The inward teacher: Milton's rhetoric of Christian liberty
In: SCN Editions and studies 2
In: Seventeenth-Century News
10 results
Sort by:
In: SCN Editions and studies 2
In: Seventeenth-Century News
In: The journal of popular culture: the official publication of the Popular Culture Association, Volume 23, Issue 3, p. 125-141
ISSN: 1540-5931
Food everywhere plays major roles in cultural reproduction. This chapter presents an ethnographic case study of food in the Micronesian island complex of Yap, where the indigenous food system of local cultigens & fish has long been the primary means through which the people express their cultural values. Further, women's preparation of starch foods such as taro & yams, complemented by men's production of fish & other protein foods, has been the core element of the Yapese political economy. Over the last 40 years, however, a growing wage economy has brought both social & economic change. The Yapese diet today includes many imported foods, especially rice, canned meats, & frozen poultry. Not only has the new diet resulted in diabetes, obesity, & hypertension, but cultural customs of almost daily sharing of food between households have diminished. Nonetheless, the Yapese have always used food to build their social world, & though the exchanges may be less frequent, & the foods may now include purchased goods such as rice, beer, & canned fish, the custom of food sharing continues. New to the culture are gatherings of family & friends at parties or picnics at the beach, with barbequed hot dogs & chicken. Thus the Yapese have developed strategies to maintain their cultural values & fulfill their social needs within the new economy. References. J. Stanton
INTRODUCTION: Mental health issues are on an exponential rise in Kashmir due to varied reasons including political instability, eco fragility, the growing lag in the provision of education and employment, and several other reasons. Impediments such as the overwhelming stigma and the cultural sensitivity associated with mental health issues both sustain and perpetuate mental ill health and also prevent any treatment and rehabilitation. This article describes the protocol of a research project, funded by the Indian Council of Medical Research, which aims to address this issue. AIM: To screen the population for mental health issues and to provide community-based intervention for the identified cases also to train community health workers for sustainable mental health support. METHODS: We will conduct a household survey using the Hopkins Symptom Checklist (HSCL-25) for the identification of the clients. A multi-stage random sampling shall be used to select the villages and the households from the marginalized communities. A sample of 500 respondents shall be screened using HSCL-25. Those who screen positive for mental health issues will be offered cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) by a qualified clinical psychologist. The research will be able to address the diagnosis of depression and anxiety-related cases and the subsequent intervention. Additionally, we will utilize the facilitator's manual for Mental Health Training Program for Community Health Workers to build sustainable mental health services in community settings. DISCUSSION: The study shall present a roadmap focusing on the indispensability of a comprehensive community-based intervention on mental health utilizing a non-pharmacological method. Assessing and analyzing the dynamics of mental health illness first hand, the study shall move ahead to offer a culturally tailored counseling program at the community level. The study also aims to highlight the role of the indigenous human resource (community health workers) and how its participation leads to a more ...
BASE
In: Journal of Poverty and Social Justice, Volume 27, Issue 3, p. 313-331
ISSN: 1759-8281
This study examined the potential influence of policies and practices on the ability of children from low-income families to participate fully in the school day. Pupils from six schools participated in 71 focus groups and revealed a range of barriers affecting their school experience: transport costs and limited support; clothing costs, stigma and enforcement of school dress codes; material barriers to learning at school and home; concerns about free school meals; missing out on school trips, clubs and events.
Findings on school uniform were an important catalyst towards a recent policy change in Scotland in increasing the school clothing grant.
In: Scottish affairs, Volume 25, Issue 4, p. 451-478
ISSN: 2053-888X
There is growing recognition that UK austerity measures impact adversely and more acutely on the most disadvantaged individuals, communities and groups. These changes may be understood as representing a shift of responsibility away from collectives to individuals. This paper explores these issues through the lens of risk analysis. Drawing on case study research from one neighbourhood in one Scottish local authority, it considers how the distinctive polity in Scotland, in the context of austerity, is redistributing social risk to vulnerable communities, groups and individuals. The local community is adapting, with varying degrees of success, to the risk transfers they are experiencing. Formal and informal risk mitigation measures are ameliorating, but not countering, these risks. The penultimate section of the paper is a collaborative endeavour. Drawing from a seminar discussion with key informants from academia, the Third Sector and government in Scotland, some of the implications of this 'risk shift' are discussed; particularly in relation to extending personalisation, stresses on social capital, changing understanding of securities, demographic developments, widening social divisions and alternatives to austerity economics.
In: McKendrick , J H , Asenova , D , MacRae , C , Reynolds , R , Egan , J , Hastings , A , Mooney , G & Sinclair , S 2016 , ' Conceptualising austerity in Scotland as a risk shift: ideas and implications ' , Scottish Affairs , vol. 25 , no. 4 , pp. 451-478 . https://doi.org/10.3366/scot.2016.0152
There is growing recognition that UK austerity measures impact adversely and more acutely on the most disadvantaged individuals, communities and groups. These changes may be understood as representing a shift of responsibility away from collectives to individuals. This paper explores these issues through the lens of risk analysis. Drawing on case study research from one neighbourhood in one Scottish local authority, it considers how the distinctive polity in Scotland, in the context of austerity, is redistributing social risk to vulnerable communities, groups and individuals. The local community is adapting, with varying degrees of success, to the risk transfers they are experiencing. Formal and informal risk mitigation measures are ameliorating, but not countering, these risks. The penultimate section of the paper is a collaborative endeavour. Drawing from a seminar discussion with key informants from academia, the Third Sector and government in Scotland, some of the implications of this 'risk shift' are discussed; particularly in relation to extending personalisation, stresses on social capital, changing understanding of securities, demographic developments, widening social divisions and alternatives to austerity economics.
BASE
In: Journal of family violence, Volume 37, Issue 8, p. 1353-1366
ISSN: 1573-2851
In: American journal of health promotion, Volume 34, Issue 3, p. 285-293
ISSN: 2168-6602
Purpose:Although there is evidence of associations between social media (SM) use and mental well-being among the general population, these associations among lesbian, gay, and bisexual (LGB) persons are poorly understood. This study compared the influence of SM experiences on mental well-being between LGB and non-LGB persons.Design and Setting:Online cross-sectional survey.Participants:National sample of 2408 US adults aged 18 to 30 years.Method:We asked participants to provide examples of when SM affected their well-being separately in good and bad ways. We coded, summed, and used rate ratios (RRs) to compare responses of LGB and non-LGB individuals. Thematically similar codes were described and grouped into categories.Results:Most responses described positive SM effects. However, of 6 codes that were significantly more frequent among LGB respondents, only social capital (RR = 1.58, 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.17-2.12) described a positive effect. Five codes described negative effects of SM for LGB users: negative emotional contagion (RR = 1.28, 95% CI, 1.04-1.58), comparison with others (RR = 1.28, 95% CI, 1.01-1.62), real-life repercussions (RR = 1.86, 95% CI, 1.18-2.94), envy (RR = 2.49, 95% CI, 1.48-4.19), and need for profile management (RR = 2.32, 95% CI, 1.07-5.03).Conclusion:These findings suggest that, for LGB persons, gaining social capital from SM is valuable for establishing and maintaining connections. Increased negative SM experiences may pose a risk for the mental well-being of LGB individuals.
In: Evidence & policy: a journal of research, debate and practice, Volume 14, Issue 2, p. 301-321
ISSN: 1744-2656
Background
Informing policy and practice with up-to-date evidence on the social determinants of health is an ongoing challenge. One limitation of traditional approaches is the time-lag between identification of a policy or practice need and availability of results. The Right Here Right Now (RHRN) study piloted a near-real-time data-collection process to investigate whether this gap could be bridged.
Methods
A website was developed to facilitate the issue of questions, data capture and presentation of findings. Respondents were recruited using two distinct methods – a clustered random probability sample, and a quota sample from street stalls. Weekly four-part questions were issued by email, Short Messaging Service (SMS or text) or post. Quantitative data were descriptively summarised, qualitative data thematically analysed, and a summary report circulated two weeks after each question was issued. The pilot spanned 26 weeks.
Results
It proved possible to recruit and retain a panel of respondents providing quantitative and qualitative data on a range of issues. The samples were subject to similar recruitment and response biases as more traditional data-collection approaches. Participants valued the potential to influence change, and stakeholders were enthusiastic about the findings generated, despite reservations about the lack of sample representativeness. Stakeholders acknowledged that decision-making processes are not flexible enough to respond to weekly evidence.
Conclusion
RHRN produced a process for collecting near-real-time data for policy-relevant topics, although obtaining and maintaining representative samples was problematic. Adaptations were identified to inform a more sustainable model of near-real-time data collection and dissemination in the future.