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Konflikt eller harmoni? individuella rättigheter och ansvarsutkrävande i svensk och brittisk sjukvård /Karlsson, Lars, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Göteborgs universitet, 2003. / Extra t.p. with thesis statement and English abstract inserted. Includes bibliographical references (p. 303-319).
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Advocating for Inclusion of Children with Williams SyndromeSelf, Michelle A. January 2010 (has links)
No description available.
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How can research evidence and citizen-serving organizations support citizens advocating for strengthening their health systems? / Supporting citizen advocates with research evidenceBelal, Ahmed Atef January 2024 (has links)
In the ever-evolving landscape of health systems, citizen advocacy stands as a tool for
influencing policy aiming to strengthen health systems. This dissertation delves into the
multifaceted nature of health policy advocacy and how citizen advocates can leverage research
evidence in addition to the commonly used emotional messaging to influence policy.
The first study is a critical interpretive synthesis (CIS), creating a theoretical framework that
helps us understand the roles of citizen health policy advocates and their relation to research
evidence. The second study is a multiple-case study that examines the approaches taken by
citizen-serving NGOs in their advocacy training and whether and how research evidence is
incorporated into the training. The third study is a qualitative descriptive study that explores
citizens' experiences participating in these training modules and their perceptions of factors
affecting the incorporation of research evidence in the training.
In Chapter 2, we included 32 publications in the CIS, and four thematic groups were identified,
including the roles of citizen health policy advocates, how research evidence could support
them and the facilitators and barriers to their use of research evidence. In Chapter 3, we
conducted a documentary review of 27 documents and interviewed 16 staff and board members
of three organizations that provide advocacy training to citizen advocates. In Chapter 3, we
interviewed 14 citizens who participated in the training of the three organizations.
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The first study outlined how citizens could use research evidence and its importance to their
advocacy roles, while the last two studies provide an understanding of how citizen-serving
organizations offer training to citizen advocates and whether, how, and under what conditions
they include research evidence in training. / Thesis / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) / Advocacy is an effective way to influence policies in democratic societies. One of those areas
that are influenced by policy advocacy is health systems. Citizens who advocate for improving
their health systems often rely on personal emotional messages rather than peer-reviewed
research evidence. This dissertation tries to understand why this is the case and how research
evidence can support those citizens. We also explore the factors that encourage or hinder
citizens from using research evidence in health policy advocacy. We then examine three
citizen-serving organizations that support citizens with advocacy training and explore how they
support the trainees to use research evidence in advocacy. We also examine the experiences of
citizens who participated in those training sessions and how they perceive the utility of research
evidence in their advocacy to strengthen their health systems.
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The political ramifications of Free/Libre Open Source Software on network advocacy.Timcke, Scott Neal 23 December 2008 (has links)
Research within the last fifteen years on global advocacy networks has often focused
on their accomplishments through the linking of similar groups. The majority of this
research while being useful to examine transnational political dynamics has two
deficiencies. The first is that there is little or no consideration of the network
infrastructure (from code to cables) that allows the aforementioned linkage to occur.
It is therefore important to investigate the politics of infrastructure, architecture and
design and the power and control thereof. Secondly, prior to Web 2.0. technologies,
advocacy networks were nodes of information distribution, rather than nodes to which
information was directed, and then subsequently collected, compiled and used for
political purposes. It is quite reasonable to argue that Web 2.0. technologies (again
due to considerations of code, digital architecture and design) have altered the manner
in advocacy networks interact with their supporters, other organizations and formal
political institutions. This change is located within the advocacy network’s technoorganizational
structure. Subsequently, as the digital architecture for the internet is an
inter-operable free/libre open source software (FLOSS) common to information
exchange, it stands to reason that as an infrastructure this technology is directly a
political landscape over which and in which friction and contestation can and does
occur. In regard to the methods of interaction, FLOSS technologies have greatly
expanded the pool of potential social activists and reduced the costs of engagement,
activism and highlighting issues. With these factors in mind it can be argued that
FLOSS has created opportunities for civil society to emerge and engage with society
at large in ways that are both new (in a digital medium) and similar (tackling issues of
social justice as constructed by the social activists). When considered at a systematic
level this process has several implications. These implications include the impact of
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networking on identity, social relations, power relations and so on, which in turn
acknowledges that modern computer networking can act as a mechanism that
radically restructures various political relations. This itself acknowledges various
contests over modern computer networking (one position which is expressed by
various FLOSS proponents), and the physical infrastructure and the power and control
thereof which allows such networking to even exist in the first instance. Within this
context, which could be described as an information ecosystem, there is a recognition
that advocacy networks have emerged as new sources of power ready to exert
influence through networking that occurs in a) a non formal manner and b) ‘beneath
the radar’ as it were.
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TheRole of Collective Identity and Framing Processes in Advocacy Efforts to Implement Farm Animal Protection Policy:Magner, Elizabeth J. January 2017 (has links)
Thesis advisor: Brian J. Gareau / This study explores efforts by the farm animal protection movement to pass anti-CAFO (concentrated animal feeding operation) farm animal protection legislation in Massachusetts and Rhode Island from 2012 to 2015, aiming to understand why successful outcomes were limited, through the theoretical lenses of collective identities and collective action frames. CAFOs, the predominant source of food animals in the United States, rear animals in intensely confined conditions, which raises significant animal welfare concerns, and also exact serious damage on workers, the environment, public health, and rural communities. Given the animal cruelty inflicted by CAFOs, animal protection organizations have invested much time and effort into passing legislation to ban intensive confinement practices, yet have encountered significant challenges in doing so in some states. This thesis aims to help explain why and how some of these challenges arise, and how they might be avoided or overcome in future efforts. To this end, I describe the collective identities of Massachusetts and Rhode Island farmers and professional farm animal advocates, and analyze the ways that these collective identities interact with and inform framing strategies. I conclude that some elements of the farm animal advocate identity conflict with farmer collective identity, and, further, that consequent advocacy framing strategies at times significantly hinder attempts to pass farm animal protection legislation.
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Ethics and the advocateCrispin, K. J., n/a January 1995 (has links)
This thesis examines the ethical implications of legal professional advocacy in an
adversary system of justice. It identifies a standard conception of the advocate's duty
which is encapsulated in the various professional codes and its fundamental principles of
partisanship and zealous advocacy. It acknowledges that the standard conception
involves a duty to pursue the interests of clients without regard for the interests of others
and explores the inevitable moral ambivalence which such an absolute loyalty entails. The
concept of role morality upon which this conception is based is explored. This involves
an examination of the adversary system of justice and the extent to which it serves the
public interest. It is concluded that the adversary system is of considerable utility in
maintaining individual rights, eliciting the truth, providing an important element of ritual
and sublimating conflict. Consequently, its value provides ethical justification for lawyers
to fulfil the adversarial roles upon which it depends. However, it is contended that it
neither requires nor justifies the absolutism inherent in the standard conception of the
advocate's duty. A number of alternative paradigms are considered but rejected as
inadequate. It is argued that the existing norms of partisanship and zealous advocacy
should be retained but relegated to prima facie duties which may have to be balanced
against competing ethical demands such as the need to avoid causing undue harm to
others.
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Promotional program for the Center for Graphic Design History /Rajanna, Kanchen. January 1991 (has links)
Thesis (M.F.A.)--Rochester Institute of Technology, 1991. / Typescript. Includes bibliographical references (leaf 72).
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Advocacy, diabetes policy, and the Missouri black communityWeaver, Angelia Y. January 1999 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Missouri-Columbia, 1999. / Typescript. Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 134-139). Also available on the Internet.
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Advocacy, diabetes policy, and the Missouri black community /Weaver, Angelia Y. January 1999 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Missouri-Columbia, 1999. / Typescript. Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 134-139). Also available on the Internet.
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Explaining non-governmental organizations (NGOs) human rights NGOs and institutions of justice in Mexico :Welna, Christopher James, Unknown Date (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Duke University, 1997. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 259-273).
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