Social exclusion, especially social exclusion in old age, represents an area of interest at European level, in the context of demographic transformations. At national level, studies and research on social exclusion in old age are scarce, although the older population is more likely to be at risk of social exclusion. The article presents the results of a quantitative research methodology based on a questionnaire applied to older people of age 65 years and over. The research was conducted during November - December 2021 and the survey was representative at national level with a margin of error of ±3.5%. The aim of this article is to analyse the perceptions of older persons regarding the access and quality of social and healthcare services accessed, and thus, to gain a better understanding on how these types of services could contribute to social inclusion. Data interpretation was made using techniques of descriptive statistical analysis. Results emphasize that access to social and healthcare services are essential in old age. Perceptions of older persons highlight the need for structural changes at national level, so that social and healthcare services could make a real contribution to reducing social exclusion.
This article demonstrates that making art in conjunction with story-telling is a method which can elucidate the everyday working practices of social work practitioners. To date, the relationship between art and social workers has rarely been noted, in part because visual studies have not attended to the lived experiences of social workers. In this paper, we draw on an empirical study undertaken in England which invited social workers to use art to tell their stories of being a social worker and doing social work. Their artefacts produced powerful visual and aural accounts of practice. They were displayed at the People's History Museum, Manchester, in the first social work exhibition of this kind, making visible to members of the public the hidden, lesser known and understood aspects of practice. In this paper, we demonstrate how particular social work structures can rupture relationships between social workers and the families they work with. In doing so, we build on the sociology of art, work and interaction by showing how visual narratives can challenge, and sometimes alter, previously held assumptions and beliefs.
This article discusses three recent books that analyze patterns of political conflict and regime change in postcolonial Asia and Africa using a social forces approach to political analysis. The social forces tradition, originally pioneered by Barrington Moore, studies the social origins and political consequences of struggles between social groups whose members hold shared identities and interests. The works under review examine, respectively, the varied regime trajectories of Southeast Asia's states, divergent regime outcomes in India and Pakistan, and the institutional origins of social cleavages and political conflict in sub-Saharan Africa. Although historically the social forces paradigm has focused on conflict between class actors, the author argues that these three works fruitfully extend the social forces approach to encompass struggles between nonclass social groups, including those defined along the lines of ethnicity, religion, nationality, region, and family. This pluralized version of the social forces approach is better suited to studying patterns of regime change in Asia and Africa, where the paradigm has been less frequently applied than it has been to cases in Europe and Latin America.
Central America has come a long way both in terms of economic and political stability. Increasingly the region is focusing on implementing productivity-enhancing reforms as well as supporting reductions in poverty and inequality. This report analyzes recent trends in public social spending in Central America from 2007 to 2014, conducts international benchmarking, examines measures of the effectiveness and efficiency of social spending, and discusses the quality of selected institutions influencing this spending. We examine total social spending, as well as detailing its four components: public spending on the education, health, and social protection and labor (SPL) sectors. In analyzing public social spending, the report addresses three crucial policy issues: (a) how to improve the coverage and redistributional incidence of public social spending; (b) how to enhance the effectiveness and efficiency of public social spending; and (c) how to strengthen the institutions governing public spending in the social sector. While based heavily on a series of recent analytical social spending studies in six countries in the subregion—Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, and Panama—this report also takes a broader regional perspective and includes some comparisons to countries in other regions.
In recent years researchers have gravitated to social media platforms, especially Twitter, as fertile ground for empirical analysis of social phenomena. Social media provides researchers access to trace data of interactions and discourse that once went unrecorded in the offline world. Researchers have sought to use these data to explain social phenomena both particular to social media and applicable to the broader social world. This paper offers a minireview of Twitter-based research on political crowd behavior. This literature offers insight into particular social phenomena on Twitter, but often fails to use standardized methods that permit interpretation beyond individual studies. Moreover, the literature fails to ground methodologies and results in social or political theory, divorcing empirical research from the theory needed to interpret it. Rather, papers focus primarily on methodological innovations for social media analyses, but these too often fail to sufficiently demonstrate the validity of such methodologies. This minireview considers a small number of selected papers; we analyze their (often lack of) theoretical approaches, review their methodological innovations, and offer suggestions as to the relevance of their results for political scientists and sociologists.
AbstractThe article discusses social innovation from a rural development perspective. The central questions addressed are: What are social innovations and why are they important for rural development? How can we gain more insights into the role and functioning of social innovations in rural development? Drawing on different approaches to conceptualise social innovations pursued in economy, management, sociology, psychology and regional economics, planning and development studies, the article outlines the central aspects on which the concept is built. Based on these insights a proposal for a concise basic definition of social innovations is given and a model of the social innovation process is introduced. Reasoning that a lack of social innovation is often one of the strongest restraints of the vitality and further development of rural communities in developed, democratic, capitalist, industrial countries, the second part orf the article highlights the need to put a stronger focus on social innovations in future rural development research. Building on these insights, the third part addresses open research questions and explains why an actor‐oriented network approach seems to be a promising potential methodological way to approach social innovations in rural development research.
"Good questionnaire design and high quality questionnaire translations are vital for data comparability in cross-national survey research. With the aim to ensure comparability and prevent unintended deviations, major academically-driven studies such as the International Social Survey Programme (ISSP) or the European Social Survey (ESS) annotate the source questionnaire specifically for translation, thus providing guidance on what needs to be considered in translation. This paper studies these translation annotations, a topic having received scant attention in research so far. The goal of this paper is to raise awareness on this special support structure in comparative research as well as on potential pitfalls in questionnaire translation. To this end, first, translation annotations, mainly from the ESS and the ISSP, are analyzed with a view to setting up a classification of translation annotations. Second, examples of annotation types are presented together with what questhey meant for translation. Third, merits of annotations and potential criticism are discussed. Fourth, guidelines are ventured for writing translation annotations as well as for working with them. Fifth, research fields are listed in order to further explore the issue of translation annotations and its impact on translation and comparability." (author's abstract)
Unlike the present age where recording and printing devices are taken for granted, disciples ofgrandmasters, such as Buddha, Moses, Jesus, Socrates and Muhammad, had to spend an enormous effort to preserve the teachings of their masters in the form of oral and/or written narrativ in order to relay it to the future generations. These efforts usually resulted in the creation of transmission networks for the dissemination of narrative, referred collectively by this paper as narrative social structure. This paper focuses on one such narrath-e structure, the hadith transmission network of Prophet Muhammad (571-632 AD). Hadith, which literally means narrative about Prophet Muhammad, had been widely transmitted orally and/or in writing, and remained as the only currency circulated in the transmission network. From the demise of the Prophet onward, a social structure and a critical approach developed around hadith narration, which transformed it from a conventional narrative into a "science " with formal rules and terminology. The political, religious, and legal importance of hadith in social life reinforced this process. The size of the network grew as Islam spread to other nations, but it also changed with the way hadith hadith became transmitted. In particular, the network began to shrink as written narrative gradually triumphed over the oral narrative, following the fate of traditional oral narratives in other parts of the world. The old tension between memorizing and writing hadith was resolved in favor of the latter, parallel to the spreading institutionalization of education which canonized certain reliable hadith collections. The data is deratedfrom classical sources mainly from Dhahabi (d. 1347AD) and Suyuti (d. 1505 .-ID). The analysis of the transmission structure as a narrative social structure reveals the interplay betM'een narrative and social structure as well as other interesting diffusion patterns in a time-stratified network.
In urban areas, atmospheric pollution represents a major threat to human health. The accurate characterization of this threat relies centrally on the quality of exposure assessment. It also requires assessment of other factors sharing the same sources and also possibly impacting health, such as noise. Fine-scale exposure assessment of air pollution levels may allow identifying spatial contrasts. Such spatial variations may lead to social differences in the distribution of the health impact of these pollutants.The general aims of the PhD were: 1. To study the possibility to model ultrafine particles distribution in urban areas and assess the correlation of ultrafine particles levels with road traffic noise; 2. To assess the risk incurred by air pollution exposure with a fine-scale modelling approach and investigate the potential socio-economic disparities in health burden induced by particulate matter; 3. To investigate the health benefits expected from hypothetical scenarios of reduction of air pollution levels at the urban scale.The first aim relies on Tri-tabs project, conducted in three European cities (Basel, Girona, Grenoble). Measurements during 20 minutes of outdoor noise and traffic, but not of UFP, were strongly reproducible over durations of a couple of days or months. In these areas, on the short-term, noise levels and UFP concentrations exhibited relatively moderate correlations, which may allow adjustment for mutual confounding in epidemiological studies, thus allowing to disentangle their possible short-term health effects.The second aim introduces health effects, and focuses on the longer term. Risk assessment studies often ignore within-city spatial variations of air pollutants. In Grenoble and Lyon areas (0.4 and 1.2 million inhabitants, respectively) in 2012, PM2.5 exposure was estimated on a 10×10 m grid by coupling a dispersion model to fine-scale data on population density. Outcomes were mortality, lung cancer and term low birth weight incidences. The numbers of cases attributable to air pollution were estimated overall and stratifying areas according to the European Deprivation Index, a measure of social deprivation. Estimations were repeated assuming spatial homogeneity of air pollutants within city. The proportion of cases attributable to air pollution was in the 3-8% range for mortality and 9–43% range for term low birth weight. In Grenoble, 6.8% (95% CI: 3.1–10.1%) of incident lung cancer cases were attributable to air pollution. The impact was underestimated by 8 to 20% when background monitoring stations were used to assess exposure, compared to fine-scale dispersion modeling. Health impact was highest in neighborhoods with intermediate to higher social deprivation.Several countries across Europe have implemented air pollution regulation policies, or low emission zones, France being an exception. We estimated the health impact of air pollution under different scenarios of reduction of fine particulate matter concentrations. Scenarios targeting a reduction in the PM2.5 annual averages by 5% led to a 10% decrease of the health burden, while actions aiming at only reducing the exposure of the population exposed above the 90th percentile did not yield a significant reduction of the health burden (around 1%).In conclusion, we have shown that short-term measurements cannot be used to model ultrafine particles levels in urban areas; we were among the first to rely on a fine-scale exposure model for estimating the health impact of air pollution, and quantify its impact on term low birth weight. Our estimations showed that background air quality monitoring stations used classically in France for health impact assessment studies tend to underestimate exposure, compared to a spatially-resolved dispersion model. We have provided an estimate of the air pollution decrease required to obtain a significant reduction of the health impact of air pollutants in urban areas. ; En zone urbaine, la pollution atmosphérique représente un enjeu majeur de santé publique. La caractérisation du risque associé dépend fortement de la qualité de l'estimation des expositions. Si les études étiologiques s'appuient maintenant souvent sur des modèles ayant une résolution spatiale fine, les études d'impact sanitaire (EIS) reposent encore généralement sur des approches avec une faible résolution spatiale. Ces contrastes spatiaux pourraient entraîner des inégalités sociales dans la distribution de l'impact sanitaire des polluants atmosphériques. D'autres facteurs, et en particulier le bruit, partagent les mêmes sources et ont potentiellement des effets sur la santé, et devraient aussi être pris en compte dans les études épidémiologiques. Les objectifs étaient : 1. D'étudier la possibilité de modéliser la distribution des particules ultrafines (UFP) en milieu urbain, et d'évaluer la corrélation entre UFP et bruit ; 2. De réaliser une EIS des particules fines avec une résolution spatiale fine, et d'investiguer les inégalités socio-économiques dans le fardeau de maladie généré par les particules ; 3. D'estimer les bénéfices sanitaires de scénarios théoriques de réduction de la pollution de l'air à l'échelle urbaine.Le premier objectif fait partie du projet Tri-tabs, conduit dans les villes de Bâle, Gérone et Grenoble. Des mesures de 20 min du bruit routier et du trafic, mais pas des UFP, étaient fortement reproductibles sur plusieurs mois. Sur des mesures simultanées, la corrélation entre le bruit et les UFP était modérée, ce qui ouvre la possibilité d'un ajustement réciproque pour de futures études épidémiologiques, permettant ainsi de démêler leurs potentiels effets court terme.Le second objectif se focalise sur le long terme. La plupart du temps, les études d'impact sanitaire ne prennent pas en compte les variations spatiales des concentrations en polluants en zone urbaine. Dans les agglomérations de Grenoble et Lyon en 2012, l'exposition aux PM2.5 a été estimée à une échelle de 10×10 m en combinant un modèle de dispersion à des données de densité de population. Les événements de santé retenus étaient la mortalité ainsi que l'incidence du cancer du poumon (Grenoble) et des petits poids des naissances à terme. Les estimations de l'impact sanitaire ont été répétées en considérant les concentrations en polluants de façon homogène au sein de chaque agglomération. La proportion de cas attribuables à la pollution de l'air était de 3–8% pour la mortalité et 9–43% pour les petits poids de naissances à terme. A Grenoble, 6,8% des nouveaux cas de cancer du poumon étaient attribuables à la pollution de l'air. L'impact était sous-estimé de 8 à 20% lorsque les stations de mesure de fond étaient utilisées. Le risque attribuable était plus important dans les quartiers dont le niveau de défaveur sociale était intermédiaire ou légèrement au-delà.Nous avons estimé l'impact de scénarios de réduction des niveaux de particules fines. Les scénarios visant une réduction de ces niveaux de 5% permettraient une réduction d'environ 10% des décès attribuables aux particules, tandis que les actions visant à réduire uniquement la pollution chez les 10% d'habitants les plus exposés ne procureraient qu'un gain sanitaire marginal (environ 1%). En conclusion, nous avons montré que les mesures à court terme ne peuvent pas être utilisées pour modéliser les UFP en zone urbaine ; nous avons été parmi les premiers à réaliser une EIS s'appuyant sur un modèle de dispersion à résolution spatiale fine, et à avoir intégré les petits poids de naissances. Nos estimations ont montré que les stations de fond utilisées couramment en France pour les EIS tendent à sous-estimer les expositions, comparées à un modèle de dispersion. Notre estimation de la réduction des niveaux de particules fines nécessaire pour atteindre une réduction significative de l'impact sanitaire de la pollution de l'air en zone urbaine pourrait servir de guide à des politiques publiques.
"India's global success in the Information Technology industry has also prompted the growth of neoliberalism and the re-emergence of the middle class in contemporary urban areas, such as Bangalore. In her significant study, BITS of Belonging, Simanti Dasgupta shows that this economic shift produces new forms of social inequality while reinforcing older ones. She investigates this economic disparity by looking at IT and water privatization to explain how these otherwise unrelated domains correspond to our thinking about citizenship, governance, and belonging. Dasgupta's ethnographic study shows how work and human processes in the IT industry intertwine to meet the market stipulations of the global economy. Meanwhile, in the recasting of water from a public good to a commodity, the middle class insists on a governance and citizenship model based upon market participation. Dasgupta provides a critical analysis of the grassroots activism involved in a contested water project where different classes lay their divergent claims to the city"--
Verfügbarkeit an Ihrem Standort wird überprüft
Dieses Buch ist auch in Ihrer Bibliothek verfügbar:
Partijska su tijela tražila utvrđivanje okolnosti donošenja Deklaracije o nazivu i položaju hrvatskog književnog jezika, sankcioniranje odgovornih te javno distanciranje od njezina sadržaja. U cilju provedbe partijskih zaključaka u većini su institucija održani posebni sastanci. Društvo književnika Hrvatske u dva je navrata raspravljalo o Deklaraciji. Najprije je 29. i 30. ožujka aktiv komunista Društva osudio njezin sadržaj te je naposljetku 4. travnja osnovna organizacija Saveza komunista Društva izrekla stegovne mjere. Vođene su rasprave i na Filozofskom fakultetu, i to najprije u osnovnoj organizaciji Saveza komunista, a potom i na Savjetu Fakulteta. U Matici hrvatskoj, osim jednoga sastanka zatvorena za javnost, s kojega se izišlo s priopćenjem da će Upravni i Nadzorni odbor Matice hrvatske podnijeti kolektivnu ostavku, nije bilo većih rasprava. Tiskovine su iz Zadra kratko izvijestile da je osnovna organizacija Saveza komunista Filozofskoga fakulteta kaznila dvojicu potpisnika. Osim očitovanja o načinu usvajanja Deklaracije nije bilo većih rasprava u institucijama potpisnicama JAZU-a, Staroslavenskom institutu i Društvu književnih prevodilaca, s tim da su njihovi članovi partijci stegovno odgovarali u drugim institucijama, većinom u Društvu književnika Hrvatske i Filozofskom fakultetu. Partijska su tijela negativno reagirala i na pojavu Predloga za razmišljanje skupine srbijanskih književnika, članova Udruženja književnika Srbije. Nakon negativnih partijskih reakcija održana je sjednica aktiva komunista i izvanredna skupština Udruženja. Inicijatorima su izrečene kazne. Članak s održanih sjednica donosi sadržaj usvojenih zaključaka i najzanimljivije dijelove izlaganja pojedinaca. Poseban je naglasak stavljen na izlaganja glavnih sudionika u donošenju Deklaracije i Predloga. ; The Party wanted to unveil the circumstances how the Declaration on the Name and Status of the Croatian Literary Language was signed. It asked for the sanctioning of the responsible ones and public distancing from its content. In order to implement the Party conclusions, in the majority of the signatory institutions special meetings were held. The Association of the Writers of Croatia discussed the Declaration twice. First, on the 29th and 30th March the communists of the Association denounced its content.Then on the 4th of April the ground organization of the League of Communists proclaimed the disciplinary measures. Discussions were led at the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, first in the ground organization of the League of Communists and then at the Faculty Council. In Matica hrvatska (Matrix Croatica) there were no larger discussions, except for one meeting that was closed for the public and that issued a statement that the Directors' Board and the Supervisory Board would sign in a collective resignation. The Zadar press gave a short report that the ground organization of the League of Communists of the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences had punished two signatories. Except for the professing of the way how the Declaration should be implemented there were no other larger discussions in the signatory institutions of the Yugoslav Academy of Sciences and Arts, in the Old Slavic Institute and Literary Translators' Association. Their members, who were the Party members, underwent disciplinary measures in other institutions, mainly in the Croatian Writers' Association and at the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences. Ther Party bodies had a negative reaction also to the appearance of The Suggestion for Thinking by a group of Serbian writers, members of the Serbia Writers' Association. After negative Party reactions a communists meeting was held as well as a special, non-regular assembley of the Association. The initiators were punished. The paper brings the content of the conclusions and the most interesting parts of the talks from these meetings. A special emphasis is put onto the talks of the main protagonists of the Declaration and the Suggestion.
This discussion paper was presented during an internal seminar of the GUARDINT Project. GUARDINT is a research project focused on the democratic oversight of intelligence agencies, and in particular of their surveillance activities. At the heart of our work is a tension between democratic values of publicity and transparency, and the rationalities of the reason of state and attached practices like secrecy. The goal of this discussion paper is to bring to light this tension and mobilize political theories on which to ground our joint work and our conceptualization of oversight and democracy.
This book challenges conventional wisdom by revealing an extensive and heterogeneous community of foreign businesses in Australia before 1914. Multinational enterprise arrived predominantly from Britain, but other sender nations included the USA, France, Germany, New Zealand, and Japan. Their firms spread out across Australia from mining and pastoral communities, to portside industries and CBD precincts, and they operated broadly across mining, trading, shipping, insurance, finance, and manufacturing. They were a remarkably diverse population of firms by size, organisational form, and longevity. This is a rare study of the impact of multinationals on a host nation, particularly before World War One, and that focuses on a successful resource-based economy. Deploying a database of more than 600 firms, supported by contemporary archives and publications, the work reveals how multinational influence was contested by domestic enterprise, other foreign firms, and the strategic investments of governments in network industries. Nonetheless, foreign agency -- particularly investment, knowledge and entrepreneurship -- mattered in the economic development of Australia in the nineteenth as well as the twentieth centuries. This book will be of interest to students and researchers in Australian and international economic and business history, the history of economic growth and scholars of international business. Simon Ville is Senior Professor of Economic and Business History and Associate Dean Research at the University of Wollongong, Australia. He is a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences in Australia and will be the Whitlam-Fraser Professor of Australian Studies at Harvard University in 2022-3. He has written widely on big business, foreign investment, the rural and resource industries, the natural history trade, social capital, transport history, and the Vietnam War. David Merrett is a Professor Emeritus at the University of Melbourne. He has published widely in Australian economic and business history. His current interests include the rise of big business and the internationalisation of the Australian economy in the twentieth century. He has numerous publications on foreign firms in Australia, notably ANZ Bank (1985), but also on Australian firms as multinationals.
Part I: About Environmental Education -- Chapter 1 - Training and dissemination about the Environment: keys to impulse the abiotic component of Environmental Education -- Chapter 2 Educating to deliver environmentally focused social innovation -- Chapter 3 - Environmental education for sustainable development: working for fundamental rights -- Chapter 4 - Nature as a teaching resource and the nature of learning -- Part II: Environmental Education and it´s Teaching -- Chapter 5 - The importance of Nature-based solutions to enhance Cabo Verde's Environment -- Chapter 6- Development of Scientific Literacy and the impact of environmental attitudes of citizens in a geological natural space -- Chapter 7- A PBL approach to Environmental Education through a Field Trip and a Science Centre Visit -- Chapter 8- Living labs in higher education: sustainable buildings technologies -- Chapter 9 - What is doing Latin America regarding the teaching of Nature-based solutions to boost Environmental Education? -- Chapter 10 - Lessons learned from including aquaponic experiments into five different tertiary education curricula -- Chapter 11 - Recommendations for promoting Environmental Education through Nature-based solutions at Turkish Higher Education Institutes -- Part III: Environmental Education and Social Engagement -- Chapter 12 - Bees and Society: native biodiversity as a strategy for environmental education based on the processes of nature -- Chapter 13- Perceptions about Sustainable Development of visitants in an Environmental Education Natural Park -- Chapter 14 - Start Park project: co-designing green-blue infrastructures to build resilient communities to climate change -- Chapter 15 - Societal embedding in geoparks: a case study in Portugal -- Chapter 16 - Environmental Education in Naturtejo UNESCO Global Geopark (Portugal): a nature-based approach -- Part IV: – Environmental Education and Nature-Based Solutions -- Chapter 17- Green Roof and walls technology standardisation and market across Europe -- Chapter 18- How Nature-Based Solutions can Contribute to Enhance Circularity in Cities -- Chapter 19- Nature-based solutions to promote environmental education on integral ecological sanitation -- Chapter 20 - Nature-based solutions for environmental education in the East Asian context -- Chapter 21- Decarbonizing the European energy sector: frameworks, examples and how education plays a key role -- Chapter 22- Nature-based solutions for water pollution control: promoting environmental education through case studies.
Zugriffsoptionen:
Die folgenden Links führen aus den jeweiligen lokalen Bibliotheken zum Volltext:
"Get your head out of your @* & . Snowflake. Stupid liberal. Ignorant conservative. There is much discussion today about the decline in civility in American politics. Couple this phenomenon with the fracturing and hardening of political attitudes, and one might wonder how deliberative democracy, much less political civility, can survive if we can't even talk to people with whom we disagree. Insults are thrown, feelings are hurt, and family and friends, at best, decide to avoid political discussions altogether. At worst, arguments cause social groups to break apart. How can deliberative democracy survive if we can't even speak to people with whom we disagree? As this book argues, we need a new way to discuss politics, one that encourages engagement and room for dissent. One way to approach this challenge is to consider how public opinion changes. By and large, public opinion is sticky and change occurs very slowly; one exception to this is the more recent and significant change in public opinion toward LGBTQ rights and marriage equality. The marriage equality movement is considered one of the great success stories of political advocacy, but why was it so successful? Brian F. Harrison argues that one of the most powerful reasons is that a broad range of marriage equality advocates were willing to engage in contentious and sometimes uncomfortable discussion about their opinions on the matter. They started everyday conversations that got people out of their echo chambers and encouraged them to start listening and thinking. But the question remains, if simple conversation can work in one arena, can it work in others? And how and where does one approach such conversation? Drawing from social psychology, communication studies, and political science, as well as personal narratives and examples, A Change is Gonna Come reflects on the last fifteen years of LGBTQ advocacy to propose practical ways to approach informal political conversation on a variety of contentious issues. This book seeks to answer the seemingly simple question: how can we be politically civil to each other again?"--Publisher's description