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Evaluation von Maßnahmen der postoperativen Versorgung von Patienten mit vorderen Kreuzbandrupturen unter sportwissenschaftlichen GesichtspunktenLudwig, Holger, Köcher, Lars 16 November 1999 (has links)
No description available.
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Kultur als Padadox / Entwicklung und Krise des konfuzianischen Kapitalismus in SüdkoreaRhee, Moon-Ho 08 July 1999 (has links)
No description available.
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Physical education and sporting activity for women during the fascist eraGori, Gigliola 11 May 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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Die Entstehung der koreanischen Chaebol / Eine soziologische Analyse des ökonomischen Handelns in einem konfuzianisch geprägten LandRhee, In-Ah 26 November 1999 (has links)
No description available.
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Zusammenhang von Persönlichkeit, Führungsverhalten und Erfolg von Fitnesscenter-ManagernSchmid, Dieter 24 February 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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Die Verdoppelung der UngleichheitSchäfgen, Katrin 04 February 1998 (has links)
No description available.
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Age at First Birth, Fertility, and Contraception in TanzaniaNgalinda, Innocent 08 December 1998 (has links)
The first visible outcome of the fertility process is the birth of the first child. The first birth marks a woman's transition into motherhood. It plays a significant role in the future life of each individual woman and has a direct relationship with fertility. The age at which child bearing begins influences the number of children a woman bears throughout her reproductive period in the absence of any active fertility control. For countries in sub-Saharan Africa, where contraceptive use is relatively low, younger ages at first birth tend to boost the number of children a woman will have. However, even when family planning is widespread, the timing of first births can affect completed family size if contraception is used for spacing but not for limiting fertility. The birth of a child is an event of great social and individual significance and its importance is recognised in all human societies. It signifies the transition of a couple into a new social status, i.e. parenthood with its related expectations and responsibilities. It marks the sexual and social maturity of the mother and the visible consummation of sexual intercourse . The relationship between age at first birth and overall fertility in developing countries is generally an underdeveloped area as far as demographic research is concerned. Fertility analysts generally assume that child bearing only occurs within marriage. Then they treat age at first marriage to be a major proximate determinant of fertility. This assumption might have been true in most traditional societies, where births out of wedlock were not accepted and virginity was a prerequisite for marriage. This assumption, however, does not hold true in modern times, where a large number of children is born outside marriage. These facts have been the major motive of conducting the current research. This study examines the reproductive behaviour of Tanzanian women. The study found the average age at first sexual intercourse to be 16 years; age at first marriage to be 17 years, while average age at first child bearing was estimated to be 18 years. By age 15, almost 10 percent of juvenile women have given birth. This study furthermore found that 41 percent of all first live births resulted from premarital conceptions. Out-of-wedlock births account for 24 percent of all first births in Tanzania according to the 1996 TDHS. The education of a woman, place of residence, and religion play the greatest roles in influencing age at first birth in Tanzania. The striking results were place of residence as it was found that rural residents have a higher mean age at first birth than women living in Dar es Salaam. Dar es Salaam women has the lowest mean age at first birth. Moslems have lower age at first birth than Catholics. There is also a strong relationship between age at first birth and age at first intercourse also with infant and child mortality. The results indicate that the younger the age of the mother at the birth of the first child, the higher the chances that the child dies. The study of current levels and trends of fertility showed that, on the average, a Tanzanian woman bears 6 children. Between the 1960s and early 1980s, an average of 7 births per woman prevailed in Tanzania. The declining fertility in Tanzania was confirmed by the analysis of the decomposition of the change of the total fertility rate (TFR) between two TDHSs. It found that natural fertility control is being gradually replaced by contraceptive use although the percentage of women using contraception is still very low. The reduction in infant and child mortality, rising numbers of women attending schools, and a rise in age at first birth are among the factors responsible for the decline in fertility in Tanzania. Education on the other hand has played a major role in raising age at first birth. Education either delays first intercourse and subsequently birth as pregnant schoolgirls are prohibited to attend formal schools or it effects the acceptance of contraception to delay first conception. Specifically, this study establish that there is an inverse relationship between age at first birth and fertility. Marriage is a weak factor in explaining fertility in Tanzania. Women in polygamous unions had fewer number of children ever born than those in monogamous unions in Tanzania. Moslems have a lower fertility than Catholics. Women residing in urban areas have fewer children than those in the rural areas. Women's education is the strongest predictor of the use of contraceptives in Tanzania. Catholic women are less likely to use contraceptives than Moslems. Tanzanian women residing in rural areas are less likely to use contraception than their counterparts residing in urban areas. Although age at first birth did not show any significance, age at first intercourse, age at first marriage and current age are highly related to contraceptive use. Variation in age at first sexual intercourse; marriage; and birth, and the extent of practising contraception are found to depend mainly on religion, place of residence, and the age of a woman. It is important therefore to design separate programmes to raise age at first birth and to lower fertility according to the findings related to religion, place of residence, and target juvenile women separately.
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Das ist nicht georgisch!Pilz, Madlen 01 July 2019 (has links)
Was charakterisiert eine postsozialistische Stadt? Dieser Frage geht die Arbeit am Beispiel der georgischen Hauptstadt Tbilisi in den Jahren 2008 bis 2012 nach. „Postsozialistisch“ wird dabei nicht nur als spezifische Transformation der Gesellschaft, sondern auch als gesellschaftliche Praxis der Abgrenzung vom Sozialismus definiert; somit werden ausgewählte Praktiken der Transformation der einst sozialistischen Stadtlandschaft und des einst sozialistischen urbanen Alltags ins Zentrum der Untersuchung gestellt.
Über den Vergleich touristischer Stadtpläne von 1980 und 2008 wird in der Arbeit den Veränderungen der Repräsentation und somit auch der Konzeption von Stadt nachgegangen. Anhand der regierungskritischen Proteste im Frühjahr 2009 werden unterschiedliche Protestpraktiken und die gegenseitigen Zuschreibungen der politischen Akteure analysiert. Ein zen¬traler Fokus der Analysen liegt dabei auf den Themen der Auseinandersetzungen rund um die Proteste – den Interpretationen von Zivilgesellschaft und der damit verbundenen (Un-)Sichtbarkeit der Akteure des Protests – sowie auf den Motiven des Protests und den Strategien ihrer Entpolitisierung. Im Transect durch die Stadt werden die unterschiedlichen Praktiken und Akteure der städtischen Rekonstruktion in öffentlichen und privaten Räumen mit Blick auf die Partizipationsmöglichkeiten für unterschiedliche Bevölkerungsgruppen untersucht.
Die Arbeit beschäftigt sich mit den postsozialistischen Ausschlüssen der neuen georgischen Nationsbildung, die mit der „sozialistischen Sozialisation“ der Betroffenen legitimiert werden und dadurch eine kritische Diskussion der neoliberalen gesellschaftlichen Tranformation verhindern. / What are the characteristics of post-socialist cities? This question underlies my research about the post-socialist transformations in the Georgian capital Tbilisi, carried out between 2008 and 2012. I understand the notion ‘post-socialist’ as an indicator for a specific form of transformation and as a practice of differentiation from the ‘socialist’: the socialist urban landscape and everyday life.
Based on the comparison of touristic city-maps from 1980 and 2008 I carve out the transformations of the urban representation and conceptualization of the city’s space. At the example of the anti-government protests in spring 2009, I analyse different protest practices and ascriptions applied to different political actors. The analytical focus is put on the central topics negotiated around the protests: on the understanding of civil society and the subsequent (in-)visibility of the actors of the protests as well as on the motivations to protest and the strategies of their depolitization. A transect through the city opens the view on different practices of transforming urban public and private spaces, asking for different degrees and ways of participating in the process of societal modernization.
In sum, the analysis reveals how the new Georgian nation building excludes the ‘socialist’ through the construction and stigmatization of a ‘socialist habitus’, therewith, inhibiting a critical revision of the ongoing neoliberal transformations.
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Bedingungen der AIDS-Prävention in BulgarienOkoliyski, Michail Alexandrov 17 June 1998 (has links)
No description available.
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Schwerkranke und Sterbende auf der Palliataivstation und im Hospiz. Eine vergleichende, verlaufsorientierte Studie von zwei exemplarischen Betreuungsmodellen / Seriously ill and dying patients treated and accompanied on pallitive floors and in hospices. A comparing study of two exemplary care-giving institutionsHerbold-Ohmes, Christine 01 August 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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