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Hidden and forgotten: the plight of children trafficked for domestic work in Uganda.Nyakato, Anne Mary 18 January 2012 (has links)
The recruitment of children from rural areas to work as domestic workers in urban areas is a practice that has gone unhindered for many years. In many communities in Africa, and in Uganda in particular, the placement of children in the homes of wealthier relatives or friends to perform domestic work in exchange for education and other benefits is considered a survival strategy. Like in many other societies, Ugandan communities find it culturally acceptable to use children to complement family income efforts. They hardly acknowledge that using children to undertake domestic activities, which at times may be hazardous to their health and education, amounts to exploitation of children. This is worsened by the fact that the use of children for domestic work co-exists with such other malicious practices, including the trafficking of children which violate their most basic and fundamental rights.
This dissertation argues that although the law on child labour has existed for a long time, this practice has flourished and in some cases it has contributed to the development of child trafficking and slavery. The study acknowledges that there are many international law and domestic instruments which seek to address these problems. While analyzing the available literature and the body of international and national legal instruments, the study challenges the extent to which these instruments are useful in delivering protection to children. It will show that, while it is evident that the UN Protocol on Trafficking in Persons brought significant contribution to international criminal law, it did not add much value in the fight against the trafficking of children for domestic work as its scope is limited to addressing transnational crimes and those involving an organized criminal group.
The dissertation also shows that neither international human rights law, nor national labour law have dealt with the question of exploitation of children adequately. It is highlighted in the study that international law has neither defined clearly the term ‘exploitation’, nor distinguished effectively between acceptable work and harmful work for children. The dissertation argues for a child-centred approach that values the full range of children’s rights and does not seek only to eliminate child labour, but also understand the reasons why children work, recognise their rights as workers and provide mechanisms that ensure decent work for children.
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A study of the association of certain attitudes toward the educational process and family socio-economic status as found among 120 public school children in St. Petersburg, Pinellas County, FloridaTangari, Anthony Joseph Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
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Family relations, hopelessness, and coping responses in child psychiatric patients and school children.January 1990 (has links)
by Shing Chi Yuen. / Thesis (M.S.Sc.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1990. / Bibliography: leaves 49-56. / ABSTRACT --- p.ii / ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS --- p.iv / TABLE OF CONTENTS --- p.V / LIST OF TABLES --- p.vi / LIST OF APPENDICES --- p.vii / Chapter CHAPTER I - --- INTRODUCTION --- p.1 / The influence of family --- p.1 / Coping responses --- p.7 / Hopelessness --- p.13 / Purpose of the Present Study --- p.18 / Chapter CHAPTER II - --- METHOD --- p.21 / Subjects --- p.21 / Instruments --- p.21 / Procedure --- p.25 / Chapter CHAPTER III - --- RESULTS --- p.26 / "Differences between child psychiatric patients and school children in family relations, hopelessness, and coping responses" --- p.26 / "Interrelationships among family relations, hopelessness, coping responses and emotional disturbance" --- p.29 / "Predictive power of family relations, hopelessness and coping responses in predicting emotional disturbance" --- p.33 / The mediating effect of coping responses --- p.38 / Chapter CHAPTER IV - --- Discussion --- p.41 / REFERENCES --- p.49 / APPENDICES --- p.57
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Children's perceptions of their outdoor environment in relation to their physical activity behaviours : exploring differences by urbanicity and area level deprivationHayball, Felicity Zara Lee January 2018 (has links)
Background – Physical activity (PA) has been shown to have numerous physical (e.g., reduced risk of cardiovascular disease, type-2 diabetes and obesity) and psychological (e.g., improved mental well-being, and reduction in levels of stress and depression) benefits for childhood health. Despite the known benefits, childhood PA levels are low in Scotland, where less than 20% of children achieve the recommended daily guidelines. Evidence suggests that time spent outside is positively associated with achieving higher PA levels. Understanding what might encourage children to spend time outside in their neighbourhood could inform the development of interventions aimed at encouraging children to be more active. Children from different socio-spatial neighbourhoods may perceive and utilise their neighbourhood differently, influencing how they spend their free time. This PhD thesis examines how children from diverse settings perceive their neighbourhood in relation to their outdoor activity behaviours. Methods – This thesis takes a qualitative, multi-methodological approach, towards understanding 10-11 year old children’s perceptions of their environment in relation to their time spent outside through the lens of Gibson’s theory of affordances. A pilot study (n=15, 5 boys, 10 girls) was conducted to test the feasibility of the methods. For the main study, the children (n=25, 12 boys, 13 girls) were from different levels of area deprivation and from varying levels of urbanicity. Data collection methods included photo voice, drawings, focus groups or interviews. The participants were asked to document features within their environment (via photographs and drawings) that they felt influenced their time outside. They were then asked to participate in either a focus group or a one-to-one interview. The data collection process took place between May and September 2015. Findings – Children’s perceptions of their neighbourhood environments are complex, and numerous differences were found to be dependent on area of residence. Children from rural areas appeared to be influenced more by physical affordances whereas children living in urban settings were influenced more by social affordances, specifically their friends. Children living in more deprived neighbourhoods spoke of needing more PA opportunities in their neighbourhood compared to children living in more affluent neighbourhoods, suggesting that inequalities may still exist between higher and lower area deprivation. Many of the children considered current play equipment too boring, and lacked challenge or risk. The children desired equipment that better suited their perceived capabilities. This thesis found that children were more likely to spend time outside for psychological reasons, such as relaxation. Conclusion – Through the use of novel methodology in this subject area, this thesis adds an original contribution to the literature by exploring children’s environmental perceptions in relation to PA, and by looking at how setting might influence these perceptions. This thesis found that children perceive their environment differently dependent on the context of their lives, suggesting that initiatives to increase childhood PA could differ depending on residential setting. Additionally, policy may emphasize the psychological benefits to children as opposed to the physical benefits. Highlighting benefits such as relaxation, happiness and excitement may be more conducive to increasing PA among this age group than focusing on benefits such as weight management and cardiovascular health.
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The experience of paediatric care closer to home : a place and space perspectiveHeath, Gemma Louise January 2013 (has links)
NHS reforms have sought to ensure that children and young people who are ill receive timely, high quality and effective care as close to home as possible (DH, 2004). This study examined the experience and impact of introducing new, ‘closer to home’ community-based paediatric outpatient clinics from the perspectives of NHS service-users and providers. Twenty-seven interviews conducted with parents and patients (aged 8-16), were analysed using a descriptive phenomenological approach. Thirty-seven interviews conducted with healthcare professionals, were analysed using a thematic framework method. Findings reveal that paediatric outpatient ‘care close to home’ is experienced in ways that go beyond concerns about location and proximity. For families it means care that ‘fits into their lives’ spatially, temporally and emotionally; facilitating a sense of ‘at-homeness’ within the self and within the place, through the creation of a warm and welcoming environment, and by providing timely consultations which attend to aspects of the families’ lifeworld. For service-providers, place and professional identity were closely related, with implicit assumptions made about where high quality of care and clinical expertise were located. Place, time and human relations were thus shown to be meaningful constituents of the experience of paediatric outpatient care. These previously ‘taken-for-granted’ nuances of healthcare delivery have implications for the design and implementation of effective ‘closer to home’ services.
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Dietary intake, eating behaviour, and weight status in primary school aged children in the West MidlandsHurley, Kiya L. January 2017 (has links)
Children are uniquely placed in a context where external influences are likely to determine their food consumption. Evidence regarding the immediate food environment’s influence on dietary quality and/or weight status in children is limited. This thesis uses data from the West Midlands ActiVe lifestyle and healthy Eating in School children (WAVES) study to explore patterns of dietary intake in children aged 5-9 years (n=1467), some of the determinants of children's dietary consumption and their associations with child weight status. Findings suggest that children’s dietary consumption needs to be more healthful, and aspects of children's school and home life may have the potential to influence dietary quality and weight status. Specifically, a healthy home food environment was associated with increased fruit and vegetable intake and a lower weight status. Certain parental feeding practices, such as using food as a reward or to regulate emotion, were also associated with increased energy intake from free sugar and weight status. In conclusion, various environmental and behavioural factors are associated with children’s dietary intake and as such, coordinated efforts in a variety of settings are required to affect the ‘what’, ‘how’ and ‘in what context’ of children’s dietary consumption and consequently childhood obesity prevalence.
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Reliability, validity and educational use of the Cognitive Abilities ProfileDeutsch, Ruth Marion January 2017 (has links)
The Cognitive Abilities Profile (CAP) (Deutsch and Mohammed, 2010) is a collaborative tool for psychologists and teachers. The CAP is based on principles of Dynamic Assessment (DA) and uses a consultative model for rating pupils' cognitive abilities in various cognitive domains and for planning interventions to facilitate pupils' progress accordingly. The CAP was developed in response to a perceived need for educational psychologists (EPs) to have access to alternative assessments to standardised psychological tests, particularly in the case of learning disadvantaged and ethnic minority pupils. Using DA as one possible approach creates a need for EPs to have access to training and to receive support with the implementation of DA-based intervention methods within local services. However, surveys of EP use of DA indicate limitations in training, inadequate support and difficulties in wider application of DA. In the present work, a quantitative methodology has been used to examine the validity and reliability of the CAP in overcoming the above-noted difficulties in the implementation of DA by EPs. The methodology involved the collection and analysis of data from three groups of EPs, two of which conducted consultations with teachers using the CAP and the third group of EPs used its own choice of consultation methodology and functioned as a control group. The findings of the present work provide evidence of good construct validity of the CAP cognitive domains, adequate inter-rater reliability between CAP users and evidence of advantage for pupils in some areas of functioning between pre- and post-use of the CAP, as validated by independent standardised tests. Analysis of perceptions of EPs of the utility of the CAP, based on the results of feedback questionnaires, addresses issues of user friendliness of the CAP. CAP users agreed on the need for initial training for psychologists and support for practitioners. The findings have implications for adoption of a novel approach in EP and teacher related work.
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Characterisation of the androgen dependent phenotypeRodie, Martina Elizabeth January 2017 (has links)
The effects of androgens reach far and wide and can be physiological as well as pathological. They are not limited to males and involve almost every system in the human body. Their influence on reproductive development and behaviours is well studied, but more recently, attention has turned to the wider reaching consequences of androgen exposure. Disorders of sex development (DSD) are rare conditions in which individuals may be deficient in, or resistant to, the effects of androgens. The long-term health and quality of life for these individuals is not well reported, but where there are reports, there are descriptions of increased depressive like behaviours, anxiety and poor social functioning. Lack of androgens has been linked to poorer neurocognitive outcomes in some studies and there is a concern that more aggressive hormone replacement should be considered in early life for those individuals lacking in androgens. These disorders can be difficult to study for many reasons. Firstly, they are rare conditions. Secondly, adults with DSD do not tend to visit hospital regularly and can therefore be challenging to engage in research. Thirdly, studying the effects of early life exposure to steroid hormones and relating these to later life behaviours is incredibly complex. Animal models have been used for many years to study the hormonal environment. For my first study, I used a model of rodent neonatal androgen blockade by treating pups with the anti-androgen flutamide for the first five days of life. The animals were studied again in adolescence (6 weeks of age) and early adulthood (10 weeks of age). There were no significant differences found in testosterone, dihydrotestosterone and androstenedione levels in either age group, demonstrating that the androgen blockade was transient. The anogenital index (AGI) was significantly shorter in the treated animals when compared to controls at 6 weeks of age and 10 weeks of age. Phallus length was significantly shorter in treated males when compared to the healthy males at 6 weeks of age and at 10 weeks of age. Phallus weight was significantly lower in the treated animals at 10 weeks of age when compared to the healthy animals. This work demonstrated that my rodent model of neonatal androgen blockade was an effective one. My next study used the same rodent model and aimed to link the perinatal hormonal environment with in vivo brain chemistry using a painless, non-invasive technique known as Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy. Using a mixed effects model, I analysed the effects of sex, gender, treatment with flutamide and age on the metabolite pattern of the rodent brain. Ɣ-aminobutyric acid (GABA), glucose, glutamine, glutamate, phosphocholine and myo-inositol all changed over time. The combined peaks of glutamate and glutamine also demonstrated a significant change over time. GABA, glutamate, phosphocholine and myo-inositol showed significant sex differences as did the combined peaks of glycerophosphocholine and phosphocholine, N-acetylaspartate (NAA) and N-acetylaspartylglutamate (NAAG) and glutamate and glutamine. Aspartate, GABA and myo-inositol were all significantly changed by treatment of the animals with flutamide and GABA and myo-inositol levels in treated males were similar to control females at both 6 and 10 weeks. My final study using the rodent model of androgen blockade looked at the histological changes in the brain. Brains were sectioned and stained for neuronal cell counts and microglial cell counts, and PCR for the Androgen Receptor (AR) was performed. I demonstrated significant, sexually dimorphic changes in neuronal cell counts, microglial cell counts and androgen receptor expression in two clearly defined areas in the rodent brain. In summary, my rodent work demonstrated a link between the neonatal hormonal environment and the sexually dimorphic chemistry and histology of the in vivo brain, and supports the hypothesis that the microglial cell plays a critical role in brain masculinisation. To include a translational aspect to this thesis I extended my work to a population of undermasculinised boys, who were attending hospital for an hCG stimulation test as part of their investigations for 46 XY DSD. The hCG stimulation test is a valuable method for assessing androgen production but there is a need to explore its utility in assessing androgen responsiveness and long-term prognosis. I aimed to assess the effects of the hCG test on the in vivo brain chemistry using MRS, and the peripheral transcriptome using microarray. I reliably demonstrated metabolites in the brains of healthy male infants, healthy female infants and affected male infants. Healthy male infants had significantly lower levels of N-acetylaspartate than affected males in the hypothalamus and lower levels of the phosphocholines in the frontal cortex. In my transcriptomic study of DSD patients, I demonstrated the existence of an androgen responsive group of small RNAs that are measurable in peripheral mononuclear blood cells, and that change over the short duration of an hCG stimulation test, raising the prospect of combining the biochemical assessment of testosterone production with an objective molecular assessment of androgen sufficiency. In summary, in this thesis I have successfully linked the early hormonal environment with later life in vivo brain chemistry, confirmed by histological studies. I have also identified a novel marker, which could potentially be used as an assessment of androgen sufficiency in the future.
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Fear of hypoglycaemia in childhood diabetesTah, Priya January 2016 (has links)
Hypoglycaemia is an unavoidable consequence of treatment of Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus (T1DM). Symptoms are often embarrassing and distressing and can lead to the development of fear of hypoglycaemia (FoH). This fear can have a negative impact on diabetes management and can lead to further medical complications. 210 children and young people (CYP), aged 3-17 years and 190 parents from diabetes paediatric clinics across the West Midlands, UK, completed questionnaires exploring the prevalence of hypoglycaemia, FoH and links to hypoglycaemia awareness, self-care, quality of life and anxiety. Demographic information and HbA1c data were also collected. Results indicated that hypoglycaemia and severe hypoglycaemia (SH) are a problem for CYP in the UK. Hypoglycaemia Fear Survey (HFS) scores were higher in parents than in CYP (Total HFS 37.1±14.9 vs. 50.2±17.8 vs. 45.2±18.0, CYP vs. mother vs. father, respectively, p < 0.01). Adolescents with prior experience of severe hypoglycaemia (SH) had higher HFS scores compared to those without (t=-3.61, p < 0.001). Trait anxiety and SH explained 23% of the variance in HFS scores in adolescents. Trait anxiety explained 37% of the variance in HFS scores in under 11 year olds, 18% in mothers of under 11 year olds, 6% in mothers of adolescent and 10% in fathers of adolescents. There was no correlation between HFS and HbA1c. Qualitative analyses identified ‘Burden’ as an overarching theme from CYP and parent interviews. ‘Negative emotions’ and ‘Living with diabetes’ emerged as the key themes of analysis. This research study adds to existing findings on the prevalence of hypoglycaemia, severe hypoglycaemia, FoH and possible related factors, by focusing on the paediatric population and their parents, in the UK, for which there is limited research. Qualitative analyses also provided novel reports of the experience of T1DM for CYP and their mothers. Implications of this research could lead to the development of an FoH and anxiety managementprogramme for CYP and their parents. The findings of this study also help to raise awareness of this very real and current issue in diabetes management.
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A developmental study of causal attribution : balance and the use of internal versus external organizational schemas in social situationsSmith, Anna C. January 2011 (has links)
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