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Social commerce in emerging markets and its impact on online community engagementAlgharabat, R.S., Rana, Nripendra P. 2020 July 1918 (has links)
Yes / This study aims to build on the understanding of social commerce in the emerging markets and how it influences online community engagement. The conceptual model was proposed using theories including the social support theory, the trust theory, the social presence theory, the flow theory and the service-dominant logic theory. Using Facebook online community, the data were collected from 400 respondents from Jordan and analysed using AMOS based structural equation modelling. Results revealed that social commerce constructs positively influence social support, community members’ trust and social presence. Furthermore, it was found that social support and social presence positively affect community members’ trust. We also found that community members’ trust positively influence flow whereas both community members’ trust and flow positively influence community engagement.
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Whole-genome sequencing for TB source investigations: principles of ethical precision public health.van Rie, A., de Viedma, D.G., Meehan, Conor J., Comas, I., Heupink, T.H., De Vos, E., de Onate, W.A., Mathys, V., Ceyssens, P-J., Groenen, G., González-Candelas, F., Forier, A., Juengst, E. 18 June 2021 (has links)
Yes / BACKGROUND: Whole-genome sequencing (WGS) of Mycobacterium tuberculosis allows rapid, accurate inferences about the sources, location and timing of transmission. However, in an era of heightened concern for personal privacy and science distrust, such inferences could result in unintended harm and undermine the public´s trust. METHODS: We held interdisciplinary stakeholder discussions and performed ethical analyses of real-world illustrative cases to identify principles that optimise benefit and mitigate harm of M. tuberculosis WGS-driven TB source investigations.RESULTS: The speed and precision with which real-time WGS can be used to associate M. tuberculosis strains with sensitive information has raised important concerns. While detailed understanding of transmission events could mitigate harm to vulnerable patients and communities when otherwise unfairly blamed for TB outbreaks, the precision of WGS can also identify transmission events resulting in social blame, fear, discrimination, individual or location stigma, and the use of defaming language by the public, politicians and scientists. Public health programmes should balance the need to safeguard privacy with public health goals, transparency and individual rights, including the right to know who infects whom or where.CONCLUSIONS: Ethical challenges raised by real-time WGS-driven TB source investigation requires public health authorities to move beyond their current legal mandate and embrace transparency, privacy and community engagement.
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The impact of a new public health approach to end-of-life care: A systematic reviewSallnow, L., Richardson, H., Murray, S.A., Kellehear, Allan January 2015 (has links)
No / Communities play an increasingly significant role in their own health and social care, and evidence demonstrates the
positive impact of this work on a range of health outcomes. Interest is building regarding the application of the principles of the new
public health approach to those facing the end of life and their families and communities.
To review the evidence relating to the impact of a new public health approach to end-of-life care, specifically as this applies to
efforts to strengthen community action.
Design: A systematic review employing narrative synthesis. Both meta-ethnography and the use of descriptive statistics supported
analysis.
Data sources: Eight databases (AMED, ASSIA, BiblioMap, CINAHL, Cochrane Reviews, EMBASE, MEDLINE and PsycINFO) were
searched from the earliest record to March 2015 using set eligibility criteria.
Results: Eight articles were included in the analysis. Three main themes emerged from the meta-ethnography: making a practical
difference, individual learning and personal growth and developing community capacity. The quantitative findings mapped to the
meta-ethnography and demonstrated that engaging communities can lead to improved outcomes for carers such as decreased fatigue
or isolation, increase in size of caring networks and that wider social networks can influence factors such as place of death and involvement of palliative care services.
Conclusion: Evidence exists for the impact of community engagement in end-of-life care. Impact assessment should be an integral part of future initiatives and policy makers should recognise that these approaches can influence complex issues such as carer support,
community capacity, wellbeing and social isolation.
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Preserving Paradise: A Case Study of Public Attitudes And Its Impact on the Conservation of the Indian River Lagoon WatershedWells, Zanielle 01 January 2024 (has links) (PDF)
The Indian River Lagoon (IRL) is an important estuary along Florida’s east coast. It is known for its ongoing water quality issues attributed to human activity in the watershed, which has resulted in extensive restoration and conservation efforts. This study researches the relationship between public perception and sentiment toward sustainable development initiatives and how they influence conservation and restoration in the Indian River Lagoon watershed. Twelve semi-structured interviews were conducted with IRL experts who work in the government, academia, nonprofit, or nongovernmental sectors to discuss public sentiment and engagement practices within the watershed. The responses were analyzed using a causal layered analysis, which highlighted social, political, and economic factors that influence public attitudes on various initiatives within the IRL ecosystem. Based on the findings, improved relationship building and diversity in IRL stakeholders are important to ensuring comprehensive community engagement with environmental stewardship and management.
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Escravos gas to liquid and community integration : a multi-case study approach / K.A. AjoguntanAjoguntan, Kayode Austine January 2008 (has links)
Socioeconomic study is a procedure that ensures that the likely positive and negative impact of a new project on the socioeconomic life of a community is taken into account. It has become a crucial part of sustainable development process. The understanding of socioeconomic study procedures is an increasing necessity for all those involved in the process. Similarly, proper knowledge of the function of socioeconomic study during the environmental impact assessment (EIA) process is of paramount importance for the mitigation of the likely effects of the new development.
Furthermore, as the world is gradually growing into a global village, it has become increasingly imperative that organizations integrate the people in their operations' areas in the overall objective of their businesses. Community engagement (CE) is a partnership process that can be used to assess and manage the problem affecting the well-being of a community because of a new development.
This research work used the SWOT matrix technique to develop a management framework that companies can use to manage their weaknesses and threats because of inadequate community engagement strategy. To achieve this, the work evaluated the extent to which socioeconomic study is integrated into the EIA processes. It also assessed the extent to which oil companies are using community engagement as a development strategy.
The findings of this dissertation revealed that oil explorations in the Niger Delta area have affected the well-being of the people both positively and negatively. Unfortunately, their negative impact outweighed their positive impact. Although they carry out socioeconomic studies, they have been neglecting the recommendations reported in the socioeconomic study document by experts. The level of community engagements therefore has also been very poor.
SWOT matrix technique was used to develop the management framework for each company based on the perceived strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats of the companies as revealed in this research. This should serve as a guide for the companies in their CE strategies. / Thesis (M.Ing. (Development and Management Engineering))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2009.
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Escravos gas to liquid and community integration : a multi-case study approach / K.A. AjoguntanAjoguntan, Kayode Austine January 2008 (has links)
Socioeconomic study is a procedure that ensures that the likely positive and negative impact of a new project on the socioeconomic life of a community is taken into account. It has become a crucial part of sustainable development process. The understanding of socioeconomic study procedures is an increasing necessity for all those involved in the process. Similarly, proper knowledge of the function of socioeconomic study during the environmental impact assessment (EIA) process is of paramount importance for the mitigation of the likely effects of the new development.
Furthermore, as the world is gradually growing into a global village, it has become increasingly imperative that organizations integrate the people in their operations' areas in the overall objective of their businesses. Community engagement (CE) is a partnership process that can be used to assess and manage the problem affecting the well-being of a community because of a new development.
This research work used the SWOT matrix technique to develop a management framework that companies can use to manage their weaknesses and threats because of inadequate community engagement strategy. To achieve this, the work evaluated the extent to which socioeconomic study is integrated into the EIA processes. It also assessed the extent to which oil companies are using community engagement as a development strategy.
The findings of this dissertation revealed that oil explorations in the Niger Delta area have affected the well-being of the people both positively and negatively. Unfortunately, their negative impact outweighed their positive impact. Although they carry out socioeconomic studies, they have been neglecting the recommendations reported in the socioeconomic study document by experts. The level of community engagements therefore has also been very poor.
SWOT matrix technique was used to develop the management framework for each company based on the perceived strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats of the companies as revealed in this research. This should serve as a guide for the companies in their CE strategies. / Thesis (M.Ing. (Development and Management Engineering))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2009.
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We built this country for free – using a phenomenological approach for (re) imagining Mississippi Black small-scale farmersCrockett, Destiny Denise 08 December 2023 (has links) (PDF)
By the early 20th century, in 1920, Black farmers owned 14% of US farmland. Today, in the 21st century, Black farmers own less than 2% of US farmland. The demise of Black farmers and Black farmland in US Agriculture is a direct result of social, political, and racial weaponization against their foodways, culture, and livelihoods. The history concerning the plight of Black farmers goes beyond USDA's historical discrimination but enters a position where racism is embedded and perpetuated within the structure of US agriculture. In effect, Black small-scale farmers have reaped the downfall of this system, enduring racial biases and a complex relationship to the land for future generations. This dissertation examines and investigates the contemporary challenges associated with Mississippi’s small-scale Black farmers and their strategies that resist these challenges to create a self-sufficient agricultural system. Employing a qualitative approach using 31 semi-structured interviews and 4 focus groups discussions, in total of 87 persons, this research studies barriers and resilience strategies by amplifying the voices of small-scale Black farmers across Mississippi. This work draws from previous scholarship in institutional racism, colorblind racism, Black agrarianism, community based organizations, food sovereignty, and Black geographies. Findings indicate that racism still undermines Black farmers in agriculture. Still, they resist and combat these barriers by becoming powerful agents that bring catalyst change in the form of community togetherness and self-sufficiency.
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VOLUNTEERING AND DEMOCRATIZATION IN SOUTHERN AFRICA: A STRUCTURAL AND CULTURAL ANALYSISCompion, Sara 01 January 2016 (has links)
This dissertation examines the practices and social constructions of volunteering in Southern Africa. Grounded in structural and cultural theory, I focus on volunteering as the product, rather than the raw material, of political processes. My approach stresses the volunteers’ perspectives, yet centers on critiques of dominance. In doing so, I destabilize the view of volunteering as inherently pro-social behavior, or as intrinsically characteristic of deepening democratic systems.
Combining evidence from Afrobarometer surveys and twelve months of ethnographic fieldwork in South Africa and Zambia I show how meanings and practices, not just resources and capital, shape the socially constructed nature of volunteering given specific historic, economic and political conjunctures. The findings reveal that contemporary practices of volunteering in Southern Africa are a consequence of poverty, paternalistic exchange relationships, and state-civil society partnerships undergirded by foreign development aid.
The dissertation is structured around four empirical points. The first concerns who volunteers. I identify characteristics of Africans who are most likely to actively belong to voluntary groups, and pinpoint the role of foreign development aid and poverty in shaping the volunteer landscape. The second highlights the positive connection between civic culture and active voluntary group membership in Africa, but I argue that this association does not inherently translate into greater democratic gains for a country. The third emphasizes “why” people volunteer. I document the exchange nature of volunteering, revealing its practical function for maintaining social cohesion and augmenting social capital, while simultaneously entrenching social hierarchies and paternalistic inequalities. The fourth point offers a theory linking three orientations to volunteering with activities in three different types of civil society. These view can be “allegiant,” “opportunistic,” or “challenging” and steer people toward volunteer activities that match their inclinations to enhance, confront, or preserve given social systems.
Throughout this dissertation I illustrate how volunteerism aids residents of complex, diverse societies to define new social relations, craft compatible identities, and make meaning of social change. I present an effort in doing a sociology of volunteerism from Africa, rather simply in Africa, which increases the generalizability of existing theories of volunteerism to post-colonial, developing country contexts.
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Community engagement at a higher education institution - exploring a theoretical grounding for scholarly-based service-related processSmith-Tolken, Antoinette Rachèlle 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (PhD (Curriculum Studies))--University of Stellenbosch, 2010. / Bibliography / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: This dissertation is an interpretive analysis of the meanings and understanding of the
construct 'service' in its relation to scholarly engagement with external non-academic
communities at curricular level. The study links to other studies relating to community
engagement in higher education or focusing on internal service to the university community,
but it is unique in its theorising of service with and in external non-academic communities.
The specific aim of the study was to develop a theoretical framework to view, understand,
analyse and evaluate scholarly-related service activities which represent the community
component of experiential learning pedagogies.
The primary data for the study were generated through unstructured interviews with the four
actor groups participating in such activities, namely module coordinators, students,
community organisation representatives and community members. Their responses were
interpreted, analysed and triangulated through grounded theory methodology.
A substantive theory consisting of four interrelated processes, through which these activities
take place, was developed culminating in a theoretical framework that integrates the four
processes into one coherent process of cyclical interchange of social commodities. In this
process there is a reciprocation of scholarly service and community service where the latter
represents the service of the community to the university culminating in the interchange of
tangible and intangible products that represent the commodities. The co-creation of useful
contextual knowledge represents the ultimate outcome of this process through an interchange
of tacit, codified and implicit knowledge of professionals and laymen in society. The
theoretical framework provides a better understanding of the difference between the
relationships with external communities and the actual service actions that take place during
scholarly service activities. Within such understanding the framework suggests rethinking of
how service activities are planned and integrated in community engagement at curricular
level. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Hierdie proefskrif is 'n interpretatiewe ontleding van die betekenisse en begripsverband van
die konstruk "diens" op 'n kurrikulêre vlak binne die vakkundige interaksie met eksterne nieakademiese
gemeenskappe. Die studie hou verband met ander studies oor
gemeenskapsinteraksie binne die hoër onderwys asook dié wat fokus op interne diens aan die
universiteitsgemeenskap. Die studie is egter uniek ten opsigte van die teoretisering van diens
binne en in samewerking met eksterne nie-akademiese gemeenskappe. Die spesifieke doel
van die studie was om 'n teoretiese raamwerk te ontwikkel waardeur wetenskapsverwante
diensaktiwiteite wat die gemeenskapskomponent van ervaringsleerpedagogië verteenwoordig
beskou, verstaan, geanaliseer en geëvalueer kan word.
Die primêre data vir die studie is versamel deur middel van ongestruktureerde onderhoude
met die vier groepe wat 'n rol speel in kurrikulumverwante gemeenskapsdiensaktiwiteite,
naamlik module koördineerders, studente, verteenwoordigers van gemeenskapsorganisasies
en lede uit die gemeenskap. Hulle antwoorde is met behulp van die metodologie van
gefundeerde teorie geïnterpreteer, ontleed en deur kruistoetsing geverifieer.
'n Selfstandige teorie, bestaande uit vier verwante prosesse waardeur hierdie aktiwiteite
plaasvind, is ontwikkel wat uiteindelik beslag gekry het in 'n teoretiese raamwerk wat op sy
beurt die vier prosesse in een koherente proses van sikliese verwisseling van sosiale
kommoditeite integreer. In hierdie proses is daar ’n duidelike verwantskap tussen vakkundige
diens en gemeenskapsdiens waar laasgenoemde die diens van die gemeenskap aan die
universiteit verteenwoordig. Hierdie verwisselende verwantskap lei tot die uitruiling van
tasbare en nie-tasbare produkte wat die sosiale kommoditeite verteenwoordig. Die
medeskepping van bruikbare kontekstuele kennis verteenwoordig die uiteindelike uitkoms
van die proses waarin basiese kennis, die geskrewe kennis en die inherente aangeleerde
kennis van kundiges en ongeskoolde persone in wisselwerking tree. Die voorgestelde
teoretiese raamwerk verskaf beter insig in die verskil tussen die verhouding met eksterne
gemeenskappe en die werklike diensaksies wat plaasvind gedurende vak-gebaseerde
diensaktiwiteite. Binne sodanige verstaan stel die raamwerk voor dat die manier wat sulke
aktiwiteite beplan word, herbedink behoort te word.
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Staging sustainability : an indigenous performance approach to development communicationAluko-Kpotie, Oluwabukola Omolara 15 October 2014 (has links)
The process of communicating notions of sustainable development in rural grassroots communities in the oil-rich region of southern Nigeria, West Africa, is complex and remains an on-going challenge. The material consequences of ineffective communication between community leaders and their constituencies are evident in the Nigerian communities examined in this dissertation, where poverty is pervasive and where a large majority of the population can neither read nor write in English. Popular performances, specifically theatre, are an essential medium of communication and information dissemination on community development projects in these communities. Theatre for Development (TFD), as these form of popular performances are called, was first introduced to the country in 1975. Its methodology is an adaptation of the techniques of Theatre of the Oppressed created by theatre scholar Augusto Boal. The method is aimed specifically at effecting dialogue, encouraging critical thinking, and motivating the desire for community development and social change. A number of challenges, however, limit the effectiveness of this method in achieving these goals. They include funding constraints, which restrict the amount of time TFD participants spend working in any community and limit follow-up visits to sustain integral dialogues begun during a post-performance discussion. In essence, funding restrictions limit the possibility of achieving sustainable community development. To address this key challenge of time constraints and to facilitate sustained development dialogue between community stakeholders, this dissertation examines the use of indigenous performance practices staged by local performers in rural grassroots communities. By creating and staging a TFD performance using structural elements of oriki, an indigenous performance practice in the region, I address a core research question: How do structures and contents of indigenous performance practices create forums for sustained dialogue and collective consciousness awakening? The answer to this question lays the foundation for sustainable development projects in Nigeria and offers a practical way to improve the effectiveness of TFD as a medium of information dissemination, a tool to facilitate sustained dialogue, and a community development approach in rural grassroots communities in the country. / text
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