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To 'test' or not to 'test'? : an exploratory study of WITS students' responses to Voluntary Counselling and Testing (VCT).Buldeo, Priya 29 June 2012 (has links)
The health of University students is important as these individuals are central to the future economic sector. Since HIV/AIDS is a major public health threat in South Africa (SA), it is vital to develop health initiatives that aim to reduce the HIV prevalence rate among youth and to promote positive health behaviour. Voluntary Counselling and Testing (VCT) is one such initiative. The National Department of Health (NDoH) recently implemented the „First Things First‟ campaign that aims to promote VCT among youth. In line with the NDoH‟s initiative, this study explored the factors that shape attitudes towards VCT among first year students at the University of the Witwatersrand (WITS).
This study was conducted using a combination of quantitative and qualitative research methods. The respondents included 195 first year students out of approximately 220 who participated in a survey and two key informants in the field of HIV/AIDS whom I interviewed. With regards to ethical considerations, the study protected the respondent‟s rights by maintaining anonymity of all survey participants and exercised care that the human rights of individuals and the reputation of WITS as an institution were safeguarded.
Based on conceptual models of health behaviour, the study identified factors that shaped students responses to VCT. The results of this study indicate that youth at WITS go for VCT mainly to know their HIV status. This is being triggered by them knowing someone who has either; been for VCT, is living with HIV or passed away due to AIDS. In addition, the free availability and easy accessibility of VCT services on campus and the positive influence of peers through social mobilisation were regarded as key motivations for students accessing VCT. However, some students seem to not access VCT services due to personal fears of rejection, blame and discrimination if they were to be found HIV-positive. The gendered dynamics and nature of clinics together with the poor attitudes of some health service providers were also major barriers to VCT uptake among youth.
The findings conclude that many students know that VCT is a necessary and beneficial process. It also found that there are multiple factors that work together in complex ways to shape the reasons why youth choose to „test‟ or not to „test‟ for HIV.
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Neither ‘Less’ Nor ‘Free’: A long-term view of couples’ experiences and construction of involuntary childlessnessMoulet, Christine, res.cand@acu.edu.au January 2005 (has links)
Childlessness, whether voluntary, involuntary or circumstantial, is becoming more common in our society. Statistically, greater numbers of Australian women and their Western counterparts will not bear children, thereby creating a larger quantum of couple families. The unwelcome socio-economic consequences have prompted research into reproductive intentions and behaviour to address barriers to reproduction. Studying those who are childless by ‘choice’ or ‘infertile’ provides important ‘reference points’ but also creates a myopic view of the childless that often overlooks circumstantial factors or ignores the fluctuating nature of fertility intentions. Moreover, the medical discourse on infertility has conditioned our thinking and focused research on the psycho-social effects and impacts of assisted reproduction treatment and its failure. This has blurred and obscured the distinction between infertility and involuntary childlessness. Too often these are viewed through the same prism of grief and bereavement as a temporary but pervasive ‘crisis’ and as impediments to adult development in the long term. The thesis provides new insights that challenge our conventional ways of thinking particularly its findings that although infertility and childlessness are related, they are separate phenomena. This has wide-ranging implications, especially for reformulating related clinical practice and counselling. There are several important considerations. One is the finding that the grief and bereavement model has its limitations beyond the infertility stage. Another is the theoretical reconstruction that the thesis provides of the grief that the involuntary childless experience. Finally, it makes a strong case for a more appropriate alternative which the thesis argues should be based on a growth-oriented model. The time point at which the information for this study was collected has rarely ever been used before. This adds significant weight to the findings and applications that potentially derive from them. The thesis also examines gender issues including the complexities in differential experiences, amongst and across gender categories. It builds on the existing body of knowledge on the gendered experience of involuntary childlessness and offers additional explanations for the variations found, around which clinical interventions should be framed. Overall, this study makes an important contribution to our knowledge and understanding by documenting the transitional process to involuntary childlessness in broader terms than has hitherto been the case. Contrary to conventional thinking related to adult development, the findings underscore the importance of viewing involuntary childlessness as an alternative developmental pathway.
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Professional armed forces new trend in Europe : transformation of the Czech armed forces /Zold, Zoltan. January 2002 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.S. in Defense Systems Management)--Naval Postgraduate School, June 2002. / Thesis advisor(s): Raymond Franck, Donald Abenheim. Includes bibliographical references (p. 85-88). Also available online.
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The impact of using the voluntary framework of accountability as a measure of student progress and outcomes at a community collegeZylka, Sheryl Ann 19 November 2013 (has links)
The community college mission is to provide open access to higher education for all students. For that reason, accountability measures have focused primarily on student access to their institutions. However, in recent years there was a shift to include student progress and outcomes, in addition to access, as measures of institutional effectiveness.
With this shift came concerns by community college leadership on a national level that they were being held accountable with measures that were inappropriate for this sector of higher education. As a result, the Voluntary Framework of Accountability (VFA) was created. This framework is unique in that it was designed for and by community colleges and is currently being piloted on a national basis by the American Association of Community Colleges at approximately 100 locations.
This qualitative research case study, based upon grounded theory, chronicles the participation process of the Community College of Allegheny County (CCAC) in the development and piloting of accountability metrics using the VFA model to measure student progress and outcomes and the resultant impact on policy and practice at the CCAC.
In my research, I found a number of factors shaping the implementation of the VFA pilot. The decision of the CCAC to participate in the development and pilot project of the VFA can be traced back to the increased pressure of accountability on the institution and the leadership of the current president and his philosophy about data informed decision-making. Other findings that influenced the implementation of the VFA included the limitations of the pre-VFA metric definitions and measurements that were being used to account for student progress and outcomes. In my treatise I describe the implementation issues, including the challenges and benefits of using the VFA accountability model, and then examine how it has impacted organizational policy and practices. / text
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Voluntary disclosure of corporate strategy : determinants and outcomes : an empirical study into the risks and payoffs of communicating corporate strategyCoebergh, Henricus Petrus Theodorus January 2011 (has links)
Business leaders increasingly face pressure from stakeholders to be transparent. There appears however little consensus on the risks and payoffs of disclosing vital information such as corporate strategy. To fill this gap, this study analyzes firm-specific determinants and organisational outcomes of voluntary disclosure of corporate strategy. Stakeholder theory and agency theory help to understand whether companies serve their interest to engage with stakeholders and overcome information asymmetries. I connect these theories and propose a comprehensive approach to measure voluntary disclosure of corporate strategy. Hypotheses from the theoretical framework are empirically tested through panel regression of data on identified determinants and outcomes and of disclosed strategy through annual reports, corporate social responsibility reports, corporate websites and corporate press releases by the 70 largest publicly listed companies in the Netherlands from 2003 through 2008. I found that industry, profitability, dual-listing status, national ranking status and listing age have significant effects on voluntary disclosure of corporate strategy. No significant effects are found for size, leverage and ownership concentration. On outcomes, I found that liquidity of stock and corporate reputation are significantly influenced by voluntary disclosure of corporate strategy. No significant effect is found for volatility of stock. My contributions to theory, methodology and empirics offers a stepping-stone for further research into understanding how companies can use transparency to manage stakeholder relations.
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Providing a friend : the Bolton Guild of Help, the poor and the problem of poverty, 1905-1914Robertson, Stuart Charles January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
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Culture, corporate governance and disclosure in Malaysian corporationsHaniffa, Roszaini Mohamad January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
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The social action of the local church : five congregations in an English cityCameron, Helen Elizabeth January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
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Agenda setting and denial in the states nonprofit hospital tax exemptions : a North Carolina case study /Millsaps, Linda Struyk. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--West Virginia University, 2005 / Originally issued in electronic format. Vita. Includes abstract. UMI number: 3170939. Includes bibliographical references (p. 128-136). Also available via the World Wide Web.
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The recognition and enforcement of debts under the statutes of Acton Burnell (1283) and Merchants (1285), 1283-1307McNall, Christopher January 2000 (has links)
This thesis is about the statutes of Acton Burnell (1283) and Merchants (1285) which provided for the voluntary registration of debts before specially established registries, and sophisticated measures of execution against the defaulting debtor's person, goods, and lands. The introduction describes the sources for this thesis; the London Recognisance rolls; the certificates of statute merchant into the Chancery; the Plea Rolls of the Royal courts and of local - principally, borough - courts. Chapter 1 describes the background to the statutes, in particular the recoverability of debts before Royal, local, and mercantile courts before 1283. Chapter 2 explores the immediate legal and political contexts of Acton Burnell. A draft of the statute is discussed and compared with the statute. The need for reform in 1285 is assessed, setting Merchants alongside Westminster II n c.39. The provisions under both statutory schemes for recognition and enrolment of the debt, and the initiation of execution are described. Chapter 4 examines execution against the debtor's movable property. The statutory appraisal, sale and delivery of the debtor's goods are examined and compared both with the draft provisions and common law modes of execution. Appraisers' liability under the statutes is examined. Competing execution against the same debtor is investigated. Chapter 5 examines the debtor's arrest and detention, gaolers' statutory liability, statutory costs and damages. It investigates the operation of the statutes once the debt had been satisfied, the mechanisms for obtaining the debtor's release, and challenges to unlawful imprisonment via the writ audita querela. Chapter 6 examines execution against the debtor's immovable property. The chapter discusses the 'extent' by which the debtor's lands were to be delivered to the creditor under Merchants, and the nature of the creditor's holding of his debtor's immovables (the tenancy 'by statute merchant').
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