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The Descendants of Hurao: An Exploratory Study of Chamoru Rights GroupsButler, Alan T. 10 February 2020 (has links)
No description available.
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Food Waste Reduction through Food Sharing Initiatives: The lived Experiences of Restaurants and Food Bank Employees in RiyadhAbdur-Rahim, Abdulwasih I. January 2023 (has links)
Today’s world is characterised by considerable inconsistency. In some parts of the world people are living in starvation and malnutrition, while in some other parts of the same world, about 1.3 billion tons of food is wasted every year. We do not know enough about what contributes to food waste. However, there seems to be an emergent pattern of behaviour around sharing food. This hermeneutic phenomenological research will explore how food sharing might reduce food waste in a cultural and community-based society like Saudi Arabia through the lived experiences of restaurants and food bank employees.
Research data were collected through a face-to-face semi-structured interview method from 15 participants from selected restaurants and food bank in Riyadh. Using the theory of planned behaviour (TPB) as the theoretical lens, a conceptual framework was proposed to elicit underlying behavioural and cultural factors impeding food waste reduction and the inefficiency of food sharing. Using Paul Colaizzi’s approach, the collected interview data were reviewed, analysed, and seventeen themes were elicited for further discussion.
The findings suggest that culture through an affluent way of life and the show-off lifestyle of hosts continue to contribute to more food wastage. The strictly business nature of restaurants operation leads to edible food fit for human consumption ending up in the garbage. The revised conceptual framework provides insight into the factors hindering food waste reduction and food sharing. With supporting regulations and policies, food leftovers can either be distributed to people in need or put to an alternative use.
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Multidimensional manual therapy model for managing patients with chronic non-specific low back painSteffen, Marjory Christine January 2013 (has links)
Low back pain (LBP) is regarded as a major health and economic problem in
western industrialised countries even at this time in the twenty-first century.
Researchers estimate that it has increased to affect about 45% of the population in
2011. This increase creates a major burden on the health care services, social
structures and the economy in terms of absenteeism from work. CNSLBP is still
poorly understood. Main reasons for the poor understanding of CNSLBP discussed
in this study are the limited understanding of the effect of the spine as kinetic chain
which includes the head and pelvic girdle and with its attachments to the scapulae .
The process of development of ISMS dysfunction are discussed as a combination of
abnormal spinal loading, soft and neural tissue plasticity that result in biomechanical
malalignment, adaptive and maladaptive movement patterns, pain processing
integrated with psychosocial factors that influence the biomechanical, pain
processing and psychological responses are discussed as possible mechanisms in
the development of CNSLBP.
The researcher developed a multidimensional manual therapy model to manage
patients with CNSLBP based on metacognitive reflection on her clinical reasoning
over a period of 40 years as the research methodology. The metacognitive reflection
has been performed within the interpretive paradigm
The model that resulted from the metacognitive reflection is dialectic in nature
because it entails the understanding of the patient‘s problem from an interpretive as
well as from an empirico-analytical perspective.
The model is conceptualised in three stages: Firstly the conceptualisation of the
integrated spinal movement system (ISMS), to indicate that the spine, head, shoulder and pelvic girdles function as a closed kinematic chain. Secondly the
process of the development of ISMS dysfunction as a major concept in the clinical
picture of patients with CNSLBP is based on functional anatomy of the ISMS and the
researcher‘s clinical observation in clinical practice. The researcher indicates how
the development of ISMS dysfunction and characteristic adaptive behaviour are
integrated components of the patient‘s complex heterogenic clinical picture. The
underlying process for the development of ISMS dysfunction as a possible
mechanism for CNSLBP is described as plasticity of soft and neural tissues
(including the brain) which result in chronicity over time.
Thirdly a multidimensional manual therapy model to manage patients with CNSLBP‘s
heterogenic condition is discussed. The model indicates how the mechanisms
underlying the development of ISMS dysfunction is addressed in a multidimensional
approach to patient management. Finally the multidimensional manual therapy
model is discussed in relation to other relevant intervention approaches. The model
finally serves as a point of departure for planning and conducting appropriate
research in basic and clinical sciences.
The multidimensional manual therapy model for the management of patients with
CNSLBP has been developed in clinical practice and is presented as a practicetheory
in the form of a model. / Thesis (PhD)--University of Pretoria, 2013. / gm2013 / Physiotherapy / Unrestricted
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Feelings of Enlightenment: A Hermeneutic Interpretation of Latent Enlightenment Assumptions in Greenberg's Emotion-Focused TherapyGomez, Alex A. 17 August 2018 (has links)
No description available.
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