
Imagining and critical reflection in autobiography: An odd couple in
... through artistic media. They interpreted their narrative once again in each telling. Besides having a cognitive function of explanation and understanding, interpretation of the life story also exercises a normative function. The interpreter expects to reach a self-understanding which measures up to ...
... through artistic media. They interpreted their narrative once again in each telling. Besides having a cognitive function of explanation and understanding, interpretation of the life story also exercises a normative function. The interpreter expects to reach a self-understanding which measures up to ...
Sample chapter - Centre for Research in Social Simulation
... Using computer simulation in the social sciences is a rather new idea – although the first examples date from the 1960s, simulation only began to be used widely in the 1990s – but one that has enormous potential. This is because simulation is an excellent way of modelling and understanding social pr ...
... Using computer simulation in the social sciences is a rather new idea – although the first examples date from the 1960s, simulation only began to be used widely in the 1990s – but one that has enormous potential. This is because simulation is an excellent way of modelling and understanding social pr ...
Representations, identity and resistance in communication
... Culture informs the ways we think and act in relation to everything – even the ways in which we think about communication. Hayakawa (1978) for example, points out how communication is represented in Western cultures, where the listener is often positioned as subordinate to the active and independen ...
... Culture informs the ways we think and act in relation to everything – even the ways in which we think about communication. Hayakawa (1978) for example, points out how communication is represented in Western cultures, where the listener is often positioned as subordinate to the active and independen ...
PS09 BP
... anaesthetists, or other trained and credentialed medical practitioners practising within their scope of practice, to conscious sedation in healthy patients, because of the inherent risks in deeper sedation and general anaesthesia. These risks include airway obstruction, respiratory depression and ca ...
... anaesthetists, or other trained and credentialed medical practitioners practising within their scope of practice, to conscious sedation in healthy patients, because of the inherent risks in deeper sedation and general anaesthesia. These risks include airway obstruction, respiratory depression and ca ...
The practice of medicine has undergone a seismic shift
... • Uncertainty about the role of the independent medical staff. • New payment methodologies are emerging that reward outcomes, patient satisfaction, and population medicine. • There is a projected physician shortage at a time of increasing demand for services. The Employment Trend Many health syst ...
... • Uncertainty about the role of the independent medical staff. • New payment methodologies are emerging that reward outcomes, patient satisfaction, and population medicine. • There is a projected physician shortage at a time of increasing demand for services. The Employment Trend Many health syst ...
Justice Criminology and Criminal
... and other disciplines intervene in public life, they need to do so in ways that remain embedded in academic formative intentions and processes, and retain an overriding interest in the production of knowledge. Yet this is not, as we hope to make clearer below, in any sense an argument that scholarsh ...
... and other disciplines intervene in public life, they need to do so in ways that remain embedded in academic formative intentions and processes, and retain an overriding interest in the production of knowledge. Yet this is not, as we hope to make clearer below, in any sense an argument that scholarsh ...
Welfare Reform in Alberta : Reflections on
... Introduction - Philosophy of Social Welfare “Social Welfare in Hong Kong is based on the premise that societies have an obligation to assist their members to overcome personal and social problems and to fulfill their role in life to the optimum extent in accordance with the particular social and cul ...
... Introduction - Philosophy of Social Welfare “Social Welfare in Hong Kong is based on the premise that societies have an obligation to assist their members to overcome personal and social problems and to fulfill their role in life to the optimum extent in accordance with the particular social and cul ...
COMMUNICATIONS - Stop TB Partnership
... what are the precise mechanisms/loci of responsibility at country level to take forward ACS programming?; Staffing and human resources: how can country level ACS staff be better qualified, more senior and more influential in design and implementation of national TB strategies?; Can we ensure that AC ...
... what are the precise mechanisms/loci of responsibility at country level to take forward ACS programming?; Staffing and human resources: how can country level ACS staff be better qualified, more senior and more influential in design and implementation of national TB strategies?; Can we ensure that AC ...
The Market as a Social Space - FA Hayek Program
... result of the interplay of actions of various individuals who are both competing against each other for resources and cooperating with one another in the provision and distribution of goods ...
... result of the interplay of actions of various individuals who are both competing against each other for resources and cooperating with one another in the provision and distribution of goods ...
NRP 2006 and Beyond
... What defines competence? e.g.To be able to successfully place the ETT in the trachea What is the benchmark which defines competence? e.g The ability to successfully intubate within 3 attempts > 90% of the time How do you evaluate using the benchmark definition? e.g. The sequential opportunities for ...
... What defines competence? e.g.To be able to successfully place the ETT in the trachea What is the benchmark which defines competence? e.g The ability to successfully intubate within 3 attempts > 90% of the time How do you evaluate using the benchmark definition? e.g. The sequential opportunities for ...
1 Conceptualizing a Mother-Baby
... makes it possible for mothers and babies to be together (Goal 1); however there is also widespread agreement that we also need to make it possible for mothers to successfully integrate their maternal and occupational roles (Goal 4) and that we need to advance women’s status and gender equity (Goal 5 ...
... makes it possible for mothers and babies to be together (Goal 1); however there is also widespread agreement that we also need to make it possible for mothers to successfully integrate their maternal and occupational roles (Goal 4) and that we need to advance women’s status and gender equity (Goal 5 ...
changing narratives and power dynamics in private standards in
... Through the unpacking of narratives, the paper contributes to emerging understanding of how standards and MSIs frame sustainability challenges in certain ways that may be judged narrow from the perspective of workers and smallholders and their wider communities. We raise questions about how standar ...
... Through the unpacking of narratives, the paper contributes to emerging understanding of how standards and MSIs frame sustainability challenges in certain ways that may be judged narrow from the perspective of workers and smallholders and their wider communities. We raise questions about how standar ...
Kelleher,M. and Poell,R. FACING UP TO THE LEARNING
... American/Anglo-Saxon economic principles of organisational effectiveness. They criticise the use of sophisticated cultural and psychological theories by modern management to maximise benefits for the company without paying a great deal of attention to ensuring personal learning benefits for employee ...
... American/Anglo-Saxon economic principles of organisational effectiveness. They criticise the use of sophisticated cultural and psychological theories by modern management to maximise benefits for the company without paying a great deal of attention to ensuring personal learning benefits for employee ...
PDF
... migration occurs) payoffs of all groups of workers, and, under certain sufficient conditions, increases welfare - even that of the workers who responded to the opportunity to migrate but ended up not migrating. Our analysis complements recent research on the “beneficial brain drain,” which demonstra ...
... migration occurs) payoffs of all groups of workers, and, under certain sufficient conditions, increases welfare - even that of the workers who responded to the opportunity to migrate but ended up not migrating. Our analysis complements recent research on the “beneficial brain drain,” which demonstra ...
The Connected Customer: The Changing Nature of Consumer and
... are also reflected in the content of the chapters in this book. First, business customers and consumers alike are increasingly connected to their suppliers and competitors, not only by traditional one-to-many mass marketing but also by one-to-one and many-to-many marketing techniques. This evolution ...
... are also reflected in the content of the chapters in this book. First, business customers and consumers alike are increasingly connected to their suppliers and competitors, not only by traditional one-to-many mass marketing but also by one-to-one and many-to-many marketing techniques. This evolution ...
Sciences Philosophy of the Social
... systems. This avoids the rigidity of the notion of a system as made up of its parts. Systems can be over-lapping and non-nested. These domains are not the only social systems (there are others at different levels of abstraction); but they are the ones that are the center of the analysis here. Second ...
... systems. This avoids the rigidity of the notion of a system as made up of its parts. Systems can be over-lapping and non-nested. These domains are not the only social systems (there are others at different levels of abstraction); but they are the ones that are the center of the analysis here. Second ...
Mindshaping
... imitation. Most non-human species are limited to acquiring new goals from observing the behavior of others, while selecting their own methods of accomplishing those goals. For example, many bird species can learn from observing conspecifics that food can be extracted from a particular location, but ...
... imitation. Most non-human species are limited to acquiring new goals from observing the behavior of others, while selecting their own methods of accomplishing those goals. For example, many bird species can learn from observing conspecifics that food can be extracted from a particular location, but ...
Gauteng Rural Development Strategy
... The Rural Development Framework, adopted by the Government in 1997, defined rural areas as “sparsely populated areas in which people farm or depend on natural resources, including villages and small towns that are dispersed throughout these areas. In addition they include large settlements in the fo ...
... The Rural Development Framework, adopted by the Government in 1997, defined rural areas as “sparsely populated areas in which people farm or depend on natural resources, including villages and small towns that are dispersed throughout these areas. In addition they include large settlements in the fo ...
Do Democracies Have Different Public
... A third tenet of formal voting theory is that the “form of the game is important” and not just a reaction to efficiency considerations. As explained by Myerson (1995), an important goal of game theoretic models of public choice is to predict how different political institutions would result in diffe ...
... A third tenet of formal voting theory is that the “form of the game is important” and not just a reaction to efficiency considerations. As explained by Myerson (1995), an important goal of game theoretic models of public choice is to predict how different political institutions would result in diffe ...
Dear Virgil
... The first road to phenomenology is well known. When talking to people in the social sciences who have a serious interest into phenomenology, their stories are often identical. After having read Berger and Luckmann, they got interested in Schütz, and they may even have looked at or studied the works ...
... The first road to phenomenology is well known. When talking to people in the social sciences who have a serious interest into phenomenology, their stories are often identical. After having read Berger and Luckmann, they got interested in Schütz, and they may even have looked at or studied the works ...
TBNA techniques - Bronchoscopy International
... Patient has COPD. Prebronchoscopy bronchodilators may be considered but are not as important as in asthmatics. ...
... Patient has COPD. Prebronchoscopy bronchodilators may be considered but are not as important as in asthmatics. ...
5. Change is Central to Sociology
... To my mind, this is to draw the wrong conclusion from a valid contention about the social being of the individual. The problem contained in the dilemma of the double character of society is not limited to specifying the relevant dichotomy; it is equally that of explaining the connections and interpe ...
... To my mind, this is to draw the wrong conclusion from a valid contention about the social being of the individual. The problem contained in the dilemma of the double character of society is not limited to specifying the relevant dichotomy; it is equally that of explaining the connections and interpe ...
Local Institutions and Citizenship Regimes in the Eastern Arctic
... working in the communities, while separate Eskimo councils were established to act, in theory, as advisory bodies. The Eskimo councils sent representatives to the settlement council meetings and would report back any news or messages to the Inuit community in the area. Typically, a number of committ ...
... working in the communities, while separate Eskimo councils were established to act, in theory, as advisory bodies. The Eskimo councils sent representatives to the settlement council meetings and would report back any news or messages to the Inuit community in the area. Typically, a number of committ ...
Similarity of attitudes model v8
... Opinion creation is a social process. Attitudes and behaviors are embedded within a complex system of social interactions and relations with other people. Social psychology in 50’s was interested in the subject of social influence in groups, resulting in theories and ideas of conformity (Asch, 1956) ...
... Opinion creation is a social process. Attitudes and behaviors are embedded within a complex system of social interactions and relations with other people. Social psychology in 50’s was interested in the subject of social influence in groups, resulting in theories and ideas of conformity (Asch, 1956) ...