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RURAL HOSPITAL MEDICINE, VOCATIONAL, 1/B60
RURAL HOSPITAL MEDICINE, VOCATIONAL, 1/B60

... competence, the programme will have the flexibility to recognise prior knowledge and skills. Many trainees are likely to have large parts of both the clinical attachments and academic programme accredited to them when they enter the training programme. Trainees granted prior knowledge will be expect ...
Social Darwinism - Research
Social Darwinism - Research

... state of nature seems analogous to the competition for natural resources described by Darwin. Social Darwinism is distinct from other theories of social change because of the way it draws Darwin's distinctive ideas from the field of biology into social studies. Darwin, unlike Hobbes, believed that t ...
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Futures Traded - Cardiff University
Futures Traded - Cardiff University

... content on the other are not simple givens in human culture. Rather, they have a long history, in which a variety of habits of mind and cultural themes are interwoven. Above all, they involve a claim of ownership in which rights over the future are transferred from the divine to human beings in the ...
ISSN 0340-5443, Volume 64, Number 10
ISSN 0340-5443, Volume 64, Number 10

... advances of social network analysis (Krause et al. 2009). Social networks have local and global properties that can be understood by a set of metrics describing the connectedness, closeness, and centrality of individuals (Table 1). Such node and group-based metrics not only allow the classification ...
The Construction of Music as a Social Phenomenon
The Construction of Music as a Social Phenomenon

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Deadly Ethics?: The Impact of Social Darwinism on - H-Net
Deadly Ethics?: The Impact of Social Darwinism on - H-Net

... other concerns: was Nazism imbued with a coherent everything, including human consciousness, society, and moral vision or was it nihilistic and opportunistic, an- morality was a function of natural cause and effect. These imated only by the will to power? Does evolutionary natural laws could be know ...
Defining `living standards`
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... in its Living Standards Measure (LSM), the most widely used marketing research tool in South Africa (SAARF, 2012). Components of the LSM have changed over time, as certain aspects take higher priority and others become obsolete. For example, once upon a time, a VCR set merited placement on the LSM. ...
Third World Quarterly 16
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Chapter 4: Economic growth and chronic poverty
Chapter 4: Economic growth and chronic poverty

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pdf format - Cardiff University
pdf format - Cardiff University

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... dominant in academic sociology and mainstream academic fields. The social world is treated as a place of concrete reality, characterized by uniformities and regularities which can be understood and explained in terms of causes and effects. Given these assumptions, the individual is regarded as takin ...
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... Due to the sparser populations in rural areas, the populations are trending increasingly older because of the outmigration of rural youth and aging baby boomer population. While rural populations are older, certain rural areas also have a higher presence of different minority groups within the area. ...
Sample Exam Questions/Chapter 16 1. Suppose an emissions tax is
Sample Exam Questions/Chapter 16 1. Suppose an emissions tax is

... C) Sam buys a dilapidated house, renovates it, and increases the property values of all houses in the neighborhood. D) Liquid waste from Sam's chicken farm flows into a neighbor's well water. 17. Suppose each person in a community had to pay for his or her own education from kindergarten through hig ...
LeadingAge Ziegler 100 survey
LeadingAge Ziegler 100 survey

... were added to help participants accurately respond to the survey questions. The questions were aimed to gauge the adoption of various technologies at the organization-level, rather than within each individual community or campus. Please note that the technology adoption rate across various communiti ...
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... The most conventional view of the Nordic model is derived from the classic conflict between labor and capital. It assumes that the model is built on a basic compromise between the interests of employers and employees, in which a strong labor movement has pressed employers to make political and econo ...
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What is the difference between social and natural sciences?

... Technical boundaries are related to the inability to conduct precise measurements. These boundaries have always been research foci themselves, and were pushed through the invention of the telescope, the microscope, the geiger counter and many other measurement instruments. Financial boundaries play ...
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here - NHS Education for Scotland

... transfer of care into community settings (ref) The National Audit Office’s report on managing admissions to hospital with the emphasis on making sure patients are treated in the most appropriate setting and in a timely manner to take the pressure off emergency hospital admissions (ref) A need to pro ...
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4.1 Up the Creek Without a Paddle? Exploring the Terrain for

... termed policy research into social and educational questions, including youth affairs (though almost exclusively into un/employment and training issues). Since youth affairs remains a policy brief for which the Commission has no explicit formal mandate as such, it has been difficult to generate an i ...
End of Life Care
End of Life Care

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Introduction
Introduction

... disabilities, and more. Many feminists have argued that the social forces that form us, and their effects, cannot be decomposed into discrete elements (Lugones and Spelman 1983; Spelman 1988; Crenshaw 1989; Harris 1990). Is it possible to give a unified account of gender or race, while still affirmi ...
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Community development

The United Nations defines Community development as ""a process where community members come together to take collective action and generate solutions to common problems."" It is a broad term given to the practices of civic leaders, activists, involved citizens and professionals to improve various aspects of communities, typically aiming to build stronger and more resilient local communities.Community development seeks to empower individuals and groups of people with the skills they need to effect change within their communities. These skills are often created through the formation of large social groups working for a common agenda. Community developers must understand both how to work with individuals and how to affect communities' positions within the context of larger social institutions.Community development as a term has taken off widely in anglophone countries i.e. the US, UK, Australia, Canada and New Zealand and other countries in the Commonwealth. It is also used in some countries in eastern Europe with active community development associations in Hungary and Romania. The Community Development Journal, published by Oxford University Press, since 1966 has aimed to be the major forum for research and dissemination of international community development theory and practice.Community development approaches are recognised internationally. These methods and approaches have been acknowledged as significant for local social, economic, cultural, environmental and political development by such organisations as the UN, WHO, OECD, World Bank, Council of Europe and EU.
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