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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.
71

"O Conselho Municipal de Saúde de Franca: estudo sobre a participação e o controle social" / Municipal Council of Health of Franca: study about the participation and the social control

Andréia Aparecida Reis de Carvalho Liporoni 18 May 2006 (has links)
O Conselho Municipal de Saúde é um importante instrumento de interlocução regulada e institucionalizada na formulação de diretrizes e na fiscalização e avaliação da política de saúde no Brasil. Este estudo analisa a atuação do Conselho Municipal de Saúde de Franca - SP. Nosso objetivo foi conhecer a dinâmica do CMS no processo de gestão, financiamento e controle da política de saúde do município e como a administração municipal reconhece o Conselho como seu interlocutor na gestão do setor saúde. A pesquisa foi realizada entre fevereiro de 2004 a julho de 2005 e utilizada a abordagem qualitativa de pesquisa em saúde. A partir da análise documental das Atas do CMS, de matérias de jornais veiculadas na cidade no mesmo período e das entrevistas com os conselheiros municipais identificamos assuntos temáticos que nortearam a discussão de nosso estudo. Assim, constatamos um grande esforço dos conselheiros em assumir seu papel no desempenho de suas funções, porém encontramos alguns limites que dificultam a efetividade do controle social. Podemos citar assim, a questão político-partidária dos membros do conselho e a manipulação por parte da administração municipal. Encontramos também potencialidades para efetivação do direito à participação nas decisões que vão desde a capacitação dos conselheiros até a criação de mecanismos para dar maior visibilidade ao Conselho e assim propiciar que este possa dar voz as demandas da população. / Municipal Council of Health is an important instrument of regulated dialogue and institutionalized in the formulation of guidelines and in the surveillance and evaluation of the politics of health in Brazil. This study analyzes the performance of Municipal Council of Health of Franca-SP. Our objective was to know the dynamics of the CMS in the management process, financing and control of the politics of health of the municipal district and as the municipal administration recognizes Council as its interlocutor in the administration of the section health. The research was accomplished among February from 2004 to July of 2005 and the qualitative approach of research in health was used. Starting from the documental analysis of the Minutes of the CMS, of matters of newspapers transmitted in the city in the same period and of the interviews with the municipal counselors we identified thematic issues that orientated the discussion of our study. Like this, we verified a great effort of the counselors in assuming their role in the acting of their functions; however we found some limits that hinder the effectiveness of the social control. We can mention like this, the issue political-adherent of the members of the council and the manipulation by the municipal administration. We also found potentialities for the effectiveness of the right to the participation in the decisions that are going from the counselors' training to the creation of mechanisms to give larger visibility to Council and like this to propitiate that this can give voice the demands of the population.
72

Multiculturalism as a community development program

Stock, Richard George January 1973 (has links)
No description available.
73

Meat trays, marginalisation and the mechanisms of social capital creation: An ethnographic study of a licensed social club and its older users

Simpson-Young, Virginia January 2008 (has links)
Doctor of Philosophy(PhD) / Alongside informal networks of friends and family, formal social groupings such as voluntary associations are valued by older people as opportunities for engagement. In Australia, one such grouping is the licensed social (or ‘registered’) club. Approximately 20 per cent of all older Australians, and 80 per cent of older residents of the state of New South Wales, actively participate in such clubs. Despite this, older people’s registered club participation has received little scholarly attention. This ethnographic study of one particular registered club aimed to discover the nature, meaning and role of club participation for its older members. Social capital existing in club-based networks emerged as a further investigative focus, and its mechanisms and outcomes were examined. Participant observation and in-depth interviewing were the main data collection methods used. Data analysis procedures included thematic analysis (based loosely on grounded theory methodology), as well as the more contextsensitive narrative analysis and key-words-in-context analysis. The study found that club participation enabled older members to maintain valued social networks, self-reliance and a sense of autonomy. Social networks were characterised by social capital of the bonding type, being largely homogeneous with respect to age, gender, (working) class and cultural background. Strong cohesive bonds were characterised by intimacy and reciprocity, and possessed norms including equality and the norm of tolerance and inclusiveness. These helped to minimise conflict and build cohesiveness, while protecting older club-goers from increasing marginalisation within the club. Peer grouping within this mainstream setting may have shielded the older club-goers from stigma associated with participation in old-age specific groups. The nature and scale of registered club participation amongst older Australians points to their unique and important role. The findings of this research indicate that – for at least this group of older men and women - club use is a major contributor to maintaining social connectedness and a sense of self as self-reliant, autonomous and capable. In the context of an ageing population, Australia’s registered clubs feature in the mosaic of resources available to older people, and their communities, for the creation of social capital.
74

A quantitative analysis of the student involvement and social development between first-year college students with and without a learning disability /

Guajardo, Daniel. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (Ed. D.)--Graduate School of Education, Oral Roberts University, 2006. / Includes abstract and vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 143-170).
75

Att få vara med. : Hur barns konsumtionsmöjligheter påverkar den sociala delaktigheten i skolan. / To take part. : How children's consumption-possibillities affects social participation in school

Hyltse, Martina, Ydreståhl, Louise January 2012 (has links)
Studiens syfte var att undersöka om, och i så fall hur, barns konsumtionsmöjligheter påverkar den sociala delaktigheten bland barn i förskola/skola/fritids. Vi ville fånga skolpersonalens upplevelser av fenomenet för att förstå hur detta skulle kunna hanteras. För att svara på syftet har en kvalitativ studie gjorts med hjälp av semistrukturerade intervjuer med personal som arbetar inom verksamheterna. Resultatet visar att barnens konsumtionsmöjligheter till viss del påverkar den sociala delaktigheten. på både gott och ont. Personalen har för det mesta hittat egna lösningar för att hantera fenomenet då styrdokumenten är otydliga med hur man bör gå tillväga för att skapa en jämlik miljö i skolan utifrån barnens olika konsumtionsmöjligheter. / The aim of the study was to examine how the childrens consumption- possibillities affects social participation among children in preschool/school/leisure. We wanted to catch the staff's perceptions of the phenomenon in order to understand how this could be handled. To answer the aim, a qualitative study have been made. The study has been carried out using semi-structured interviews of personnel involved in the various organizations. The result shows that children's consumption- possibillities to some extent affect social participation, both good and bad. The staff have mostly found their own solutions to address the phenomenon, because the policy documents are unclear of how tp proceed in order to create an equitable enviroment in schools by children of different consumption opportunities.
76

Planners' approaches to community participation in community health programmes: case studies in Southeast Asia

Rifkin, Susan B. January 1982 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Social Work / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
77

SOCIAL INSIGHT AND GROUP PARTICIPATION AMONG SELECTED UNIVERSITY STUDENTS

Ogrosky, Wendell Ray, 1942- January 1977 (has links)
No description available.
78

Building an educational community : the participation of international graduate students in civic engagement projects

Lew, Marna R. January 2006 (has links)
In the next few years, the number of international students, including graduate students, in Canada is expected to increase considerably (Cudmore, 2005). Simultaneously, recent funding cuts to higher education in a more neoliberal policy climate leave these students with fewer services to facilitate their integration into the host community (Hellsten & Prescott, 2004; Trice, 2004). One important way in which students become integrated is by participating in civic engagement projects. This study examined how, in the current policy climate, international graduate students are taking part in such projects. / Based on semi-structured interviews with six international graduate students in the field of education in Quebec, the study showed that students embraced a more Deweyan perspective of education and successfully participated in civic engagement projects despite many challenges, such as an academic culture that provides little active support for their involvement in civic engagement activities. The study concludes with recommendations so that universities can provide such support.
79

Decentralized spaces for change : a case study of the Lunerburg war room at eDumbe Local Municipality.

Zondi, Lungile Prudence. 12 September 2014 (has links)
This research paper looked at a war room as a decentralized space for change through which public participation is to be enhanced and service delivery accelerated at a ward level. The Lunerburg community demarcated as ward one under eDumbe Local Municipality was used as a case study. The eDumbe Local Municipality falls under Zululand District Municipality located in the northern part of KwaZulu-Natal. Since the take-off of democracy in South Africa, national government has put programmes in place to fight the acceleration of poverty and attend to the backlogs of service delivery. Provincial government are always mandated to implement national programmes or improvised according to the needs of their provinces. In the province of KwaZulu-Natal, the former Premier Zweli Mkhize launched war rooms as a provincial strategy derived from the national war on poverty campaign (announced by former president Thabo Mbeki during the State of the Nation Address, 2008) in the attempt to create decentralized spaces for change through which public participation is to be enhanced to achieve accelerated service delivery at a ward level. The other significance of the strategy is that it takes provincial government to local municipality wards in a collaborative manner. It is also important to note that the use of war rooms in the attempt to enhance public participation and service delivery is not understood and accepted by many people. Currently there are discussions held by the KZN office of the Premier in collaboration with sector departments as well civil societies in the attempt to give war rooms a relevant name. Literature on public participation, decentralization as well as on good governance supported by various diagrams and tables was used to argue in support that citizen’s voices should be integrated in development plans that affect them directly. The study was empirical, employed qualitative methodologies and used triangulated means to collect the data. Content analysis was used to analyse the collected data. The focus of the research was to investigate the extent through which, war rooms as decentralized spaces for change, serve as a unique mechanism to achieve public participation at a ward level in respect to currently existing strategies at a ward level. The study intended to also highlight mechanisms that are used by the war room as well to diagnose the support that the war room is receiving from other government departments. Study findings revealed that the Lunerburg war room executive committee members still lack proper training in relation to their roles and responsibilities within the war room. Members of the Lunerburg community didn’t know where the war room is located and what it does at a ward level. It was also discovered that the Lunerburg war room is not resourced to enhance public participation and accelerate service delivery on its own. Operations of the Lunerburg war room enable community members as beneficiaries of the war room to remain passive participants rather than active participants in the decisions that affect them directly. / Thesis (M.Soc.Sc.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2014.
80

Exploring the Sustainability of Control of Qinhuai River: A case study in Nanjing, Jiangsu, China

Hu, Jingwei January 2014 (has links)
Qinhuai river in Nanjing, China, has suffered pollution since the late 1970s. To solve the problem, Nanjing Municipality conducted two river control projects. The first one in 2002 ended up a failure, and the second one in 2012 also faced various hinders. The aim of the thesis is to examine the sustainability of the river control launched in 2012, and to contribute with some suggestions for improvement. In this thesis, the author used methods of interview and literature review to gain the empirical data of the river control, used method of stakeholder analysis to analyze the data with the lens of sustainable development, Integrated Water Resource Management (IWRM) and externalities. After the analysis, the river control is considered unsustainable. The conclusion is that the pollution mainly originates from wasted domestic water. And the river control launched in 2012 is not sustainable as it lacks long-term perspective, social participation, gender awareness and solutions to mitigate the externalities. The emphasis is that, as the enabler, regulator and provision offer, Nanjing Municipality needs to raise social participation and internalize the environmental externalities to reach sustainable management of the Qinhuai river.

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