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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.
1441

Intranät från ett användarperspektiv : riktlinjer att följa vid en implementering

Andersson, Emeli, Magnell, Ida, Pettersson, Matilda January 2009 (has links)
<p>Today, an Intranet is an important way for a company to share information. An Intranet has become a company’s way to communicate within the organisation. This communication is important, especially when the company is going through changes. In order for a project to succeed, the employees must support it. This support can be gained through good communication. Because of this, we have chosen to make our bachelor thesis about this interesting and important subject. Many organisations can find a solution for a well-functioning Intranet by asking its employees what they want in a new Intranet, and what they think about the change.</p><p> </p><p>This bachelor thesis is based on a study that conducted interviews at companies that were about to introduce a new Intranet. The study is aided by the theories in the subject, as well as with meetings with the company in order to obtain relevant information. The study gave us information about what the Intranet should endure and what the employees think about the change. We compiled the results and created some advice and guidelines that can help our company implement a new Intranet. These guidelines can also be used at other companies in similar situations.</p> / <p>Intranät är idag en naturlig del i informationsspridningen på ett företag. Intranätet har därför blivit företagets sätt att kommunicera internt. Denna kommunikation är viktigt i ett företag, särskilt vid en förändring. För att projekt ska lyckas är det viktigt att få med sig medarbetarna, vilket kan uppnås genom bra kommunikation. Därför har vi valt att inrikta vår uppsats på detta intressanta och viktiga ämne. Genom att ta reda på vad medarbetarna vill ha för funktioner i intranätet och hur de ser på förändringen, kan organisationer komma att hitta en lösning på ett fungerande intranät. Denna uppsats är gjord utifrån en fallstudie som består av djupgående intervjuer på ett träförädlingsföretag, som ska införa ett nytt intranät. Fallstudien utformades efter teorier i ämnet och möten med fallförtaget för att kunna få fram relevant information. Undersökningen gav ett underlag till vad fallföretagets intranät ska innehålla och hur de anställda såg på förändringen. Resultatet har vi sammanställt i ett antal riktlinjer och några goda råd som kan hjälpa vårt fallföretag att införa det nya intranätet. Dessa råd går även att applicera på andra företag i en liknande situationer.</p>
1442

Driver Interaction : Informal Rules, Irritation and Aggressive Behaviour

Björklund, Gunilla January 2005 (has links)
<p>On a daily basis drivers have to share the roads with a great number of other road users. To make the driving task possible every driver has to take the intentions and behaviours of other road users into account. In other words, the road users have to interact with each other. The general aim of this thesis was to examine factors that regulate and influence the interaction between road users. To do so, three studies, applying a social psychological approach to driving, were conducted. In the first study it was investigated how the rules of priority, the design of the intersection, and the behaviour of other drivers influence yielding behaviour in intersections. The second study examined driver irritation and its relationship with aggressive behaviours. Finally, in the third study drivers’ attributions of their own and other drivers’ behaviour were investigated in relation to driver irritation. The thesis also includes a minor field study, aiming at examining to what extent informal traffic rules are used in intersections and in roundabouts, as well as measuring the validity of self-reports. The results indicate that, in addition to the formal rules, drivers rely on informal rules based on road design and on other drivers’ behaviour. Drivers also differ with respect to strategies of yielding behaviour. Irritability and aggressive behaviour on the roads appear largely to depend on drivers’ interactions and drivers’ interpretation of the behaviour of others. Some aggressive behaviour is an expression of irritation and may provoke irritation of other drivers. This means that an irritated driver might start a chain reaction, spreading irritation and aggressive behaviour from driver to driver. To diminish irritation and aggressive behaviour on the roads it is necessary to change drivers’ behaviour either by changing the road design or, which is probably a more possible remedy, by changing their general attitudes about driving. By providing drivers with insight into the cognitive biases they are subject to when judging other road users’ behaviour, both driver irritation and aggressive behaviours on the roads probably would decrease.</p>
1443

Assembly required: self-employed workers' informal work-learning in online communities

Thompson, Terrie Lynn 11 1900 (has links)
It seems that for many people, spaces on the web are an integral part of their lives. This may include seeking out learning opportunities in online communities. There is plenty of buzz about these cyberspaces whether they are part of new social media configurations or commercialized product-related spaces cultivated by enterprises. It is important to explore how online spaces mayor may notcreate new locations of educational possibilities for workers. The subtle, and sometimes not so subtle, fusion of these technologies into work-learning practices warrants attention. This research project focuses on online communities as sites of learning, with an over-arching question of: How do self-employed workers experience informal work-related learning in an online community? Community can describe a gathering of people online that is organic and driven by a shared interest. These online spaces may also be purposefully nurtured by professional associations, workplaces, or businesses. This research project focuses on these spacesoutside the auspices of formal online courses. I draw on Actor Network Theory (ANT) to explore how work-learning is enacted in online communities and the implications of the intertwining of people and objects in multiple, fluid and distributed actor-networks. I also use the notion of legitimate peripheral participation from Situated Learning theory to explore how different possibilities for learning are shaped by locations and trajectories within a work practice and larger community of practitioners. Data was collected by interviewing 11 self-employed workers and then following the actors as objects of interest surfaced. This dissertation is a collection of five papers as well as introduction and conclusion chapters and a background chapter on ANT. Findings explore notions of online collectives shifting to more networked configurations, the complexity of work-learning practices unfolding in multiple spaces, contradictions between Web2.0 rhetoric and practices as different associations with knowledge and novel ways of knowing are enacted, and questions about the politics of technology that emerge from uncertainties around delegation, invisible practices, and necessary literacies. Given the need to pull objects out of the background and into critical inquiry, I also explored how a researcher interviews technology objects as participants in a study. / Adult Education
1444

Adult education, popular culture, and women's identity development: self-directed learning with The Avengers

Wright, Robin Redmon 02 June 2009 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to investigate the impact of popular culture, especially prime-time television, on women learner-viewers’ identity development. More specifically, this study explores one specific television show, the 1962-64 Cathy Gale episodes of The Avengers as a portal to adult learning. It further explores the ways in which television, as a form of public pedagogy, can help facilitate the formation of a critical or feminist identity among adult learner viewers. The research questions guiding this study were: 1) How and what did women learn from watching The Avengers? 2) How did women incorporate that learning into their lives and into their identities? and 3) How did women interpret and accommodate the feminist example of Cathy Gale? Data for this study was collected over a two-and-a-half year period. Data consisted of interviews with contemporaneous viewers of the Cathy Gale Avengers episodes, interviews with scriptwriters and the actor who played Cathy Gale, Honor Blackman, numerous documents from statistics obtained at the British Film Institute, fanzines, and newspaper articles of the period. Analysis revealed that in particular historical times and situations television viewing can become a form of public pedagogy, facilitating transformational learning in adult viewers that produces lasting, life-changing effects. The investigation revealed that not only did biologically-born women incorporate Cathy Gale’s feminist example into their identities and actions, but biologically born males whose core gender identity was female did also. This dissertation is written in article format. Each of the six sections has been designed as stand-alone pieces to aid accessibility and enhance readers’ engagement with the study.
1445

Die Interdependenz formaler und informaler Strukturen im Lichte der Systemtheorie Niklas Luhmanns / The interdependence of formal and informal structures in light of Niklas Luhmann's systems theory

Thiele, Henry January 2009 (has links)
Die meisten Menschen verbringen heutzutage den Großteil ihres Daseins in Organisationen. Sie werden immer häufiger in Organisationen geboren (Krankenhaus), in Organisationen sozialisiert (Kindergärten, Schulen usw.), sind für ihre Existenzsicherung auf Lohnzahlungen von Organisationen angewiesen, und zunehmend fristen sie ihr Lebensende in Organisationen (Krankenhaus, Altenheim etc.). Aus soziologischer Sicht sind Organisationen deshalb besonders interessant und verdienen eine besondere Beachtung in der Gesellschaftsanalyse. In dieser Untersuchung soll nicht der Siegeszug der Organisation in der soziokulturellen Evolution der Gesellschaft im Mittelpunkt stehen, sondern die Frage: Wie kommt das Driften (Maturana, Varela, 1991) der Organisation zustande? Geht man davon aus, dass in der Evolution Aussterben die Regel und Anpassung die Ausnahme ist, scheint der Aspekt des Driftens organisierter Sozialsysteme besonderes Augenmerk zu verdienen. Liest man die für Deutschland veröffentlichten Zahlen der Unternehmensinsolvenzen, gerade in den heutigen Zeiten der Wirtschafts- und Finanzkrise, scheint der Fortbestand einer einmal ins Leben gerufenen Organisation eher ungewiss als gesichert zu sein. Des Weiteren scheint es so zu sein, dass Organisationen gewissen Lebenszyklen (Küpper, Felsch) unterworfen sind. In den älteren Organisationstheorien wurde noch von einem einheitlichen Zweck ausgegangen, der die gesamte Strukturierung der Organisation übergreift. Alle Organisationsmitglieder haben ihr Handeln im Hinblick auf die Verwirklichung dieses spezifischen Zwecks der Intention nach rational zu gestalten. In der Organisationsanalyse stellte man aber fest, dass Zweckverschiebungen innerhalb der formalen Organisationen eher die Regel als die Ausnahme sind. (Mayntz, 1963 u.a.) Dies Problem der rational gestalteten Organisation wurde somit den Organisationsmitgliedern zugeschrieben. Gleichsam als die andere Seite der formalen Organisation agieren die Mitglieder der formalen Organisation in der informellen Organisation als Mikropolitiker (Bosetzky, Heinrich, 1989), die die formalen Strukturen unterminieren, um ihre persönliche Nutzenmaximierung voranzutreiben. Übernimmt man diese Perspektive für die Betrachtung der formalen Organisation, kann man sich schwer der Annahme verweigern, dass die Organisationsmitglieder grundlegend feindlich gegenüber der Organisation gesinnt sind. Mit dieser Perspektive würde man all den freiwilligen Mitgliedern in Hilfsorganisationen, sozialen Vereinen usw. nicht gerecht werden. In der hier durchgeführten Analyse wird die Perspektive der Luhmannschen Systemtheorie eingenommen. Damit sind die Organisationsmitglieder nicht aus der theoretischen Betrachtung eliminiert, sondern im Gegenteil, sie werden in der Umwelt der organisierten Sozialsysteme verortet. Das hat den entscheidenden Vorteil, dass den Organisationsmitgliedern aus der theoretischen Betrachtung heraus mehr Freiheit zugestanden wird als in akteurszentrierten Theorien. Denn Systembildung bedeutet immer die Streichung mindestens eines Freiheitsgrades (Foerster von, 1997). Mit der Luhmannschen Systemtheorie wird des Weiteren davon ausgegangen, dass sich gleichsam unbeobachtet hinter dem Rücken der Anwesenden ein Netzwerk webt, ein soziales System sich bildet. Alle sozialen Systeme beruhen letztlich auf der Unterscheidung von Bewusstsein und Kommunikation. Die Kommunikation selbst kann man nicht beobachten sondern nur erschließen. Solange sie störungsfrei läuft, bleibt sie den Anwesenden unbewusst. Erst bei Störungen des Kommunikationsflusses macht sie sich bemerkbar, obgleich sie fast nie den Anwesenden bewusst wird. Denn die Kommunikation drillt den Menschen auf den Menschen, weil sie sich der Wahrnehmung entzieht (Fuchs, 1998). Die Autopoiesis der Kommunikation ist auf die Anwesenheit zweier psychischer Systeme bzw. Bewusstseinssysteme angewiesen. Sie ermöglichen überhaupt erst den Raum oder den Phänomenbereich, in dem die Autopoiesis sozialer Systeme möglich ist (Luhmann, 1990). Die Autopoiesis der Kommunikation setzt entsprechend immer Interaktion der Anwesenden voraus. In der Interaktion selbst, werden sich die Anwesenden in besonderer Weise wechselseitig bewusst und können sich entsprechend anders zur Geltung bringen, als in den Strukturzwängen einer formalern Organisation. Die Kommunikation selbst gibt den Beteiligten gewisse Changiermöglichkeiten an die Hand, z.B. das An- und Ausschalten verschiedener operativer Displacement (Fuchs, 1993), um ihren störungsfreien Ablauf zu ermöglichen und entsprechende Brüche zu vermeiden. Zum Beispiel den nahtlosen Übergang von einem Thema zu einem anderen. Die Interaktion selbst wird als zeitinstabiles Kontaktsystem (Luhmann, 1997) begriffen, das mit dem Auseinandergehen der Beteiligten erloschen ist. Die hier kurz angerissene Bedeutung der Kommunikation in der Luhmannschen Systemtheorie erklärt, warum ihr in der durchgeführten Analyse ein so breiter Raum eingeräumt wurde. Organisationen sind Sozialsysteme eines anderen Typs und besitzen damit verbunden ganz andere emergente Eigenschaften. Sie können mit der diffusen Kommunikation der Interaktion nichts anfangen. Ihre Operationen basieren auf Entscheidungen. Jede Entscheidung schließt an eine Entscheidungskommunikation an, aber sie selbst ist die Sinnverdichtung dieser Kommunikation. Und eben dieser Sachverhalt stellt ihre Effizienz, ihr Tempovorteil gegenüber allen anderen Typen sozialer Systeme dar. Erst wenn es der Organisation gelingt Entscheidungen an Entscheidungen zu knüpfen, ist sie in der Lage ihr eigenes Netzwerk ihrer eigenen Entscheidungen zu etablieren. Nur in der Form der Entscheidung kann sie ihre für sie selbst nicht weiter hintergehbaren Systemelemente (Entscheidungen) aneinander anschließen, Entscheidungen anhand von Entscheidungen produzieren. Gelingt ihr das, gewinnen die Entscheidungen füreinander Relevanz, können sich wechselseitig stützen, vorbereiten und entlasten. Jede Entscheidung muss jetzt ihre eigene Vorgängerentscheidung und den jeweiligen Kontext anderer Entscheidungen mit berücksichtigen. Es bildet sich ein Zusammenhang der Entscheidungen, der die Grenzen des Systems begründet und bezeichnet. Da jede Organisation sich immer nur jeweils im Moment ihres Entscheidens realisiert, bekommt sie ein Zeitproblem. Man muss nicht nur entscheiden, sondern man muss mit Bezug auf den Entscheidungszusammenhang korrekt und rechtzeitig entscheiden bevor sich das zu entscheidende Problem zu Ungunsten der Organisation von selbst erledigt hat. Alles was jetzt in der Organisation als relevant betrachtet werden soll, muss die Form einer Entscheidung annehmen. Dies bedeutet nicht, dass in der Entscheidungskommunikation nicht Einfluss auf die Entscheidung genommen werden kann, aber zum einen wird man aufgrund des Entscheidungsdrucks versuchen die Entscheidungskommunikation soweit wie möglich zu verkürzen, z.B durch Programmierung. Zum anderen sieht man der Entscheidung ihre Entscheidungskommunikation nicht an. Man kann sie nur noch erahnen. Organisationen kommunizieren am liebsten mit Organisationen in ihrer Umwelt, da diese gezwungen sind, selbst Entscheidungen zu produzieren, mit denen man selbst etwas anfangen kann. Man kann sie entweder in den eigenen Entscheidungszusammenhang übernehmen, oder man kann sie mit einer eigenen Entscheidung ablehnen. Aber jede Entscheidung, die die Organisation trifft bestätigt oder ändert ihre Strukturen. Dieser Gedankengang führte zu der Überlegung, dass informale Strukturen selbst organisierte Interaktionssysteme sein müssen. Sie müssen sich bereits in irgendeiner Form selbst organisieren. Sie stehen unter dem Gesetz des Wiedersehens. Die sozialen Kontakte werden sich in einem absehbaren Zeit- und Interessenhorizont wiederholen, sich verdichten und konfirmieren (Luhmann, 1997) und dies erfordert bereits ein gewisses Maß an Organisation. Man muss die nächsten Treffen planen, ein Thema auswählen usw. Letztlich produzieren sie Entscheidungen mit denen die formale Organisation etwas anfangen kann. Dies ist einer der Gründe, warum sich die formale Organisation zunehmend den Zugriff auf informale Strukturen ermöglicht. / From sociological view organisations are especially interesting and earn a special attention in the society analysis. The starting point of this analysis is the question: How do the drifts (Maturana, Varela come about, in 1991) of the organisations? In the older actor-centred organisation theories was gone out from a uniform purpose which spreads the whole structuralisation of the organisation. The problem of the rational creation of the organisation was ascribed therefore, as an other side of the formal organisation, to the organisation members. In the analysis carried out here the perspective of Luhmann system theory is taken. One assumes from the fact that as it were unnoticeably behind the back of the persons present a network grows up, a social system forms. Organisations are social systems and own quite specific emergente qualities. Their operations are based on decisions. Every decision connects to a decisive communication, but it herself is the sensory compression of this communication. And just these circumstances show her efficiency, her tempo advantage compared with all other types of social systems. Only if to the organisation decisions succeed to attach to decisions, it is to be set up in the situation her own network of her own decisions. Now every decision must consider her own predecessor's decision and the respective context of other decisions with. A connection of the decisions, the borders of the system forms reasonably and called. One must decide not only, but one must decide with reference to the decisive connection correctly and on time before the determining problem has taken care in unfavours of the organisation by itself. Now everything should be looked what in the organisation as relevant, must accept the form of a decision. This does not mean that in the decisive communication influence on the decision cannot be had, but, on the one hand, one will will try to shorten on account of the decisive pressure the decisive communication as far as possible, e.g., by programming. On the other hand one does not look to the decision at her decisive communication. One can only foresee them. Organisations best communicate with organisations in her environment, because these are made produce even decisions with which one himself can start something. One can take over them either in own decisive connection, or one can reject them with own decision. But every decision, they the organisation hits confirmed or changes her structures. This train of thought led to the consideration that informale structures themselves must be organised interaction systems. They must already organise in any form themselves. They stand under the law of the reunion. The social contacts will recur in a foreseeable time and interests horizon, condense and confirm (Luhmann, in 1997) and this already requires a certain measure in organisation. One must plan the next meetings, a subject select etc., In the end they produce decisions with those the formal organisation something can start. This is one of the reasons, why the formal organisation allows itself increasingly the access to informale structures.
1446

Health economic studies on advanced home care

Andersson, Agneta January 2002 (has links)
The aim of this thesis was to examine the cost-effectiveness of specific advanced home care and home rehabilitation interventions and to improve economic evaluation methods when applied to advanced home care. This included a comparison of two alternative ways of administering oxygen at home to patients with chronic hypoxaemia, as well as a review of scientific evidence on costs and effects of home rehabilitation after stroke. Also included were studies on prominent methodological issues in advanced home care - the redistribution of care efforts among caregivers and costing of informal care efforts. For patients with chronic hypoxaemia, a randomised, controlled trial showed that mobile liquid oxygen was considerably more costly compared to concentrator treatment. However, the treatment effects showed that liquid oxygen had a better impact on patient quality of life. The literature review revealed that the outcomes and costs of home rehabilitation after stroke are equal to those of alternative treatment strategies. Similar results were obtained in a study comparing hospital-based and home-based stroke rehabilitation, which also showed that there is a considerable redistribution of costs between health care providers and social welfare providers. Studies of patients in advanced home care in the county of Östergötland, Sweden, showed that the cost of informal care constitutes a considerable part of the care effort in all costing approaches used. Also, informal care costs were higher among patients who were men, who were younger, who had their own housing and had a cancer diagnosis. This thesis reveals that advanced home care interventions can differ regarding costs as well as effects, and thus comparisons between alternative home care interventions must also be performed. Further, redistribution effects are important to consider in evaluations. The cost of informal care is substantial in advanced home care. These costs must be included in evaluations with a societal perspective or else the comparisons will be biased.
1447

Assessing the knowledge, attitudes and practices of street food vendors in the City of Johannesburg regarding food hygiene and safety

Campbell, Penelope Tracy January 2011 (has links)
This study is aimed to assess the extent of street food vendor information and education on food safety. Aim: To determine the knowledge, attitudes and practices (KAP) of street food vendors, within the City of Johannesburg, with regard to food hygiene and safety. Methods: A descriptive, cross-sectional study utilizing a quantitative research approach. Data was collected through face-to-face interviewing of street food vendors, with observations of general hygiene and cleanliness. Data was captured in Excel and imported into CDC Epi Info version 3.4.3 (2007) for analysis. Numerical data was analyzed using descriptive statistics and categorical data was analyzed using frequencies. Bivariate analysis was used to establish differences between regions with high and low proportions of street food vendors with regard to knowledge, practices and attitudes variables.
1448

Urban types in rapidly urbanising cities

Lupala, John Modestus January 2002 (has links)
One of the challenges confronting cities innon-industrialised countries today is the fact that cities aregrowing at unprecedented rates, sizes and densities. Growthtrends in these cities are largely unregulated. In thesecountries, cities have changed in at least four major ways:their size, spatial organisation or morphology, the quality anddistribution of public services and infrastructure and theiremployment base. While this situation can be attributed toglobal urbanisation trends, the general poor knowledge on howthese cities develop, densify and acquire certain physicalcharacteristics has limited effective urban planning andmanagement. At times, the pervasive knowledge gap has beenassociated with the lack of relevant theories and concepts toexplain the evolution, growth and prevailing spatial qualities.However, the limited research in this field has alsocontributed to this problem. The other problem that confrontsthe rapidly urbanising city is continued sprawl that has beenmanifested in externalities of inadequate infrastructureprovision and under-utilisation of scarce resourcesparticularly land. This thesis is an attempt to contribute towards addressingthese two problem areas. The main field of study is on urbantypes within a rapidly urbanising city context. Dar es Salaamcity was selected a case study area. The study exploresthetheoretical framework for classification and analysis ofsettlements. The relevance of this framework in the studycontext is examined. At low scale level, the study provides ananalysis of house forms, density, plot characteristics, spacesand space uses in formal and informal settlements. The analysis shows that urbanisation under poverty andlow-density urban types greatly influence the sprawlingcharacter of the city. The increasing market-led housingdevelopment and ineffective planning responses are contributingfactors to the observed unguided densification anddeteriorating spatial qualities. It has also been shown thatwhile theoretical frameworks developed from most industrialisedcountries can be adapted to analyse urban types innon-industrialised countries, these theories are limited incomprehending fully the growth and character of rapidlyurbanising cities. <b>Key words:</b>Urban types, house forms, density, plotcharacteristics, spaces and space use, spatial quality, formaland informal settlements, Dar es Salaam.
1449

Driver Interaction : Informal Rules, Irritation and Aggressive Behaviour

Björklund, Gunilla January 2005 (has links)
On a daily basis drivers have to share the roads with a great number of other road users. To make the driving task possible every driver has to take the intentions and behaviours of other road users into account. In other words, the road users have to interact with each other. The general aim of this thesis was to examine factors that regulate and influence the interaction between road users. To do so, three studies, applying a social psychological approach to driving, were conducted. In the first study it was investigated how the rules of priority, the design of the intersection, and the behaviour of other drivers influence yielding behaviour in intersections. The second study examined driver irritation and its relationship with aggressive behaviours. Finally, in the third study drivers’ attributions of their own and other drivers’ behaviour were investigated in relation to driver irritation. The thesis also includes a minor field study, aiming at examining to what extent informal traffic rules are used in intersections and in roundabouts, as well as measuring the validity of self-reports. The results indicate that, in addition to the formal rules, drivers rely on informal rules based on road design and on other drivers’ behaviour. Drivers also differ with respect to strategies of yielding behaviour. Irritability and aggressive behaviour on the roads appear largely to depend on drivers’ interactions and drivers’ interpretation of the behaviour of others. Some aggressive behaviour is an expression of irritation and may provoke irritation of other drivers. This means that an irritated driver might start a chain reaction, spreading irritation and aggressive behaviour from driver to driver. To diminish irritation and aggressive behaviour on the roads it is necessary to change drivers’ behaviour either by changing the road design or, which is probably a more possible remedy, by changing their general attitudes about driving. By providing drivers with insight into the cognitive biases they are subject to when judging other road users’ behaviour, both driver irritation and aggressive behaviours on the roads probably would decrease.
1450

Familjehemsplacering hos "annan närstående" : en undersökning, med utgångspunkt i SoL 6:5, om socialsekreterares uppfattning och övervägande av närståendeplacering

Melander, Petra, Tjernberg, Carolina January 2007 (has links)
Our study has its starting point in the Swedish social legislation (Socialtjänstlagen) and more specifically in the 6th chapter's 5th paragraph. That paragraph regulates that social workers should try to find a kinship care placement when they are about to do a placement of a child. Our purpose is to examine how social workers, before they do a placement of a child, understand the informal kinship that is not relatives, if they consider the informal kinship and if certain circumstances have an impact on the consideration. To get this information we have done five interviews with social workers. Recent studies show that social workers in past years have begun to think more positively of people's kinships and that they more often use the resources of the kinship. Our results shows that the social workers contact the informal kinship before they do a placement, they have positive attitudes towards these types of placements, they have similar understandings of who should be considered in the informal kinship, they do this consideration in most cases and many circumstances has an impact on this consideration. To get a deeper understanding of the results we analyzed them with social constructivism and the sociology of law.

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