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Managing austerity : emotional containment in a residential children's home under threatMelaugh, Brian Thomas January 2016 (has links)
The aim of the study was to explore the process and practice of leading change in residential child care and assess the efficacy of ‘emotional containment’ in this context. Residential child care in Ireland is experiencing significant change. Change is an emotional experience for staff and leadership is named as pivotal in organisational change. However, there is gap in the literature because leadership and organisational change theory does not fully fit with the relational nature of residential child care. The study is responding to this gap in literature and employs a qualitative case study to explore the impact of organisational change on residential child care, strategies used by leaders to manage the emotional impact of change and identify what practices support emotional containment. Central to the study was a nine-month observation of a child care organisation (Liffey View). Funding reductions in response to austerity emerged as the change event having the greatest impact, strategies to manage funding cuts (team restructuring, reductions in salary) evoked emotions of loss, despair and anger towards external funding bodies. In fact, austerity challenged the very survival of Liffey View Children’s home. The findings highlight how emotional containment supported the organisation to manage the impact of austerity. Containment is linked to the capacity of residential leaders to hold and work with emotion, providing structures (e.g. team meetings) that allow teams to make sense of emotion and finding ways to influence relationships with funding agencies. However, containment on its own is not sufficient to lead change, learning gained through containment needs to be linked to action and the theory of emotional containment is enhanced by integrating thinking from leadership and strategy. A framework integrating thinking from emotional containment and wider management theory is offered as a tool for leading change and for leadership development in residential child care.
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Projective identification as a form of communication in the therapeutic relationship: A case studyCrawford, Michelle January 1996 (has links)
Magister Artium (Psychology) - MA(Psych) / This dissertation reviews the construct of projective identification and the
ways in which it is used as a powerful form of communication by the
patient within the therapeutic relationship. The particular model of
projective identification explored in this dissertation is that of Bion (1962)_
who, through his model of containment, brought the subtle interactive
processes between the mother and infant into the foreground. This has
been used as a metaphor for the therapeutic relationship. Some of the
theoretical constructs central to an understanding of projective
identification are introduced and discussed. Clinical case material from
psychodynamic child psychotherapy is used in an attempt to illustrate the
patient's use of and therapist's experience of projective identification. The
method used is the single case study and material is drawn from 14
sessions. Through an analysis of the therapist's experiences in the
countertransference, with the help of ongoing supervision and personal
psychotherapy, it is shown that patient's induce feelings and experiences
in the therapist in an attempt to communicate aspects of their internal
worlds. Self reflection and retrospective analysis has been highlighted
with the hope that this may be useful to future neophyte psychotherapists
working psychodynamically.
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10 Bowen St.Leitch, Fran January 2008 (has links)
This project is a site specific based exploration into the boundaries between the domestic home and the navigation of the anxious corporeal body which dwells in the space. These connections open up ways of mapping anxiety brought on through intrusive thoughts surrounding contamination (in relation to Obsessive Compulsive Disorder). The corporal navigation of the domestic is fuelled by the thoughts and their control over the notions of fear and anxiety surrounding the transferring of contaminated material from the external temporal world (dust and organic matter) into the internal sterile environment through movement or fissures in the fabric of the dwelling. The project explores the notions of the domestic space being formed into a container for the intrusive thoughts through physical acts of decontaminating, containment, sealing and expelling the elements of dirt; the body and the home become a hybrid entity alluding to the extreme control which forms and takes over the domestic space.
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Multi application small light water reactor containment analysis and designHaugh, Brandon Patrick 28 May 2002 (has links)
This thesis presents the assessment of the Multi Application Small Light
Water Reactor (MASLWR) containment design during steady-state and transient
conditions. The MASLWR project is a joint effort between Idaho National
Environmental and Engineering Laboratory (INEEL), NEXANT Bechtel, and
Oregon State University. The project is funded under a Nuclear Energy Research
Initiative (NERI) grant from the Department of Energy (DOE).
The GOTHIC code was used to simulate the full scale prototype and the
Oregon State University MASLWR test facility. Detailed models of the full scale
prototype and OSU test facility were generated in GOTHIC. GOTHIC
condensation heat transfer models produced heat transfer coefficients that vary by
an order of magnitude. This had a significant impact on the pressurization rate and
peak pressure achieved within containment. A comparison of the GOTHIC
calculation results for the full scale prototype and the test facility model shows
reasonable agreement with respect to containment pressure trends and safety
system mass flow rates. / Graduation date: 2003
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Development and assessment of electronic manual for well control and blowout containmentGrottheim, Odd Eirik 01 November 2005 (has links)
DEA ?? 63, Floating Vessel Blowout Control is a blowout containment study which was
completed in 1990, and it did not include discussions about operations in the water
depths we currently operate in. As offshore drilling is continuously moving into deeper
and deeper waters, a need to further investigate well control and blowout containment in
ultradeep water has arisen.
This project describes the development and assessment of an electronic cross-reference
tool for well control and blowout containment, with added focus on ultradeep water
operations. The approach of this manual is fully electronic, thus being able to serve the
needs of the engineer/driller with greater ease in both pre-planning and in a stressful onthe-
job setting.
The cross-reference is a manual for the state of the art in well control and blowout
containment methodology. It provides easy-to-use topical organization by categories and
subcategories, and aims at providing clear links between symptoms, causes, and
solutions. Clear explanations to complicated issues are provided, and confirmation of
applicable blowout intervention procedures, be it conventional or unconventional, are
discussed.
Human error and equipment failure are the causes of blowouts, and they are bound to
happen in an ultradeep water environment. Well control events are harder to detect andhandle in ultradeep water, and quick reaction time is essential. After detection and shutin,
the Driller??s method is the preferred circulation method in ultradeep water, due to its
responsiveness and simplicity. In case kick handling is unsuccessful, contingency plans
should be in place to handle a potential blowout. If a blowout does occur, and the
blowing well does not self-kill through bridging, a dynamic kill through relief well
intervention is likely to be necessary, as underwater intervention is difficult in ultradeep
water. With new ultradeep water drilling technologies providing potential for increased
performance, alternative well control methods might be necessary. Along with these new
technologies follow new unfamiliar procedures, and proper education and training is
essential.
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10 Bowen St.Leitch, Fran January 2008 (has links)
This project is a site specific based exploration into the boundaries between the domestic home and the navigation of the anxious corporeal body which dwells in the space. These connections open up ways of mapping anxiety brought on through intrusive thoughts surrounding contamination (in relation to Obsessive Compulsive Disorder). The corporal navigation of the domestic is fuelled by the thoughts and their control over the notions of fear and anxiety surrounding the transferring of contaminated material from the external temporal world (dust and organic matter) into the internal sterile environment through movement or fissures in the fabric of the dwelling. The project explores the notions of the domestic space being formed into a container for the intrusive thoughts through physical acts of decontaminating, containment, sealing and expelling the elements of dirt; the body and the home become a hybrid entity alluding to the extreme control which forms and takes over the domestic space.
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The performance of control and the control of performance : towards a social anthropology of defecationLea, Rachel Vanessa January 2001 (has links)
Defecation has remained overlooked within anthropology and sociology, despite recent focus on the body. The thesis suggests that this is related to its construction as something hidden in the last few hundred years of modern Western society. It is physically and mentally dismissed as personal and biological rather than social or cultural. The few references that exist enable one to argue that it always has significance as a repetitive daily activity needing careful social management and which is crucial to the definition of personhood. Its praxis reveals much about social values concerning differentiation by age, sex, gender and generation. Freud, Elias, Bakhtin and Douglas have influenced its image but do not adequately explain it. Phenomenological theories of embodiment and ideas of cultural performance are shown to be more useful in demonstrating that defecation is a lived cultural experience. The focus is on contemporary Britain, studied through participant observation and day-to-day participation, using material from conversations, anecdotes, observations, experiences, media reports, novels, and films encountered during the period of research. The main themes that emerge are privacy, hiddenness, embarrassment and concern but also that it is welcomed as physical release, and as offering valued periods of time-out and solitude. It is also a symbol of both all that is low and all that is deep. These contradictions are analysed through the two axes of control/loss of control and release/containment. It is argued against recent medical anthropological and sociological studies of incontinence that it cannot be assumed that the opposite of incontinence is continence and containment. The issue of control is paramount, rather than the issue of containment in itself.
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Effects of Nodalization on Containment Analysis in a Loss of Coolant Accident Using GOTHICMcNeil, Wilfred J. IV 21 May 2013 (has links)
Existing containment models for a loss of coolant accident at many nuclear power plants were created in the 1970s using older computer technology and thermal hydraulic models which were available at that time. While conservative, these models may not present the detail necessary to identify conditions which may be used to produce additional design margin for the plant.
After exploring containment and critical flow modeling, the basis for the use of GOTHIC in this analysis was established. A GOTHIC model was then created to simulate the loss of coolant accident results shown in an Updated Final Safety Analysis Report analysis for the North Anna Power Station. This model was used to examine the effects of increased nodalization in a subcompartment on the existing containment model.
It is shown that adding multidimensional sub-nodes to areas of interest can provide valuable detail which was absent in the UFSAR model. Simulations are able to show the localized pressure spike around a LOCA pipe break that quickly dissipates, leaving significantly lower pressures in what was once an averaged, single, lumped-parameter node. This suggests that additional design margin may exist depending on where the pipe break is assumed to occur. / Master of Science
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The Iranian Nuclear Dilemma: How Does the U.S. Respond?Andersen, Corey L. 26 February 2008 (has links)
Since the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003, Iran has visibly increased its work towards developing a nuclear program. This is alarming to many because Iran's ambitions for its nuclear program are unclear and whether it is on a quest for nuclear weapons is unknown. The Iranian government is largely anti-West, anti-Israel, and now, with the downfall of Iraq, is in a position to spread its influence throughout the Middle East. This thesis examines the evolution of the Iranian nuclear program, the relationship between the United States and Iran and how this relationship will likely have a significant influence on the ability of Iran to develop a nuclear program. The goal is to assess the current status of the situation and examine the possible policies the United States could implement towards Iran and its nuclear program. / Master of Arts
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Avaliacao da estabilidade estrutural de contencoes metalicas de centrais nuclearesSILVEIRA, RENATO C. da 09 October 2014 (has links)
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