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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

School choice in America and Indiana?s Choice Scholarship Program

Mills, Jason Daniel 06 January 2017 (has links)
<p>This is a comprehensive study researching the existence of school choice programs in the country, concentrating on the Indian School Voucher program. Data was collected by examining existing case law, surveys and scholarly papers. The school choice programs in all 50 states and the District of Columbia was examined. Each state program was listed and any legal challenges associated with each program was identified. Further, the K-12 & School Choice Survey conducted by the Friedman Foundation in January 2016 and the 2015 Choice Scholarship Program Annual Report: Participation and Payment Data were examined to determine who is using Indiana?s Choice Scholarship Program and how registered Indiana voters perceive the program The findings of this research suggest that most parents prefer to have some level of control over their children?s? education. This research also found that Indiana voters overwhelming support the program. However, it was also found that, although there is a favorable perception of Indiana?s voucher programs by low and middle-income families there is also a lack of participation by those same families.
2

Housing inequalities in urban China 1978-2003 /

Zhang, Chuncen. January 2009 (has links)
Includes bibliographical references (p. 40-42).
3

The Reacculturation of Veterans Post Transition Assistance Program

Hanlan, Kyle 01 January 2022 (has links)
As many as 61% of veterans have sought reintegration services after the Transition Assistance Program (TAP) to help them cope with culture shock. TAP is not designed to address cultural transition. However, culture shock has resulted in disassociating behavior, unemployment, and homelessness in the veteran community. The purpose of this study was to identify the unmet reacculturation needs of post-active duty veterans in Chester County, Pennsylvania, who have utilized the United States’ Department of Defense’s TAP. Using an ethnographic approach, this study identified the extent that the TAP helps 13 post-active duty veterans obtain the autonomy stage of culture shock theory to the extent of career transition preparation only. In areas of reacculturation, veterans reported feeling on their own to manage mounds of paperwork during a perceived pointless “check the box” out process course set to calibrate an individual to civilian life through “toxic positivity.” This study found that veterans do not perceive separation from the military as solely a career change but as a cultural and lifestyle change. TAP does not address the needs of cultural and/or lifestyle changes, which impedes veterans' reacculturation through autonomy obtainment. It is recommended that TAP expand the application of 10 U.S.C. §1142(b)(10) to include cultural transition as a part of the transition plan. Addressing veterans' culture shock will help reduce the 20 veteran suicides per day due to readjustment issues leading to positive social change.
4

Oligarchic Cartelization in Post-Suharto Indonesia: Exploring the Legislative Process of 2017 Election Act

Hargens, Bonifasius 01 January 2020 (has links)
A few ruling individuals from party organizations overpowered Indonesia’s post-authoritarian, representative democracy. The legislative process of the 2017 Election Act was the case study employed to examine this assumption. The underlying thinking was that there was a contest between “wealth power” (oligarchy) and “participation power” (democracy). The power of wealth controls the party and government institutions. Notwithstanding the presence of participation power, there was, however, no balance between wealth power and participation power, because the formal control of politics was in the hands of party oligarchs. The study purpose was to bridge the gap in knowledge by exploring how the party oligarchs maintained the policymaking, reputedly using cartelized strategies, to defend the status quo. By employing the oligarchy and cartelization theories, the central research question of this inquiry focused on how the party oligarchs, allegedly using cartel work-patterns, mastered the policy process in post-Suharto Indonesia. A qualitative case-study was used with in-depth interviews with 15 participants for data collection and the N-Vivo program for data analysis. Qualitative findings indicated that the party oligarchs engineered the legal process in parliament applying cartelized strategies to defend privileges they obtained from collusive interpenetration with the state. The implications for social change include informing members of parliament, other policymakers, and civil society groups of the cruciality of comprehending the modus operandi of oligarchic cartels. Understanding the “oligarchic cartelization” theoretical postulate is a fundamental step for party members to improve their performance in public offices. The results of this study can also be a useful reference for pro-democracy activists to defend the ontological essence of public participation in implementing representative democracy at an appropriate level.
5

Continuity of care among the homeless

Saunders, Sarah Lee 01 January 1990 (has links)
The dissertation employs Andersen and Newman's conceptual framework of health service utilization to examine continuity of care among homeless people. The research context is the Health Care for the Homeless Program which provides free health and medical care to thousands of homeless people in 19 major U.S. cities. The study examines continuity of care for a common illness episode among homeless people, namely peripheral vascular disease of the lower limbs and related disorders. Continuity is modeled as a function of predisposing individual, illness level, and health service system characteristics. The analysis uses multiple regression statistical methods to assess whether and the extent to which individual and health system determinants have net effects on continuity. The findings suggest two related theoretical implications. First, there are multiple sources of continuity. Second, health service system and individual characteristics affect continuity net of each other. The findings also suggest several practical implications including the importance of full-time outreach staff, verbal instructions to return for care, and more extensive weekly hours at each delivery site, just to name a few.
6

A critical analysis of the recommendations of pressure groups on public housing policy in Hong Kong /

Wong, May-ling, Margaret. January 1996 (has links)
Thesis (M. Hous. M.)--University of Hong Kong, 1996. / Includes bibliographical references (leaf 101-107).
7

A critical analysis of the recommendations of pressure groups on public housing policy in Hong Kong

Wong, May-ling, Margaret. January 1996 (has links)
Thesis (M.Hous.M.)--University of Hong Kong, 1996. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 101-107). Also available in print.
8

An evaluative analysis of the long term housing strategy in Hong Kong

Cheng, Shing-kwong, Eric. January 1989 (has links)
Thesis (M.Soc.Sc.)--University of Hong Kong, 1989. / Also available in print.
9

National public health policy and its local implementation

Douglas, Flora January 2010 (has links)
Translation of national public health policy into local action is poorly understood. This thesis explores this issue using: (a) independent evaluation data of the government-funded Well Men’s Services Pilots Programme (WMS); and (b) an analytical framework derived from ‘rational’ health planning models; particularly the PRECEDE PROCEED (PP) model. A mixed-methods study was conducted, comprising: (i) a review of the health planning literature; (ii) an interpretative documentary analysis of policy documentation and local intervention plans; and (iii) a secondary analysis of 42 semi-structured interviews with local managers and professionals responsible for developing interventions in response to the policy. The research findings (ii&amp;iii) were considered in light of this review. This thesis concluded that rationalist health planning approaches and frameworks are not sufficient to guide the implementation of public health policy to an effective conclusion, and has argued that there is a need to develop new ways of thinking about public health issues that have become ‘policy problems’ deemed in need of intervention and resolution. This new thinking needs to acknowledge the complex and contested nature of health problems. This include accepting: (1) that a range of different perspectives and interpretations of public health policy problems and associated notions of their solutions will reside amongst those individuals and organisations tasked with transforming policy into practice; (2) the inevitability of imperfect and contested evidence; (3) future uncertainties, and; (4) the existence of bureaucratic barriers that will constrain direct engagement of the intended beneficiaries, by policy implementers, in the process of developing interventions.
10

Moving to the separate apartment : building, distributing, furnishing, and living in urban housing in Soviet Russia, 1950s-1960s /

Harris, Steven E. January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Chicago, Dept. of History, December 2003. / Includes bibliographical references. Also available on the Internet.

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