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Case studies of two contemporary faith-based organizations that care for individuals with mental disabilitiesAmstutz, William J. January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (D. Min.)--Biblical Theological Seminary, 2004. / Abstract. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 166-170).
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Exportación de banano orgánico a CanadáLa Rosa-Duarte, Cynthia-Pilar, Camaiora-Castañeda, Gianfranco-Pietro January 2016 (has links)
Las expotaciones tienen una participación sobresaliente en el PBI nacional. Del mismo modo, se ha experimentado un crecimiento de las mismas en un 565% en la última década y las exportaciones no tradicionales representan un nada despreciable 32% del total exportado, con perspectivas de crecimiento. En la actualidad, Perú, es líder en crecimiento de exportaciones en la región latinoamericana, por encima de países como Colombia, Chile, Brasil y México; y el segundo con mayor incremento de la IED en la última década. A lo largo del presente estudio se describirán la oportunidad y la viabilidad de la exportación de banano orgánico al mercado canadiense, al mismo tiempo que se propone una alternativa estratégica para su exitosa inserción. / Trabajo de investigación
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Imagining Public Space in Smart Cities: a Visual Inquiry on the Quayside Project by Sidewalk TorontoOkcuoglu, Tugba January 2019 (has links)
Recently, the ‘Smart City’ label has emerged as a popular umbrella term for numerous projects around the world that claim to offer an enhanced urban experience, often provided in collaboration with international companies through private-public partnerships. As smart cities pledge to create long-term economic sustainability and progressive form of urban entrepreneurialism, it is getting important to highlight risks such as the reduced role of the public sector, technological dominance and data privacy.In contrast to more a conventional, long-term, holistic master planning, a technologically pre-determined form of Smart City endangers the emancipator usage of public spaces as spaces of diversity, creativity, inclusive citizen participation and urban sustainability.This research approaches the concept of Smart Cities as a future category and, thus, targets to develop a comprehensive visual analysis based on architectural representations in the form of computer-generated images (CGI’s). The Quayside project, a notable and widely criticized urban development project, by Sidewalk Toronto, a cooperation between Waterfront Toronto and Sidewalk Labs which is a sister subsidiary of Alphabet Inc., has been selected as Smart City case study as. Visual analysis was conducted by using the theoretical frame advocating ‘Coordinating Smart Cities’ in contrast to ‘Prescriptive Smart Cities’ by Richard Sennett. In addition to Sennett’s concept of ‘Incomplete Form’, Jan Gehl’s ‘Twelve Quality Criteria’ was used as coding categories to elaborate the content analysis which was followed by semiological and compositional interpretations. Visuals have been investigated in three sequential sets and analyzed focusing on time-based comparative frequency counts for sets of visuals. Concentrating on how future public spaces are illustrated, the study aims to uncover and to discuss how Smart Cities are being imagined and advertised.
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Social Media for Well-Being: A Mixed Method Approach to Examine the Use of SocialSupport and Mood ManagementZaher, Zulfia 13 July 2018 (has links)
No description available.
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INTERSECTIONALITY AND THE ROLE OF SERVICE PROVIDERS: A STEP TOWARDS IMPROVING THE EMPLOYMENT OUTCOMES OF IMMIGRANT WOMENHassan, Farha January 2020 (has links)
Examining service providers’ perspectives of barriers and facilitators for immigrant women seeking employment / There are multi-faceted barriers that shape the employment trajectories and
economic outcomes of immigrant women in the Canadian labour market. In response to
the barriers that immigrant women experience, the Federal government, Immigration,
Refugee, and Citizenship Canada (IRCC), have initiated funding towards employment
programs for immigrant women. This critical ethnographic study examines the
perspectives of ten service providers in the Greater Toronto Area (GTA), in order to
identify the barriers and facilitators immigrant women experience within employment
services when trying to obtain secure well-paid employment. The data analysis revealed
three major themes: the role of funding for employment programs and settlement
services, the categorization of immigrant women by skills; and the application of
individualized services to meet the needs of immigrant women. Using an intersectional
lens, my research highlights that immigrant women experience various challenges to
finding, obtaining, and maintaining employment due to the intersection of their social
location (e.g. race, gender, immigration status, language, culture, and religion). Service
providers mitigate some of these barriers to secure well-paying employment by providing
individualized services to meet differential needs of immigrant women. While this
approach has led to success in matching some immigrant women to jobs that align with
their field of expertise and career goals, service providers are restricted in their ability to
meet the full needs of immigrant women due to underfunding and structural barriers. My
research reveals that employment services, immigration processes, and labour market
practices can (re)produce and maintain the marginalization of immigrant women in the
labour market. This paper concludes with some policy recommendations for immigrant-serving employment services and social work practice. / Thesis / Master of Social Work (MSW)
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Application du modèle logit mixte emboîté dans le cadre de l'estimation de la demande de transportStevanović, Dalibor 11 April 2018 (has links)
Tableau d'honneur de la Faculté des études supérieures et postdoctorales, 2006-2007 / L'objectif de ce mémoire est d'appliquer la méthodologie du modèle logit mixte dans le cadre de l'estimation de la demande de transport. L'idée de base est de remplacer le modèle logit emboîté, construit par l'équipe de chercheurs de University of Toronto, par un modèle beaucoup plus flexible qui est le logit mixte à erreurs composées. Avant de procéder à l'estimation, un exercice d'identification plutôt complexe doit être effectué étant donnée la structure riche de la matrice des covariances. Le modèle est calibré avec les données provenant du sondage sur les habitudes de déplacements de la grande région de Toronto : Transportation Tomorow Survey (TTS). Les résultats affichent un bon comportement et le modèle est capable de capter une partie de la corrélation recherchée par la structure des facteurs. Le modèle logit mixte emboîté performe mieux que le modèle logit standard au niveau de la vraisemblance maximisée et de la prévision des probabilités de choix.
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Residential Solar Energy Adoption in a Community Context: Perceptions and Characteristics of Potential Adopters in a West Toronto NeighbourhoodSherk, Theodore January 2012 (has links)
In the summer of 2007, a single neighbourhood in downtown Toronto contributed at
least 13 percent of all residential grid???tie solar photovoltaic (PV) systems sold in the
Canadian province of Ontario. On average, PV purchaser households produced 37
percent as much electricity as they consumed.
This research investigates solar energy adoption in a community case study. Specifically,
it investigates why some residents who sign up for a solar resource assessment through
a community solar energy initiative (CSEI) decide to purchase, and others decide not to
purchase in the short???term. Characteristics and perceptions of potential adopters are
analyzed to better understand their motivations and barriers to adoption.
Community energy projects became an official public policy goal in Ontario, with the
passing of the Green Energy and Green Economy Act in 2009. Approximately 80 percent
of Ontario???s anticipated generation capacity will need to be built, replaced or
refurbished within 15 years. In this context, the Ontario Ministry of Energy, Ontario
Power Authority, and Deloitte (one of Canada???s leading professional services firms),
have partnered with a ???green benefit??? fund, the Community Power Fund, to help local
community groups access resources to develop and establish renewable energy
projects. Understanding solar energy adoption in a community context is therefore
important to improve the effectiveness of such policies, including the disbursement of
multi???million dollar grant funds.
Differences between purchasers and non???purchasers in respect of adoption behaviour
were found in this study to cluster around two general themes. The first theme
concerns differences in compatibility of both the concept of solar energy systems, and
their physical attributes, with characteristics of potential adopter households. Some
compatibility issues are straightforward, e.g. availability of roof space with a southern
orientation. Others are more complex, involving several interrelated perceptual and
socio???demographic factors. For instance, while both purchasers and non???purchasers
rated cost as a very important barrier, purchasers rated the motivation of solar energy
systems to reduce climate change higher relative to the barrier of high financial costs
than did non???purchasers. Purchasers were also more likely to possess a graduate
degree, while non???purchasers were more likely to hold a professional degree.
The second general theme relates to potential adopters??? trust and stake in the ability of
the community???based initiative to reduce barriers in the adoption process. Since two
types of solar energy systems are considered in the case study???PV and thermal (hot
water)???differences are explored between each of three respondent groups: solar PV
purchasers, solar hot water (SHW) purchasers, and non???purchasers.
iv
Surveys were used to gather data on adopter perceptions and characteristics. A
participatory research design helped identify the research topic. Two main bodies of
literature???community???based social marketing (CBSM) and diffusion of innovations
theory???were drawn upon to conceptualize the adoption process and interpret the
survey findings. These include five models of human behaviour that can be used to
guide the design of CBSM campaigns. Diffusion theory was used as a basis for discussing
???perceived innovation attributes???. The study takes an integrated approach by
considering both social and technical aspects of solar energy adoption, together with
the issues of fuel substitution and household electricity demand.
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L’identité en projets : ville, architecture et patrimoine. Analyse de concours à Québec et à TorontoBen Jemia, Imen 10 1900 (has links)
Dans un contexte de globalisation et de profusion des discours identitaires, la thèse examine le concept d’identité, ses définitions et ses usages dans les débats et les pratiques de la ville, de l’architecture et du patrimoine. Les interventions sur un bâtiment historique révèlent autant le rapport identitaire de la société avec son histoire que celui avec le monde contemporain. La recherche traite de concours d’architecture dans deux villes canadiennes qui aspirent à se positionner à l’échelle internationale, l’une focalisant sur l’aspect contemporain global et l’autre sur l’aspect historique et local. L’objectif de la recherche est d’une part de contribuer au dévoilement du processus de construction identitaire des villes contemporaines à travers les projets d’architecture. D’autre part, il s’agit d’analyser le processus d’identification et l’identité architecturale dans son rapport à l’histoire et à la contemporanéité dans la pratique au sein de bâtiments historiques. La ville devient un objet de communication, qui use de marketing urbain, pour augmenter sa visibilité. L’architecture devient un moyen de communication utilisé pour transmettre une identité visuelle.
La méthodologie combine l’analyse des discours, ainsi que l’analyse de l’architecture et de sa représentation. Le choix du concours du Centre d'accueil et d'interprétation de la Place-Royale à Québec (1996) et de l’agrandissement du Musée royal d’Ontario (2001) à Toronto permet d’appréhender les différentes facettes du concept d’identité et de révéler les enjeux locaux et internationaux. Le fait qu’il s’agisse de concours donne accès à un corpus de discours qui comprend les programmes, les politiques de la ville, les présentations des architectes et la réception. L’histoire de chaque concours ainsi que l’analyse sémantique des discours de la commande éclairent le rapport entre les processus et les intentions et permettent de mettre en lumière les enjeux locaux. L’analyse des discours textuels et visuels des architectes dévoile le processus d’identification des projets, les différents types de référents impliqués ainsi que les stratégies de communication employées. L’analyse des projets rend compte des caractéristiques de l’identité de l’architecture contemporaine et son rapport avec le patrimoine.
La recherche dévoile l’importance des discours et de la communication dans la construction identitaire des villes en amont des concours ainsi que le débat sociétal que la question pose. Durant le processus d’identification architecturale, le biais induit par la commande amène une emphase et une surenchère des discours historiques par les architectes dans le cas de Québec. Les projets proposés misent sur une mise en scène de la ville historique et du patrimoine et focalisent sur l’expérience visuelle des visiteurs. Dans le cas de Toronto, l’intérêt pour l’aspect global et spectaculaire dans la construction identitaire de la ville en amont du concours, génère un engouement pour une représentation attractive des projets et pour une architecture iconique. / This thesis examines the concept of identity, its definitions and uses in the debates and practices of the city, architecture and heritage. Interventions on historic buildings reveal as much the relationship between the identity of society and its history as with the contemporary world. This research studies architectural competitions in two Canadian cities that aspire to be international, one focusing on the contemporary and global aspect (Toronto) and the other on the historical and local aspect (Quebec City). The objective of this research is on the one hand, to unravel the process of identity construction of the contemporary city through architectural projects. On the other hand, it is to analyze the process of identification and the architectural identity in its relation to history and contemporaneity in architectural practice of historic buildings.
The methodology used in this study combines discourse analysis and analysis of the architecture and its representation. The choice of the competition of Place-Royale Interpretation center in Quebec City (1996) and the competition for the expansion of Royal Ontario Museum (2001) in Toronto reveals the concept of identity’s different facets. The history of each competition and semantic analysis of the documentation clarify the relationship between processes and intentions and help to highlight local issues. The analysis of both textual and visual discourses of architects’ proposals reveals the process of identification of the projects, the different types of references involved and the communication strategies employed. The analysis of the projects reflects the identity characteristics of contemporary architecture.
This research reveals the importance of discourses and communication in the construction of cities’ identity, and the societal debates that these questions provoke. During the process of architectural identification, the specific approach of the brief, in the case of Quebec City, prompts a discourse with a historical focus by the architects. The proposed projects are presented within the historical setting and focus on the visual experience of visitors. In the Toronto case, the interest on the global and spectacular in the city’s identity construction generates enthusiasm for an attractive representation of the projects and for iconic architecture.
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L’identité en projets : ville, architecture et patrimoine. Analyse de concours à Québec et à TorontoBen Jemia, Imen 10 1900 (has links)
Dans un contexte de globalisation et de profusion des discours identitaires, la thèse examine le concept d’identité, ses définitions et ses usages dans les débats et les pratiques de la ville, de l’architecture et du patrimoine. Les interventions sur un bâtiment historique révèlent autant le rapport identitaire de la société avec son histoire que celui avec le monde contemporain. La recherche traite de concours d’architecture dans deux villes canadiennes qui aspirent à se positionner à l’échelle internationale, l’une focalisant sur l’aspect contemporain global et l’autre sur l’aspect historique et local. L’objectif de la recherche est d’une part de contribuer au dévoilement du processus de construction identitaire des villes contemporaines à travers les projets d’architecture. D’autre part, il s’agit d’analyser le processus d’identification et l’identité architecturale dans son rapport à l’histoire et à la contemporanéité dans la pratique au sein de bâtiments historiques. La ville devient un objet de communication, qui use de marketing urbain, pour augmenter sa visibilité. L’architecture devient un moyen de communication utilisé pour transmettre une identité visuelle.
La méthodologie combine l’analyse des discours, ainsi que l’analyse de l’architecture et de sa représentation. Le choix du concours du Centre d'accueil et d'interprétation de la Place-Royale à Québec (1996) et de l’agrandissement du Musée royal d’Ontario (2001) à Toronto permet d’appréhender les différentes facettes du concept d’identité et de révéler les enjeux locaux et internationaux. Le fait qu’il s’agisse de concours donne accès à un corpus de discours qui comprend les programmes, les politiques de la ville, les présentations des architectes et la réception. L’histoire de chaque concours ainsi que l’analyse sémantique des discours de la commande éclairent le rapport entre les processus et les intentions et permettent de mettre en lumière les enjeux locaux. L’analyse des discours textuels et visuels des architectes dévoile le processus d’identification des projets, les différents types de référents impliqués ainsi que les stratégies de communication employées. L’analyse des projets rend compte des caractéristiques de l’identité de l’architecture contemporaine et son rapport avec le patrimoine.
La recherche dévoile l’importance des discours et de la communication dans la construction identitaire des villes en amont des concours ainsi que le débat sociétal que la question pose. Durant le processus d’identification architecturale, le biais induit par la commande amène une emphase et une surenchère des discours historiques par les architectes dans le cas de Québec. Les projets proposés misent sur une mise en scène de la ville historique et du patrimoine et focalisent sur l’expérience visuelle des visiteurs. Dans le cas de Toronto, l’intérêt pour l’aspect global et spectaculaire dans la construction identitaire de la ville en amont du concours, génère un engouement pour une représentation attractive des projets et pour une architecture iconique. / This thesis examines the concept of identity, its definitions and uses in the debates and practices of the city, architecture and heritage. Interventions on historic buildings reveal as much the relationship between the identity of society and its history as with the contemporary world. This research studies architectural competitions in two Canadian cities that aspire to be international, one focusing on the contemporary and global aspect (Toronto) and the other on the historical and local aspect (Quebec City). The objective of this research is on the one hand, to unravel the process of identity construction of the contemporary city through architectural projects. On the other hand, it is to analyze the process of identification and the architectural identity in its relation to history and contemporaneity in architectural practice of historic buildings.
The methodology used in this study combines discourse analysis and analysis of the architecture and its representation. The choice of the competition of Place-Royale Interpretation center in Quebec City (1996) and the competition for the expansion of Royal Ontario Museum (2001) in Toronto reveals the concept of identity’s different facets. The history of each competition and semantic analysis of the documentation clarify the relationship between processes and intentions and help to highlight local issues. The analysis of both textual and visual discourses of architects’ proposals reveals the process of identification of the projects, the different types of references involved and the communication strategies employed. The analysis of the projects reflects the identity characteristics of contemporary architecture.
This research reveals the importance of discourses and communication in the construction of cities’ identity, and the societal debates that these questions provoke. During the process of architectural identification, the specific approach of the brief, in the case of Quebec City, prompts a discourse with a historical focus by the architects. The proposed projects are presented within the historical setting and focus on the visual experience of visitors. In the Toronto case, the interest on the global and spectacular in the city’s identity construction generates enthusiasm for an attractive representation of the projects and for iconic architecture.
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A Little Room of Hope: Feminist Participatory Action Research with "Homeless" WomenParadis, Emily Katherine 25 February 2010 (has links)
In April 2005, a group of women gathered for a human rights workshop at a Toronto drop-in centre for women experiencing homelessness, poverty, and isolation. One year later, the group sent a representative to address the United Nations Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. This dissertation describes and analyzes the feminist participatory action research-intervention project that began with the workshop and led to the United Nations. Over the course of 15 months, more than 50 participants attended weekly meetings at the drop-in. They learned about social and economic rights, testified about their experiences of human rights violations, and planned and undertook actions to respond to and resist homelessness. This thesis draws upon observations of meetings, documents produced by the group, and interviews with thirteen of the participants, in order to examine the project from a number of angles. First, the project suggests a new understanding of women’s homelessness: testimonies and interviews reveal that homelessness is not only a material state, but more importantly a social process of disenfranchisement enacted through relations of harm, threat, control, surveillance, precarity and dehumanization. Understanding homelessness as a social process enables an analysis of its operations within and for a dominant social and economic order structured by colonization and neoliberal globalization. Secondly, the thesis takes up participants’ assessments of the project’s political effectiveness and its impacts on their well-being and empowerment, and reads these against the researcher’s experiences with the project, in order to explore how feminist participatory methodologies can contribute to resistance. Finally, the thesis concludes with recommendations for theory, research, service provision, and human rights advocacy on women’s homelessness.
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