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Towards a culturally acceptable housing strategy : The case of Kumasi, GhanaTipple, A. G. January 1984 (has links)
No description available.
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Public intervention in rural housing marketsShucksmith, M. January 1987 (has links)
No description available.
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Government housing policy in Nigeria 1960-1985 : An analysis of public policy-makingInameti, J. E. January 1987 (has links)
No description available.
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Living on the periphery : housing, industrial change and the stateMooney, Gerard Charles January 1988 (has links)
No description available.
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Mechanical tests and computational models for evaluating the cushioning performance of dairy cow cubicle bedsTierney, Gary January 2002 (has links)
No description available.
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Ethnic residential change in Belfast 1969-1977 : the impact of public housing policy in a plural societyKeane, Margaret Christine January 1985 (has links)
No description available.
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Assessing local housing requirements : a study with reference to planning practiceGuillou, Nicholas John Hatton January 1990 (has links)
No description available.
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Urban lower-middle- and middle-income housing : an investigation in affordability and options, Dhaka, BangladeshRahman, Mohammed Mahbubur January 1991 (has links)
No description available.
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Occupying houses : the social relations of tenureBanim, Maura January 1986 (has links)
With the shifts in housing tenure patterns in post-war Britain being so decisive and apparently relentless, one of the main issues that concerns those involved with housing is that of the impact of mass home-ownership - especially on those groups new to the tenure. These concerns range from the possible effect of new home-owner ship on voting patterns and political allegiances; to the financial hardship that seems to be increasingly falling on low income owner occupiers; and to the domestic and familial changes entailed by two-income mortgages. It is towards assessing the impact of these changes more fully, that this thesis is aimed. In order to better understand the origins and effects of tenure shifts, two main points are made. Firstly, that the occupation of houses (of whatever tenure) is an issue that involves practically everyone in society, either as individual tenants/owners/homeless persons, or as groups of ratepayers/voters/neighbourhoods or as business/financial/political interests, or as any combination of these. Secondly, it is emphasised that the terms and conditions of the various tenures have been created and have been altered and adapted over time, and that the definition and meaning of the tenures is as crucial to the housing debate as the well-recognised tenure trends. Consequently, it is argued that the changing patterns and definitions of tenures have a crucial and far-reaching effect on wider social relations in society whilst, at the same time, these changes originate from and in part reflect, already occurring events in civil society.
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RECOVERY AS A GUIDE FOR ENVIRONMENTAL ENHANCEMENT IN GROUP HOMES FOR PEOPLE WITH A MENTAL ILLNESS: A SOCIAL-ECOLOGICAL APPROACHWhite, CATHERINE 04 March 2013 (has links)
Background: As the paradigm underlying mental health care slowly shifts from an approach primarily institutional and medical in its orientation toward one more community-based and recovery-oriented, housing needs have come to the forefront. Many people with persistent mental illness accept group home living situations that do not necessarily meet their needs, and do not align with the recovery vision. Research focused on recovery for residents of group homes is all but absent in the literature.
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to identify the challenges and opportunities for enabling group homes to increase their capacity to serve as an environment that integrates the recovery vision.
Method: Using ethnographic methods, this case study examined the cultural milieu of a group home, how recovery is understood within the setting, and the impact of policies and practices on enacting the recovery vision. By converging multiple strategies for data collection (participant observation, key informant interviews, and document analysis), a multi-level perspective was achieved. The use of the social-ecological model, with its attention to multiple levels of influence, emerged as a highly relevant perspective, without which the recovery vision cannot be realized.
Findings: The culture within the home revealed a comfortable atmosphere, basic needs being met, access to planned and unplanned activity, and caring relationships with staff, which contribute to a place attachment that could be difficult to loosen. There is a lack of awareness of recovery-enabling practice at multiple levels, which emerged as a key challenge to its implementation. Although some policies at the government level support self-sufficiency as an important objective, others make progress towards this ideal difficult, if not impossible, such as those related to funding. The focus on enhancing well-being in the day-to-day setting subsumes the growth goals associated with recovery.
Conclusion: Integrating the recovery vision within group home could benefit from confronting well-established approaches, embracing advocacy roles, and addressing mechanisms for change at multiple levels. Only then will people with mental illness living in group homes reap the benefits of social justice, social inclusion and full citizenship that come with recovery. / Thesis (Ph.D, Rehabilitation Science) -- Queen's University, 2013-02-27 23:27:44.925
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