and experiments and in the process develops a type of practitioner's guide. The existing quantitative and qualitative evidence on the impact of using games on student learning is reviewed. On balance, a positive effect, on measures of attainment, is found in the literature. Given these findings, it is surprising that there is also evidence in the UK and US that they are not widely used. Some factors are discussed that might deter tutors from employing them. Unsurprisingly, one of these is the additional cost, which might make the use of online games seem more attractive, given the way results can be automatically recorded. However, some relatively low-cost paperbased games were found to have significant advantages. In particular, they appear to facilitate social interaction which has a positive impact on student motivation and learning. One popular and effective paper-based game is discussed in some detail. A number of recommendations are provided on how to implement the game in order to maximise the learning benefits it can provide. Some ideas on how to maximise the learning benefits from using games more generally are also considered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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7. Long-acting reversible contraception: Targeting those judged to be unfit for parenthood in the United States and the United Kingdom.
- Author
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Lowe, Pam and Rowlands, Sam
- Subjects
PREVENTION of teenage pregnancy ,LONG-acting reversible contraceptives ,CONTRACEPTION ,DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) ,POPULATION geography ,PATIENT-centered care ,SOCIAL stigma ,SOCIAL justice ,PARENTHOOD ,INTERSECTIONALITY ,POLICY sciences ,HEALTH promotion - Abstract
There is a long history of regarding marginalised groups as unfit to parent and of eugenic policies targeting those with 'undesirable' bodily conditions or behaviours. This is part of a broader pattern of stratified reproduction – structural conditions that enable or discourage certain groups from reproducing – that often brings about and exacerbates injustices. This paper critically assesses the US and UK social and medical literature on applying pressure to marginalised groups, or those who have behaved 'irresponsibly', to use long-acting reversible contraception (LARC). Targeting young people for LARC fails to recognise that social inequality is the context for teenage pregnancy, not the result of it. Provider pressure on women of colour to use LARC is linked to institutional racism, whilst policy for those with physical and intellectual disabilities is shaped by disability discrimination. Other groups to be targeted include so-called 'welfare mothers', substance users, those who have had children put into care and offenders. Particularly controversial are cases in which LARC has been ordered by courts. LARC policy incorporating these kind of discriminatory practices needs to stop; future policy should focus on person-centred care that bolsters reproductive justice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. How speculation became respectable: early theories on financial and commodity markets.
- Author
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Paesani, Paolo and Rosselli, Annalisa
- Subjects
SPECULATION ,FUTURES ,COMMODITY exchanges ,FINANCIAL markets ,STOCK exchanges - Abstract
Around the 1860s, technological advancements in transport, communication and warehousing, contributed to the emergence of world markets for many staple commodities (e.g., cotton, wheat). At the same time, the economic needs of the companies involved in this commercial revolution stimulated the growth of markets for securities and shares. The growing complexity of global markets created propitious conditions for the emergence of a class of professional speculators. Initially, the frenzy that accompanied this process seemed to confirm traditional views, which identified speculation with gambling. With time, however, a new scientific literature emerged. Focussing on the last decade of the nineteenth century up to the early 1920s in the UK and US, our analysis brings to light how contributors to this new literature made the case for speculation against conventional wisdom. In so doing, they were not blind to the downside effects of speculation as a possible source of resource misallocation. Nevertheless, they chose to emphasise its constructive side, basing their arguments on the case of commodity markets, where the idea of a long-run equilibrium price to be attained by speculation appeared plausible. They employed the same arguments in the case of the stock exchange, downplaying differences between the two markets although they were well aware of them. Thus economists played a crucial role in convincing policymakers of the beneficial effects of the new speculative instruments, against the hostility of a large part of public opinion. Futures and their use for the purpose of short selling, the most controversial of the new trading practices, were gradually accepted and regarded as legitimate commercial transactions. On the other hand, options continued to attract suspicion for a long time and to be kept in a limbo between disreputable and acceptable operations. The paper expands the existing literature on the subject by providing the first systematic reconstruction of the shared analytical arguments that, in spite of differences between authors and contexts, contributed to making speculation gradually accepted in the UK and US. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Moral thinking and communication competencies of college students and graduates in Taiwan, the UK, and the US: a mixed-methods study.
- Author
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Lee, Angela Chi-Ming, Walker, David I., Chen, Yen-Hsin, and Thoma, Stephen J.
- Subjects
- *
THOUGHT & thinking , *PSYCHOLOGY of college students , *ETHICS , *COMMUNICATIVE competence , *RESEARCH methodology , *INTERVIEWING , *COMPARATIVE studies , *COLLEGE graduates , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *RESEARCH funding , *DATA analysis software - Abstract
Moral thinking and communication are critical competencies for confronting social dilemmas in a challenging world. We examined these moral competencies in 70 college students and graduates from Taiwan, the United Kingdom, and the United States. Participants were assessed through semi-structured written interviews, Facebook group discussions, and a questionnaire. In this paper, we describe the similarities and differences across cultural groupings in (1) the social issues of greatest importance to the participants; (2) the factors influencing their approaches to thinking about social issues and communicating with others; and (3) the characteristics of their moral functioning in terms of moral awareness, moral judgment, moral discourse, and moral decision-making. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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10. Environmental conversions and muslim activists: constructing knowledge at the intersection of religion and politics.
- Author
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Hancock, Rosemary
- Subjects
MUSLIMS ,RELIGION & politics ,ENVIRONMENTAL literacy ,SOCIAL movements ,POLITICAL knowledge ,MUSLIM identity ,ENVIRONMENTALISM - Abstract
This paper examines the production of knowledge by Muslim environmental activists in the United States and Great Britain, applying Eyerman and Jamison's theory of cognitive praxis to demonstrate how religious and political knowledge and practices are synthesised by the activists. The paper emerges from research conducted with Islamic environmental organizations in the United States and Great Britain in 2012–2013 and utilises data gathered from interviews conducted with Muslim environmental activists working in those organizations and from the publicly available newsletters, websites, and articles produced by the activists and organizations. I argue that through the integration of environmental and religious knowledge, Muslim environmentalists construct a 'critical community' within Islam that seeks to transform orthodox Islamic knowledge and practice. In the process, Muslim environmentalists demonstrate that religiously-grounded social movements may simultaneously pursue religious and political change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. All bark and no bite: the political economy of bank fines in Anglo-America.
- Author
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Macartney, Huw and Calcagno, Paola
- Subjects
ECONOMICS ,BANK accounts ,LITERATURE studies ,FINANCIAL crises ,BARK - Abstract
Since the global financial crisis, the Anglo-American banking sector has been hit by revelation after revelation of mis-selling, fraud, and collusion. In response, state managers in the US and the UK have leveled over £326bn in financial penalties. Authorities claimed that fines were aimed at de-incentivizing misconduct. Drawing on a critical political economy account however, this paper argues that the penalties had a rather different objective: they were part of a populist strategy by state managers, deflecting criticism away from the financialization of Anglo-America. First we show the questionable economic impact of the fines on the banks, before exploring the terms of the penalties themselves. Second, we show how state managers used the fines to respond to a legitimacy crisis, whilst the financialization of Anglo-America since the global financial crisis has only worsened. The article expands on existing explanations in the legal studies literature, and is one of the first political economy accounts of bank fines since the GFC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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12. Self-Assessments of Mentoring Skills in Healthcare Professions Applicable to Occupational Therapy: A Scoping Review.
- Author
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Stephenson, Sara, Kemp, Erika, Kiraly-Alvarez, Anne, Costello, Paula, Lockmiller, Catherine, and Parkhill, Brianna
- Subjects
- *
ONLINE information services , *PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems , *MEDICAL databases , *OCCUPATIONAL therapy education , *MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems , *SELF-evaluation , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *PHYSICAL therapy , *MENTORING , *OCCUPATIONAL therapy , *ABILITY , *TRAINING , *LITERATURE reviews , *MEDLINE , *ALLIED health personnel , *ERIC (Information retrieval system) - Abstract
This scoping review explores the professional literature in allied healthcare to determine which self-assessments of mentor skills are the most valid and reliable for use in occupational therapy doctoral capstone programs. The aims of this scoping review include mapping evidence related to mentor assessments in healthcare, exploring implications for occupational therapy doctoral mentor training programs, and identifying common characteristics of mentor self-assessments for occupational therapy programs to consider when developing capstone mentoring resources. Researchers applied and reported via PRISMA Extension for Scoping Reviews (PRISMA-ScR). A librarian and authors formulated keywords and database selections to search PubMed/MEDLINE/PMC, and Embase were searched from across healthcare professions for training outcomes, mentor self-assessment, mentor attributes, and use of researcher-developed assessments. The search was limited to English publications from the last 20 years. Data were extracted for quantitative information regarding study characteristics and qualitative information about mentoring skills. A total of 852 results were delivered across all databases. Nineteen papers met the final eligibility criteria and were included in the data extraction. Populations were included from several healthcare professions, including 11 nursing, four healthcare researchers, one pharmacy, one midwifery, one medicine, and one medical dietetics. Countries included the United States (n = 7), Finland (n = 5), United Kingdom (n = 4), Japan (n = 1), South Africa (n = 1) and Canada (n = 1). The authors identified four valid self-assessment tools, demonstrating III and IV levels of evidence, that may be implemented by occupational therapy programs as they develop resources for mentor programs. Occupational therapy programs can use the mentor attributes found in this scoping review to create their own mentor assessment measures or may choose to use a validated tool. The authors recommend additional research in mentor education and mentor skill acquisition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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13. The Making of Scottish Jewry: Jewish Secondary Migration through Scotland.
- Author
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Morris, David
- Subjects
JEWISH migrations ,JEWS ,IMMIGRANTS - Abstract
This study places Jewish settlement in Scotland in the wider context of mass migration from Russia to the USA. It uses US passenger lists to trace a sample of Jewish migrants back to their places of origin in Russia. It also uses the 1930 US Federal Census to trace the migration paths of a sample of Scottish-born Jews after they had emigrated to the USA. Crucially, this paper argues that the Jews in Scotland did not constitute a national Jewry prior to the early 1920s. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Dower Ex Assensu and Trial by Jury and Trial by Witnesses in the English Medieval Common Law.
- Author
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Brand, Paul
- Subjects
COMMON law ,LEGAL status of widows ,MARRIAGE law ,LEGAL testimony ,ENDOWMENTS - Abstract
When widows claimed dower they were normally claiming part of the lands which their husband had possessed during their marriage. But the medieval common law also allowed widows to claim lands which the husband had never held if they had been in the possession of a close relative of the husband at the time of the marriage provided the relative had been present at the marriage and given consent to the endowment made by his or her heir apparent. This paper analyses the sixty or so actions of dower ex assensu found on the plea rolls for the period down to 1307 and in associated law reports. That assent was recorded in a written charter in relatively few cases. In most the court relied in part or in whole on the evidence of witnesses present at the ceremony. Sometimes their evidence alone was decisive. More commonly witnesses were added to a jury which gave a collective verdict on whether consent had been given. These cases provide a valuable reminder that witness evidence was already in the thirteenth century a regular and accepted feature of at least one form of common law action. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. For a revival of feminist consciousness-raising: horizontal transformation of epistemologies and transgression of neoliberal TimeSpace.
- Author
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Firth, Rhiannon and Robinson, Andrew
- Subjects
FEMINISM ,NEOLIBERALISM ,SOCIAL movements ,FEMINISM & education ,CONSCIOUSNESS raising - Abstract
This paper looks back on the methodology and experience of feminist consciousness-raising (CR) in the 1970s, in relation to the current re-emergence of feminism. It constructs an argument that a new wave of CR is desirable so as to construct new forms of feminist pedagogy and activism. The paper will argue that contemporary feminism in the UK and USA would benefit from this kind of methodology, through which a standpoint is constructed. The core of the paper is an analysis of how CR works as an affective and social process. Drawing on academic studies and participant accounts, the paper reconstructs the mechanisms through which participants' subjectivities and narratives are expressed and transformed. It suggests that these mechanisms express different non-homogeneous temporalities. The paper invites feminist pedagogy to get back to the base level of experience and unfold new theories and strategies to address the current context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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16. Rational Fictions and Imaginary Systems: Cynical Ideology and the Problem Figuration and Practise of Public Housing.
- Author
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Crawford, Joe and Flint, John
- Subjects
HOUSING policy ,PUBLIC housing ,IDEOLOGY ,CAPITALISM ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors - Abstract
This paper aims to show how Van Wel's theory of problem figuration, Carlen's concept of imaginary systems and Zizek's notion of cynical ideology may advance our theoretical and empirical understanding of the contemporary construction of housing policy narratives and embedded localised housing practise. Applying this theoretical framework to a case study of responses to homelessness in Scotland and further illustrative examples from the UK and the USA, the paper examines how housing practise is constituted through different imaginaries of housing systems. These are based on fictional as well as rational elements, located within a form of cynical ideology whereby actors act ‘as if’ the realities of the present housing crisis are distanced from the imagined intended functioning of housing systems. This masks alternative social realities and denies an explicitly articulated politics of housing which would reveal new processes of capitalism, generational and class realignments and a reframing of the role of government itself. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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17. From charity to security: the emergence of the National School Lunch Program.
- Author
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Geist Rutledge, Jennifer
- Subjects
NATIONAL school lunch program ,CHILD nutrition ,CHARITY ,NATIONAL security ,WORLD War II ,BRITISH politics & government ,UNITED States politics & government ,UNITED States history, 1945- ,HISTORY ,GOVERNMENT policy ,TWENTIETH century - Abstract
This paper explores the historical formation of the National School Lunch Program (NSLP) in the United States and argues that programme emergence depended on the ability of policy entrepreneurs to link the economic concerns of agricultural production with the ideational concern of national security. Using a historical institutionalist framework this paper stresses the critical juncture of the Second World War and the positive feedback loop created between agricultural industries and schools to understand the emergence of the NSLP. In addition, it stresses the role of frames in policy-making and focuses on the use by policy entrepreneurs of a security frame whereby child malnutrition was cast as a national security issue. The policy window of war gave policy entrepreneurs the chance to use the politically and culturally resonant frame of security, in the contexts of agricultural subsidies, to push for the creation of this programme. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. The Great British Broadcasting Competition.
- Author
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McLean, Donald F.
- Subjects
- UNITED Kingdom, UNITED States, BRITISH Broadcasting Corp., BAIRD Television Co., ELECTRIC & Musical Industries Ltd.
- Abstract
The business reasons behind the decision to start the BBC television service in 1936 remain unclear despite the volume of literature on the subject. Additionally, controversy has persisted regarding foreign involvement in what has been considered a fully British system. What is apparent from the literature is an emphasis placed on the technical development, generally under-representing other aspects of television. A new multi-disciplinary approach is proposed and applied here to explore the circumstances around the emergence of the service, together with hitherto neglected industry aspects: the business and commercial issues relating to broadcaster and suppliers. This paper highlights the primacy of the BBC television service as providing the first instance of what became a common template for live television creation whilst illustrating, with new evidence, foreign influence on British engineering development for the BBC service. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Walking, well-being and community: racialized mothers building cultural citizenship using participatory arts and participatory action research.
- Author
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O'Neill, Maggie
- Subjects
WOMEN immigrants ,CITIZENSHIP ,RIGHT of asylum ,SOCIAL justice ,UNITED States emigration & immigration ,SOCIAL processes - Abstract
Committed to exploring democratic ways of doing research with racialized migrant women and taking up the theme of “what citizenship studies can learn from taking seriously migrant mothers' experiences” for theory and practice this paper explores walking as a method for doing participatory arts-based research with women seeking asylum, drawing upon research undertaken in the North East of England with ten women seeking asylum. Together we developed a participatory arts and participatory action research project that focused upon walking, well-being and community. This paper shares some of the images and narratives created by women participants along the walk, which offer multi-sensory, dialogic and visual routes to understanding, and suggests that arts-based methodologies, using walking biographies, might counter exclusionary processes and practices, generate greater knowledge and understanding of women’s resources in building and performing cultural citizenship across racialized boundaries; and deliver on social justice by facilitating a radical democratic imaginary. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The Myth of Representations of Africa.
- Author
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Scott, Martin
- Subjects
AFRICA in mass media ,MASS media ,PESSIMISM ,BIBLIOGRAPHICAL citations ,GOVERNMENT agencies - Abstract
This paper presents the results of a comprehensive scoping review of empirical research into US and UK media representations of Africa published between 1990 and 2014. The results show that existing research has a remarkably narrow focus on a specific number of countries, events, media and texts. Research into representations of North Africa, Francophone Africa, non-news genres, non-elite media and radio content, is particularly scarce. This, I contend, provides an insufficient basis for reaching any firm, generalisable conclusions about the nature of media coverage of Africa. The common assumption that representations are dominated by Afro-pessimism, for example, may be accurate – but it is not currently substantiated by the existing evidence. In short, the widespread belief that we know how Africa is represented in the US and UK media is shown to be a myth. This paper also discusses how this myth has been maintained through certain citation practices and interpretations of evidence as well as the implications of these findings for the many corporations, governments, non-governmental organisations and researchers whose activities depend upon, or have helped to preserve, this myth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. ‘For your ears only!’ Donald Sterling and backstage racism in sport.
- Author
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Hylton, Kevin and Lawrence, Stefan
- Subjects
RACISM in sports ,PRIVATE sphere ,PUBLIC sphere ,RACIAL identity of white people ,RACISM - Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to elucidate how racism manifests ‘behind closed doors’ in thebackstageprivate domain. We do this with reference to recent high-profile controversies in the US and UK. In particular, we use the concepts of frontstage (public) and backstage (private) racism to unpack the extraordinary case in point of the ex-National Basketball Association franchise owner Donald Sterling. The paper concludes that though it is important for frontstage racism to be disrupted, activist scholars must be mindful of the lesser-known, and lesser-researched, clandestine backstage racism that, we argue, galvanizes more public manifestations. The Donald Sterling case is an example of how backstage racism functions and, potentially, how it can be resisted. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Relationship Quality and Sexuality: A Latent Profile Analysis of Long-term Heterosexual and LGB Long-term Partnerships.
- Author
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Chonody, Jill M., Killian, Mike, Gabb, Jacqui, and Dunk-West, Priscilla
- Subjects
CHI-squared test ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,LATENT structure analysis ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,HUMAN sexuality ,SURVEYS ,QUALITATIVE research ,LGBTQ+ people ,QUANTITATIVE research ,EFFECT sizes (Statistics) ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,SEXUAL orientation identity ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Purpose: Drawing on survey data (N = 7,826) collected in the United Kingdom, Australia, and the United States, this paper examines whether sexual orientation is a differentiating factor in explaining relationship quality and maintenance. Previous research suggests that sexual orientation is not significant in determining relationship satisfaction; however, these analyses have used traditional variable driven approaches, which do not provide an holistic view of the relationship by considering the unique combination of characteristics. Method: In this study, latent profile analyses were used, which is a person-centered approach that allows for identification of different types of long-term relationships. Results: Data suggested that LGB individuals had marginally higher levels of relationship quality compared to their heterosexual counterparts, and sexual orientation was also associated with differing types of long-term relationships. Discussion: These findings are interrogated in more detail, in particular, how sexual orientation is associated with types of long-term relationships and how everyday practices are associated with relationship quality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Kristeller maneuvers or fundal pressure and maternal/neonatal morbidity: obstetric and judicial literature review.
- Author
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Malvasi, Antonio, Zaami, Simona, Tinelli, Andrea, Trojano, Giuseppe, Montanari Vergallo, Gianluca, and Marinelli, Enrico
- Subjects
JUDICIAL review ,LITERATURE reviews ,LEGAL judgments ,PRESSURE ,U.S. states - Abstract
Aim: A significant amount of data concerning maternal-fetal damage arising from the exertion of Kristeller maneuvers (KMs) or fundal pressure (FP) go unreleased due to medicolegal implications.Materials and Methods: For this reason, the paper gathers information as to the real magnitude of litigation related to FP-induced damages and injuries. The authors have undertaken a research in order to include general search engines (PubMed-Medline, Cochrane, Embase, Google, GyneWeb) and legal databases (De Jure, Italian database of jurisprudence daily update; Westlaw, Thomson Reuters, American ruling database and Bailii, UK Court Ruling Database).Results: Results confirm said phenomenon to be more wide ranging than it appears through official channels. Several courts of law, both in the United States of America (USA) and in European Union (EU) Member States as well, have ruled against the use of the maneuver itself, assuming a stance conducive to a presumption of guilt against those doctors and healthcare providers who resorted to KMs or FP during deliveries. Given how rife FP is in mainstream obstetric practice, it is as if there were a wide gap between obstetric real-life and what official jurisprudence and healthcare institutions-sanctioned official practices are.Conclusion: The authors think that it would be desirable to draft specifically targeted guidelines or recommendations on maneuvers during vaginal delivery, in which to point out exactly what kinds of maneuvering techniques are to be absolutely banned and what maneuvers are to be allowed, and under what conditions their application can be considered appropriate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Why do auditors fail? What might work? What won't?
- Author
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Coffee, John C.
- Subjects
AUDITORS ,SHAREHOLDER activism ,AGENCY costs ,INDUSTRIAL management ,QUALITY of service - Abstract
Auditing failures and scandals have become commonplace. In response, reformers (including the Kingman Review in the U.K. and a recent report of the U.K.'s Competition and Market Authority) have proposed a variety of remedies, including prophylactic bans on auditors providing consulting services to their clients in the belief that this will minimize the conflicts of interest that produce auditing failures. Although useful, such reforms are already in place to a considerable degree and may have reached the point of diminishing returns. Moreover, this strategy does not address the deeper problem that clients (or their managements) may not want aggressive auditing, but rather prefer a deferential and perfunctory audit. If so, auditors will realize that they are marketing a 'commodity' service and cannot successfully compete based on their quality of services. Rationally, they would respond to such a market by seeking to adopt a cost-minimization strategy, competing by reducing the cost of their services and not investing in new technology or higher-priced personnel. What could change this pattern? Gatekeepers, including auditors, serve investors, but are hired by corporate management. To induce gatekeepers to better serve investors, one needs to reduce the 'agency costs' surrounding this relationship by making gatekeepers more accountable to investors. This might be accomplished through litigation (as happens to some degree in the U.S.), but the U.K. and Europe have rules that discourage collective litigation. Thus, a more feasible approach would be to give investors greater ability to select and remove the auditor. This paper proposes a two part strategy to this end: (1) public 'grading' of the auditor by the audit regulator in an easily comparable fashion (and with a mandatory grading curve), and (2) enabling a minority of the shareholders (hypothetically, 10%) to propose a replacement auditor for a shareholder vote. It further argues that both activist shareholders and diversified shareholders might support such a strategy and undertake it under different circumstances. Absent such a focus on agency costs, however, reformers are likely only re-arranging the deck chairs on the Titanic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Informed choice? How the United Kingdom’s key information set fails to represent pedagogy to potential students.
- Author
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Barefoot, Helen, Oliver, Martin, and Mellar, Harvey
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL technology ,SCHOOL choice ,CURRICULUM planning ,STUDENT surveys ,EDUCATIONAL quality ,HIGHER education - Abstract
This paper explores the ways in which information about course pedagogy has been represented to potential students through national descriptors and specifications such as the United Kingdom’s Key Information Set. It examines the extent to which such descriptors provide helpful information about pedagogy, for example innovative uses of technology. The paper starts by exploring the wider context within which these descriptors have been developed, including a comparison of similar descriptions internationally. This is followed by a comparative analysis, in which two courses (one single honours undergraduate degree, one Massive Open Online Course) are classified and compared. This serves to illustrate the blind spots in classifications such as the Key Information Set. The paper concludes by arguing that further work is needed to develop classification schemes that both address explicitly the interests of potential students and are able to represent the pedagogic decisions that differentiate teaching in contemporary higher education. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Democratic babies? Françoise Dolto, Benjamin Spock and the ideology of post-war parenting advice.
- Author
-
Bates, Richard
- Subjects
CHILD rearing ,IDEOLOGY ,PSYCHOANALYSIS - Abstract
This article looks at the political implications of a subject not always thought of as directly political, but which has an important ideological component: child-rearing advice. The period after 1945 offers an important example of how this topic can interact with developments in political ideology. This article takes the example of France, with substantial comparative reference to the US and Britain. It argues that the mid-twentieth century was characterized by a move from a hygienist and behaviourist approach to child rearing to a more liberal, humanist approach informed by Freudian psychoanalysis. This occurred significantly later in France – in the 1970s – than in Britain or the US, where it is associated with the years immediately after World War II. Through a comparison of two celebrated childcare experts who epitomized the change – Françoise Dolto in France, Benjamin Spock in the US – the paper explores the reasons for this temporal discrepancy. It shows that Anglo-American experts believed that the widespread application of psychoanalytic theory would help produce democratic citizens and ward off the dangers of authoritarian personalities. In France, psychoanalytic approaches became allied with conservative Catholic views of the family and women's roles, with implications for family policy into the twenty-first century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. The pharmacologic treatment of problematic sexual interests, paraphilic disorders, and sexual preoccupation in adult men who have committed a sexual offence.
- Author
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Winder, Belinda, Fedoroff, J. Paul, Grubin, Don, Klapilová, Kateřina, Kamenskov, Maxim, Tucker, Douglas, Basinskaya, Irina A., and Vvedensky, Georgy E.
- Subjects
PARAPHILIAS ,MEN'S health ,SEX offenders ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,ATTITUDES toward sex ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,ADULTS - Abstract
This paper provides an international perspective on the use of medications to treat problematic sexual interests, paraphilic disorders, and sexual preoccupation in men who have committed a sexual offence. Experts from Canada, the Czech Republic (CR), Russia, the United Kingdom, and the United States met in Prague, CR in May 2017 to review and compare their treatment approaches. This report is a summary of their discussions, including empirical data from CR and Russia which have not previously been published in the English language. All participants agreed that continuing international collaboration would be very useful for the development of ethical international prescribing guidelines, as well as pooling data from studies on the efficacy and utility of pharmacological and other biological treatments for people who have committed sexual offences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Psychological treatment of problematic sexual interests: cross-country comparison.
- Author
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Klapilová, Kateřina, Demidova, Liubov Y., Elliott, Helen, Flinton, Charles A., Weiss, Petr, and Fedoroff, J. Paul
- Subjects
PARAPHILIAS ,CONSENSUS (Social sciences) ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,CRIME ,ATTITUDES toward sex ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,PHYSICIANS ,PSYCHOTHERAPY - Abstract
This paper reviews the use of psychotherapeutic approaches to treat individuals who have committed sex crimes and/or have problematic sexual interests (PSI); including types of psychotherapy used, descriptions of preventive and reintegration programmes, and highlighting specific theoretical controversies. In the second part, experts from Canada, the Czech Republic, Russia, the United Kingdom, and the United States, who participated in an International Consensus Meeting held in Prague (2017), summarize treatment programmes in their countries. The comparison revealed some general findings: each country has variability between its own programmes; most countries have different programmes for people who are in custody and who are in the community; the state-directed treatment programmes are primarily focused on criminal individuals, while non-criminal individuals are treated in preventive programmes and/or in special clinics or are untreated; the presence of PSI in patients is acknowledged in most programmes, although specific programmes exclusively for individuals with PSI rarely exist. Studies on effectiveness are difficult to compare due to methodologic, political, and cultural differences. Further communication between more countries to share knowledge about successful treatments and preventive approaches is needed, especially enhanced international collaboration between researchers and clinicians to verify the effectiveness of current clinical and experimental program, rs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Health risk perception and shale development in the UK and US.
- Author
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Harthorn, Barbara Herr, Halcomb, Laura, Partridge, Tristan, Thomas, Merryn, Enders, Catherine, and Pidgeon, Nick
- Subjects
ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,BLUE collar workers ,DISCUSSION ,HEALTH attitudes ,HYDRAULIC fracturing ,INDUSTRIAL hygiene ,MINERAL industries ,RESEARCH funding ,RISK perception ,VIDEO recording ,ADULT education workshops ,DATA analysis ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
In this paper, we examine discourse in public deliberations in pre-development locales in the UK and US about advantages and disadvantages of future shale development ('fracking'). We aimed to understand how people anticipate potential health effects, broadly construed, of environmental toxicity and disturbance in the context of planned, but not yet implemented, energy development. In day-long deliberations with small, diverse groups in two cities in each country (London, Cardiff in the UK; Los Angeles, Santa Barbara in the US), participants discussed impacts on health and well-being using three main rubrics: 'It's money or health', 'Why take chances?' and 'Beyond the tipping point'. Throughout, participants framed health as an intrinsically moral issue, with collective responsibility as a dominant normative frame. We identify the concept of compound risk to underscore effects of multiple risks and hazards on people's sensibilities about anticipated future health and environmental harm. The findings demonstrate how and why diverse publics in pre-impact sites in both countries saw shale extraction as high stakes development that poses significant, often unacceptable, risks to human and environmental health and well-being. Risks extended beyond toxicity to broad threats to health, including, for some, the end of life as we know it on the planet. Overall, participants' discussions of health were more connected to social categories and their underlying moral principles than to technological details. This work contributes evidence of blurred boundaries between environment and health as well as the importance people place on social risks in the context of proposed energy system change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. A Comparison of State Traditions and the Revival of a Nuclear Power in Four Countries.
- Author
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Baker, Keith and Stoker, Gerry
- Subjects
COMPARATIVE studies ,NUCLEAR energy ,NATIONAL territory ,NUCLEAR power plants - Abstract
The British, American, French and Finnish governments are seeking to promote investment in a new generation of nuclear power plants. Nuclear power programmes are delivered through networks of international companies through which government must manage. This is consistent with the concept of governance. Governments can advance their policy goals by using a variety of policy instruments to shape and organize governance networks. This is known as metagovernance. The paper considers the extent to which the selection and deployment of the policy instruments used to metagovern is informed by the prevailing tradition of government. The paper examines how the British, American, French and Finnish governments have tried to metagovern. It is shown that whilst governing traditions do inform the selection and deployment of the policy instruments used to metagovern, the composition of the network, and the nature of the policy problem also plays a role in shaping government action. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. The Boondoggle: Lee Miller and the vicissitudes of private archives.
- Author
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Engle, Karen
- Subjects
CLIMATOLOGY ,MANUSCRIPTS ,PHOTOGRAPHS - Abstract
This paper recounts the surprising and disastrous results of attempting to do historical photographic research at a private archive. I had travelled to the Lee Miller Archives, in Sussex, UK, in order to conduct some preliminary research on Miller’s war work between the years 1944 and 1945. My intention was to begin comparing the drafts, original manuscripts, negatives, and captions to what Vogue published in both the US and the UK. The Archives are located in the former house of Lee Miller and husband Roland Penrose and they are managed by Miller’s son Antony Penrose. While my preparatory correspondence with the employees was straightforward and I had submitted lists of what I wanted to look at, once I arrived things immediately changed. This paper details the paternalistic climate of the Archives, as it reads some of Miller’s photography in relation to questions of history and representation. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Progress on Freedom of Religion or Belief?: An Analysis of European and North American Government and Parliamentary Initiatives.
- Author
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Toft, Monica Duffy and Christian Green, M.
- Subjects
FREEDOM of religion ,HUMAN rights ,LEGISLATIVE bodies - Abstract
Threats to and violations of freedom of religion or belief (FoRB) have been increasing around the world for the last two decades. This has prompted governments to implement initiatives to promote FoRB and to condemn violations. Drawing on data and findings of the Commonwealth Initiative for Freedom of Religion or Belief (CIFoRB), this article presents an analysis of recent legislative, parliamentary, and executive branch initiatives in the U.S., Canada, U.K., and Norway to prioritize FoRB, for the lessons they afford on effective policy action. After an overview of these states' initiatives, this paper concludes with an assessment of their success. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Competency-based standards and guidelines for psychology practice in Australia: opportunities and risks.
- Author
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Gonsalvez, Craig J., Shafranske, Edward P., McLeod, Hamish J., and Falender, Carol A.
- Subjects
- *
ACCREDITATION , *CLINICAL psychology , *MEDICAL protocols , *CLINICAL supervision , *LABOR supply , *COMPARATIVE studies , *CLINICAL competence - Abstract
Recent changes to clinical psychology training and supervision in Australia have been driven by a deliberate endeavour by regulatory authorities and professional bodies to align education and training with competency-based models of training, a development that is apparent internationally across health disciplines. A critical question is: how do reforms in Clinical Psychology training standards match international benchmarks for competency-based pedagogies? Objective: To outline key principles of competency-based pedagogies and to critically examine whether Australia's new standards and guidelines for accreditation of coursework, practicum requirements, and supervision are consistent with competency principles, and match similar guidelines proposed in the U.K. and the U.S.A. Method: Following a critical analysis of the extant literature, the authors highlight progress achieved, discuss major gaps and challenges, and examine the extent to which current accreditation changes constitute a reliable blueprint for the development of a competent psychology workforce for the country. Results and Conclusions: The current review indicates that in an overall sense, practitioner training in Australia is tracking well in comparison to international developments. Specifically, the decreased emphasis on the regulation of inputs (e.g., nature and type of coursework and practicum) is pedagogically sound and has the potential to promote training innovation and efficiencies. However, a revision of the current competency framework is required to underpin future progress. Also, the lack of reliable and valid competence instruments in combination with less than rigorous adherence to systematic, timely, and ecologically valid assessments constitute a major challenge and a serious threat to ensuring safe and competent psychology practice. What is already known about this topic: (1) Competency-based education and clinical training play important coordinated roles in ensuring the competence of clinical psychologists, consistent with the accreditation standards and registration requirements of the Psychology Board of Australia. (2) The Australian Psychology Accreditation Council (APAC, 2019) have recently published new accreditation standards for psychology programs that are based on competency principles. (3) The shift to the new paradigm is both exciting and challenging. It is exciting because it provides opportunities for innovation; it is challenging because it demands systemic change. What this topic adds: (1) The current paper compares and contrasts current standards and guidelines for accreditation in Australia with their counterparts in the U.K. and the U.S.A. (2) Although significant progress has been made in Australia, additional implementation efforts should be taken to establish a comprehensive and authoritative competency framework, incorporating empirically-supported means of assessment. Such a framework should be fit-for-purpose providing a grid that maps shared and unique aspects of competencies across registration levels and specialised endorsements. (3) The progressive relaxing of input criteria has the potential to seriously compromise the commitment to safe and competent psychological practice if training institutions do not adopt a re-designed system of ecologically valid assessments both during training and at the point of entry to the profession. (4) The need to ensure competence is maintained throughout a psychologist's career will remain a major challenge, given the ongoing and rapid advance of science. A commitment to the competency-based approach provides the necessary scaffolding for ongoing professional development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Geographies of Swimming Pool Provision: Lessons from Glasgow 1804–2014.
- Author
-
McLauchlan, Anna
- Subjects
SWIMMING pools ,RECREATION ,HISTORICAL geography ,EXERCISE - Abstract
Swimming is a popular form of recreation and exercise in the UK and US. Swimming can take place outdoors but, particularly in the UK, largely takes place in designated indoor pools. Existing research tends to focus on ‘public’ or ‘municipal’ pools leaving broader spatial geographies of swimming pool provision under explored. In response to concern about swimming pool closures, this paper draws from extensive archival research into all swimming pools in the City of Glasgow, Scotland, since the first opened in 1804. Formal and informal programmes of pool building and closure were revealed. Rather than decreasing, public provision has remained constant for the last 100 years but become progressively more spread out in relation to the city’s changing size. Broadening exploration beyond the ‘public’ category exposed a vast drop in school pool numbers around the year 2000 due to a Private Finance Initiative project that consolidated the secondary school estate and outsourced school building management. The lessons: researching all types of swimming pool through time greatly enriches understandings of the changing meaning and extent of public service provision. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Social work and the penal state.
- Author
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Cummins, Ian
- Subjects
CORRECTIONAL institutions ,COURTS ,CRIMINALS ,DIGNITY ,PRISONERS ,REHABILITATION of people with mental illness ,PROBATION ,PUNISHMENT ,SOCIAL case work ,SOCIAL control ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
The Criminal Justice System (CJS) has historically been a key site of social work intervention. Wacquant argues that the growth of social insecurity and the expansion of the penal state are endogenous features of the neo-liberal political project. The key premises of neo-liberalism have been accepted by parties of both the left and the right. This shift alongside an increase in inequality had led to increasing social anxiety and mistrust. One manifestation of these trends is a decline in the belief that the rehabilitation of offenders is a realisable goal of social and penal policy. The expansion of the penal state: the increasing numbers, poor conditions and the over-representation of minority groups mean that it should be a core social work concern. The paper outlines the ways, in which, risk and managerialism have side lined core social work values in the CJS. It concludes penal policy and conditions can only be reformed if the inherent dignity of offenders is rediscovered and placed at its centre. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Muslim Women in Australia, Britain and the United States: The Role of “Othering” and Biculturalism in Identity Formation.
- Author
-
Kabir, Nahid Afrose
- Subjects
SOCIAL conditions of Muslim women ,BICULTURALISM ,OTHERING ,MUSLIMS ,GROUP identity - Abstract
When Muslims migrate to Western countries, they bring their identity and culture with them. As they settle in their host countries, some Muslims encounter structural inequality, which is often revealed through media representation, unequal labour market status and racial profiling. Through the dynamics of structural inequality, some Muslim women remain doubly disadvantaged. Within their ethnic/religious community, Muslim women are expected to follow their cultural traditions and in the wider society their overtly Muslim appearance is often questioned. The discussion of identity formation in this paper is based on interviews with Muslim girls and women in Australia, Britain and the United States, aged between 15 and 30 years. Though the cultural and political contexts of these three countries are different, the practice of “othering” women have been similar. Through their life stories and narratives, I examine the formation of the participants’ identities. It was found that for many of these women their sense of identity shifted from single to multiple identities, thus revealing that identity formation was a flexible process that was affected by a variety of factors, including the relevance and importance of biculturalism in the women’s identity formation. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Preparing school principals in the Chilean scenario: lessons from Australia, England and the United States.
- Author
-
Aravena, Felipe
- Subjects
SCHOOL principals ,CAREER development ,EDUCATIONAL leadership ,SCHOOL administrators - Abstract
In this paper will be analysed three different educational contexts for preparing school principals such as Australia, England and the United States. This study analyses the professional development of academic leadership in the countries previously mentioned in order to apply the successful aspects to the Chilean education system, a system greatly need of improvement. The main finding of this study is that school administrator development is unproductive when the administrators themselves are not given the power to make decisions such as selecting teaching staff and managing finances. In this context, legal and bureaucratic structures in Chile act as barriers in consolidating and practicing these new ideas and recommendations. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Comparison of public health and preventive medicine physician specialty training in six countries: Identifying challenges and opportunities.
- Author
-
Peik, Samuel M., Mohan, Keerthi M., Baba, Toshiaki, Donadel, Morgane, Labruto, Andrea, and Loh, Lawrence C.
- Subjects
COMPARATIVE studies ,CURRICULUM ,EMPLOYMENT ,ENDOWMENTS ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,MEDICAL practice ,MEDICAL specialties & specialists ,STUDY & teaching of medicine ,PREVENTIVE health services ,PUBLIC health ,CERTIFICATION ,ACCREDITATION - Abstract
Rationale: Public health and preventive medicine (PHPM) has been recognized internationally as a physician specialty, but national parallels and differences exist between training contexts. This paper reviews PHPM training and employment in Canada, France, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the USA. Methods: Information gathered from relevant accreditation bodies and literature searches was used to create descriptive profiles of national training demographics and structure and a narrative outlining trends and challenges facing the specialty. Results: Notable similarities and differences exist between national contexts. Key themes were differences in training strategies and practice scope, specialty stakeholders, certification structure, and funding. Recognition challenges faced the specialty across all six countries. Other challenges included unclear competencies and training strategies and a need for PHPM specialists to highlight their role in combating population health threats. Additional differences existed between comparator countries on the structure of training, funding sources for training programs, availability of training posts, and linkages with other physician specialties. Conclusion: Highlighting these themes is a first step to fostering training collaborations between PHPM specialist physicians to augment transnational action on global public health challenges and also supports PHPM physician educators with innovative solutions from abroad that might address domestic specialty challenges. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Corporate governance and the expansion of the democratic franchise: beyond cross-country regressions.
- Author
-
Lamoreaux, Naomi R.
- Subjects
CORPORATE governance ,HISTORY of corporate law ,HISTORY of common law ,INCORPORATION ,HISTORY of civil law ,CORPORATIONS ,NINETEENTH century ,HISTORY - Abstract
This article documents the stark differences in the legal regulation of corporations in the United States compared to Britain and other Western European countries in the nineteenth century. The lack of alternative ways of obtaining ‘corporate’ advantages in common-law countries made the corporate form much more politically fraught than in civil-law countries. In the United States, general incorporation laws came after the attainment of universal white manhood suffrage and were part of a broader egalitarian movement to ensure that elites did not have advantages over everyone else. As a result, they were highly prescriptive, limiting corporations’ size and duration and also mandating specific governance rules. In Great Britain, by contrast, general incorporation laws were passed in a context where only a small fraction of the population could vote. Because the interests at stake in the legislation were those of the business and financial elite, British company law (like the less politically controversial statutes enacted on the European continent) left the rules governing corporations largely to the contracting parties themselves. This paper also argues that understanding the patterns in general incorporation laws requires scholars to move beyond cross-country regressions to study the political economic processes that unfolded in these different settings. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. To ‘enable our legal product to compete effectively with the transit market’: British American Tobacco's strategies in Thailand following the 1990 GATT dispute.
- Author
-
MacKenzie, Ross, Lee, Kelley, and LeGresley, Eric
- Subjects
TOBACCO products ,BUSINESS ,CRIME ,DOCUMENTATION ,FEDERAL government ,INDUSTRIES ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,HEALTH policy ,POLICY sciences ,PUBLIC health ,RESEARCH funding ,SALES personnel ,ECONOMIC competition ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
The opening of the Thai tobacco market, following action brought by the US Trade Representative under the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, is seen as a key case study of the tensions between trade and health policy. Interpretations of the dispute cast it, either as an example of how trade agreements undermine national policy-making, or how governments can adopt effective public health protections compliant with international trade rules. As a UK-based company, British American Tobacco has been regarded as peripheral to this dispute. This paper argues that its close monitoring of the illegal trade during this period, the role of smuggling in the company's global business strategy, and its management of the relative supply and pricing of legal and illegal products after market opening provide a fuller understanding of the interests and roles of transnational tobacco companies and the government in this dispute. The findings have important policy implications, notably the role of effective governance in countries facing pressure to open their tobacco sectors, need to better understand corporate-level activities within an increasingly globalised tobacco industry, and need to address the intertwined legal and illegal trade in implementing the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control Protocol to Eliminate Illicit Trade in Tobacco Products. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Normalizing suffering: A meta-synthesis of experiences of and perspectives on pain and pain management in nursing homes.
- Author
-
Vaismoradi, Mojtaba, Skär, Lisa, Söderberg, Siv, and Bondas, Terese E.
- Subjects
HOME nursing ,NURSES' aides ,NURSING care facilities ,PAIN ,PAIN management ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,META-synthesis - Abstract
Older people who live in nursing homes commonly suffer from pain. Therefore, relieving suffering among older people that stems from pain demands knowledge improvement through an integration of international knowledge. This study aimed to integrate current international findings and strengthen the understanding of older people's experiences of and perspectives on pain and pain management in nursing homes. A meta-synthesis study using Noblit and Hare's interpretative meta-ethnography approach was conducted. Empirical research papers from journals were collected from various databases. The search process and appraisal determined six articles for inclusion. Two studies were conducted in the US and one each in Iceland, Norway, the UK, and Australia. The older people's experiences of pain as well as perspectives on pain management from all involved (older people, their family members, and healthcare staff) were integrated into a theoretical model using three themes of "identity of pain," "recognition of pain," and "response to pain." The metaphor of "normalizing suffering" was devised to illustrate the meaning of pain experiences and pain management in nursing homes. Society's common attitude that pain is unavoidable and therefore acceptable in old age in society--among older people themselves as well as those who are responsible for reporting, acknowledging, and relieving pain--must change. The article emphasizes that pain as a primary source of suffering can be relieved, provided that older people are encouraged to report their pain. In addition, healthcare staff require sufficient training to take a person-centered approach towards assessment and management of pain that considers all elements of pain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Towards a deeper understanding of the social architecture of co-housing: evidence from the UK, USA and Australia.
- Author
-
Jarvis, Helen
- Subjects
COOPERATIVE housing ,URBAN planning - Abstract
This article draws attention to the micro-social practices that self-organising resident groups engage in over the years that it takes to build a co-housing community. This ‘social architecture’ is what distinguishes co-housing from superficially similar shared-space neighbourhoods. Co-housing developments are attracting renewed attention in Anglophone neo-liberal economies against a backdrop of crisis in conventional housing. Discussion draws on the views of co-housing residents from participatory research from the UK, USA and Australia. By engaging with a deeper understanding of group processes, shared visions and interpersonal capabilities – the ‘glue’ binding collaborative community relations – this paper challenges the priority usually given to the material characteristics of home and neighbourhood design. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Gender, careers and flexibility in consultancies in the UK and the USA: a multi-level relational analysis.
- Author
-
Donnelly, Rory
- Subjects
GENDER ,CONSULTING firms ,BUSINESS consultants ,OCCUPATIONAL adaptation ,WOMEN in the professions ,KNOWLEDGE workers ,EMPLOYEE rules ,WOMEN employees - Abstract
Management consultants are a core group of knowledge workers, and interest in their work and the organisational environment in which they operate has intensified. However, the role of policies at a national and organisational level in influencing gender regimes in this field of work remains unclear. This paper examines the organisation of careers and flexibility from the perspective of management consultants from the UK and US offices of two case study firms. The findings cast light on the role of macro- and meso-level policies together with the characteristics of the occupation and its client-focus in gendering careers and flexibility. These outcomes point to the need for the structures and policies supporting women and flexible working in these types of firms to be modified accordingly, particularly given that these firms make recommendations to clients nationally and internationally. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Young Somalis in Australia, the UK and the USA: An Understanding of Their Identity and their Sense of Belonging.
- Author
-
Kabir, Nahid Afrose
- Subjects
SOMALI diaspora ,NATIONAL character ,IMMIGRANTS ,SOMALIS ,MUSLIM youth ,TRANSNATIONALISM ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) - Abstract
The civil war in Somalia forced many Somalis to migrate to other countries where they had to adapt to new cultures and learn new languages. At the same time, they retained the identity and culture that were important to them throughout the process of migration. These first-generation Somali immigrants may feel strong allegiance to their country of origin along with a “sense of belonging” to their clan/kinship. They may also hope that one day they will be able to return “home”. But do second-generation Somalis feel the same way? This paper is based on 23 interviews with Somali immigrants in Australia, the UK and the USA. Out of the 23 participants, two were first-generation and the rest were second-generation. I seek to understand the participants' identity and their sense of belonging to their ethnicity and host country in the wake of pertinent moments of local, national and international anxiety. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Measuring macroprudential risk through financial fragility: a Minskian approach.
- Author
-
Tymoigne, Eric
- Subjects
FINANCIAL risk ,HOUSING & economics ,CASH flow ,FRAUD ,LOANS - Abstract
The paper uses the analytical framework developed by Hyman P. Minsky to construct an index of financial fragility for residential housing in the United States, the United Kingdom, and France. In the process, a clear difference is made between financial fragility, bubble, and fraud. The goal is to capture the growing interdependence between debt and asset price on the upside. The index is able to capture the rapid growth of financial fragility in residential housing from the early 2000s and an usually high level of financial fragility from 2004 in the United States. However, the construction of the index reveals that the data available are of limited quantity and quality for the purpose at hand. If the Financial Stability Oversight Council is serious about measuring systemic risk, better data about cash flows and loan underwriting should be collected in order to get an idea of the quality of leverage. This quality is measured by focusing on the means used to service debts instead of ability and willingness to service debt per se (i.e. credit risk). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Fear of the dark: a cross-cultural study into how perceptions of antisocial behaviour impact the acceptance and use of Twitter.
- Author
-
AlMuhanna, Nora, Hall, Wendy, and Millard, David E.
- Subjects
CULTURE ,STRUCTURAL equation modeling ,RESEARCH ,STATISTICS ,RESEARCH evaluation ,SOCIAL media ,MATHEMATICAL models ,RESEARCH methodology ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,FEAR ,DISCRIMINANT analysis ,ETHNOLOGY research ,COMPARATIVE studies ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,THEORY ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,ANTISOCIAL personality disorders ,TECHNOLOGY ,STATISTICAL correlation ,TRANSLATIONS - Abstract
This study investigates the impact of the perceptions of antisocial behaviour on the use of the social media platform Twitter. We extend the Unified Theory of Acceptance and Use of Technology (UTAUT) with the Perception of Antisocial Behaviour as a risk factor, and two supporting constructs: Strategic Self-Presentation and Protective Self-Presentation. We call this extended model Technology Acceptance and Use under Risk (TAUR). We investigate two groups via an online questionnaire, contrasting Anglophone countries (the UK, USA, and Canada, 200 responses), with Saudi Arabia (540 responses). In both cases the data shows that the Perception of Antisocial Behaviour impacts Twitter use, but not directly, rather it negatively impacts the influence of other factors such as Behavioural Intention – it also shows that this affects Anglophones more than Saudis. This indicates that future work should differentiate between different cultural groups, and different solutions may be needed to assuage users' fears in different parts of the world. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Unravelling dystonic pain; a mixed methods survey to explore the language of dystonic pain and impact on life.
- Author
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Amberg, Amanda, Crispin, Monique, Koeppenkastrop, Luis, Munday, Imogene, and McCambridge, Alana B.
- Subjects
MENTAL depression risk factors ,MCGILL Pain Questionnaire ,SENSES ,PAIN ,PAIN measurement ,RESEARCH methodology ,DYSTONIA ,COGNITION ,SURVEYS ,PAIN threshold ,SLEEP ,PHYSICAL activity ,SOCIAL isolation ,QUALITY of life ,AGE factors in disease ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,THEMATIC analysis ,DEMOGRAPHY ,ANXIETY - Abstract
Dystonia is a neurological disorder characterised by involuntary muscle contractions. Pain is the primary non-motor symptom, and limited studies have investigated how dystonic pain is experienced. This study aimed to investigate how people with isolated dystonia describe their pain and compare across subgroups of dystonia. Anonymous online survey via social media asking participants to describe their pain in their own words, complete the McGill Pain Questionnaire (MPQ), and answer demographic questions. Thematic analysis identified common themes and frequencies were calculated for demographic and MPQ data. One-hundred and sixty-five respondents were included (mean age 51 years, 85% female). Thematic analysis identified four major themes "Physical sensations", "Temporal features", "Destruction", "Impact on life" with several sub-themes. The most chosen MPQ descriptor was "exhausting" followed by "tight," "sharp," "pulling," and "aching". The most common descriptors showed similar prevalence across subgroups of dystonia. As no objective tests for pain exist, pain sufferers must use language to describe their pain experience. People with isolated dystonia used sensory words combined with metaphorical language to detail temporal features of pain, as well as destructive internal battles or feelings of external forces acting upon them, and the significant toll pain has on everyday life. Pain is a common and debilitating non-motor symptom for people living with dystonia and should be discussed in a persons treatment plan. Pain sufferers use language to discuss their pain experience with others and report they don't feel well understood by others including health professionals. People with dystonic pain commonly described physical sensations, temporal features, destructive forces, and the impact on life caused by their pain. Findings suggest the experience of pain with dystonia is varied and better pain management options for people with dystonia are needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Variability across countries for brain death determination in adults.
- Author
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Yuan, Fang, Li, Huiping, Pan, Tao, Wen, Wanxin, Wang, Lixin, and Wu, Shibiao
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BRAIN death ,PREDICTIVE tests ,ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY ,SOMATOSENSORY evoked potentials ,TRANSCRANIAL Doppler ultrasonography ,MEDICAL protocols ,RESEARCH funding ,SENSITIVITY & specificity (Statistics) - Abstract
The guidelines of brain death determination vary across countries. Our aim was to compare diagnostic procedures of brain death determination in adults among five countries. Consecutive comatose patients who received brain death determination from June 2018 to June 2020 were included. The technical specifications, completion rates and positive rates of brain death determination according to criteria of different countries were compared. The accuracy, sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value (PPV) and negative predictive value (NPV) of each ancillary test for the identification of brain death diagnosed according to different criteria were investigated. One hundred and ninety nine patients were included in this study. One hundred and thirty one (65.8%) patients were diagnosed with brain death according to French criteria, 132 (66.3%) according to Chinese criteria, and 135 (67.7%) according to criteria of USA, UK and Germany. The sensitivity and PPV of electroencephalogram (92.2% – 92.3%) and somatosensory evoked potential (95.5% – 98.5%) were higher than transcranial Doppler (84.3% – 86.0%). The criteria of brain death in China and France are comparatively stricter than in USA, UK and Germany. The discrepancy in brain death determination between clinical assessments and additional confirmation of ancillary tests is small. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. The use of Electronic Information Systems in social work. A scoping review of the empirical articles published between 2000 and 2019.
- Author
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Ylönen, Katri
- Subjects
PATIENT participation ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,SOCIAL workers ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,LITERATURE reviews ,SOCIAL case work - Abstract
Copyright of European Journal of Social Work is the property of Routledge and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Support for family diversity: a three-country study.
- Author
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Riggs, Damien W. and Due, Clemence
- Subjects
CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) ,CONFLICT (Psychology) ,FAMILIES ,GENETICS ,HEALTH attitudes ,HETEROSEXUALS ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RELIGION ,HUMAN sexuality ,SEX distribution ,SOCIAL support - Abstract
Objective: To understand levels of support for differences between families in terms of sexuality and mode of family formation across three countries.Background: Previous research has found that attitudes towards family diversity continue to improve over time, although differences remain.Methods : Subjects were 1605 people living in Australia, the United Kingdom or the United States who completed a questionnaire which sought to explore levels of support for a diverse range of family forms and modes of family formation.Results: Religiosity, political leanings and beliefs about the importance of genetic relatedness were all correlated with level of support. Gender of participant was a predictor of level of support. Cluster analysis indicated three clusters (unsupportive, neutral and supportive) for level of support, for which both sexuality and parent status were predictors.Conclusion: Findings highlight the normative status of reproductive heterosex, and demonstrate the considerable value accorded to genetic relatedness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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