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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.
11

Entering the new age of death care--: what else can a funeral home offer?.

January 1998 (has links)
by Cheung Chi-Wing, Julian, Lo Chi-Yun. / Thesis (M.B.A.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1998. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 54-56). / ABSTRACT --- p.ii / TABLE OF CONTENTS --- p.iv / LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS --- p.vi / ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS --- p.vii / Chapter / Chapter I. --- INTRODUCTION --- p.1 / Terminology --- p.2 / Scope of the Study --- p.4 / Literature Review --- p.5 / Methodology --- p.6 / Chapter II. --- CONSUMER ANALYSIS --- p.8 / Who will be the Customers --- p.8 / Death Care Goods and Services: A High Involvement Purchase --- p.9 / Complex Decision Making Process --- p.10 / Two Underlying Factors Affecting the Chinese in Purchasing Decision of Death Care Services --- p.12 / Confucian Values --- p.12 / "Superstition and""Feng Shui""" --- p.13 / Four Main Types of Consumer --- p.16 / Chapter III. --- ANALYSIS OF DEATH CARE INDUSTRY --- p.19 / Death Care Products (Goods and Services) in Hong Kong --- p.19 / Existing Players --- p.22 / Current Practices of Industry Players --- p.23 / Demand for Death Care Goods and Services --- p.25 / Analysis of the Performance of Funeral Homes of Hong Kong --- p.26 / The Perception of Death Care Providers --- p.29 / Deficiency in Existing Service --- p.31 / Chapter IV. --- PROPOSAL FOR INTRODUCING FREE GRIEF COUNSELING SERVICE IN FUNERAL HOMES --- p.34 / Bereavement Counseling in Hong Kong --- p.34 / The Jessie and Thomas Tam Centre --- p.34 / The Market Potential of the Service --- p.36 / Problems and Constraints of the Centre --- p.37 / Reasons behind Our Proposal --- p.37 / Contents of the Proposal --- p.39 / Setting up a Grief Counseling Division --- p.39 / Enhancing Communications with Other Bereavement Counseling Service Providers --- p.41 / Promotion of the Service --- p.42 / Actual Delivery of the Service --- p.42 / Pros and Cons for Funeral Homes as Counseling Service Providers --- p.44 / Chapter V. --- CONCLUSION --- p.48 / APPENDIX --- p.50 / BIBLIOGRAPHY --- p.54
12

The rise of cemetery companies in Britain, 1820-53

Rugg, Julie January 1992 (has links)
Cemetery companies were the principal agency of the transition from a traditional reliance on graveyards to the use of modern extra-mural cemeteries. The thesis comprises a study of the 113 cemetery companies established from 1820 to 1853, a period which saw the origin of this type of enterprise and its spreading throughout Britain. The companies are not analysed as economic entities, but rather as representations of a range of attitudes towards the problems associated with intramural interment. To facilitate discerning different trends relating to the public perceptions of the burial problem, the companies have been classified according to type. This is an exercise which relies on textual analysis of company documents to understand the principal motivation of each group of directors. Three different types of company are examined in the thesis. Directors of enterprises within the first group to emerge saw the burial problem as a religious-political issue, and used cemetery companies as a means of providing extended space for burial which was independent of the Established Church. The new cemeteries had unconsecrated ground, and offered the freedom for Dissenters to adopt any burial service they wished. The increased enthusiasm for all joint-stock enterprise in the mid-1830s saw the advent of the speculative cemetery company, which saw in the burial issue the potential to make profits in one of three ways: by tapping a specific territorial market, a particular class market, or by buying and selling the scrip of grand and impractical necropolitan schemes. A third type of company dominated the 1840s, and its main concern was the provision of extra-mural cemeteries as a sanitary measure. In addition to studies of these three groups of companies, the thesis presents analysis of two additional themes essential to the progress of burial reform: fears concerning the integrity of the corpse; and the cultural significance thought to attach to cemetery foundation. The thesis demonstrates, by studying these companies, that the reasons for taking action to found cemetery companies could vary considerably, and that perception of the burial issue altered a number of times.
13

Dueling with death Christian funeral preaching as dialogue /

Muniz, Jeremy P. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (D. Min.)--Covenant Theological Seminary, 2009. / Includes abstract. Bibliography: leaves 154-164.
14

A funeral home for Richmond, Virginia

Arnold, Henry M. January 1947 (has links)
Master of Science
15

La commercialisation de la mort à Moncton, 1856-1914

Bourgeois, Roy. January 1999 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
16

Preserving bodies, preserving buildings : funeral homes in east-central Indiana

Sievert, Sheree L. January 1999 (has links)
Traditionally, funeral homes have been family-owned small businesses which pride themselves on their personal, caring service. Many are located in historic houses worthy of preservation. In the past few decades, however, many family-owned funeral homes have been bought out by large, national corporations in search of big profits. The future of oldhouse funeral homes is uncertain. An inventory of funeral homes was conducted in a ninecounty area of east-central Indiana, including Blackford, Delaware, Grant, Hancock, Henry, Jay, Madison, Randolph, and Wayne Counties. Findings show that a majority (59%) of the funeral homes in the nine-county area of east-central Indiana inventoried are located in former residences built before 1950, with varying degree of modification. While some have had minimal or moderate alterations, a large percentage (54%) of these have been extensively altered over the years. Case studies of four pre-1950 funeral homes in the inventory area revealed that alterations, many of which reflect the needs of the funeral business, have affected not only their integrity but also their ratings in the Indiana Historic Sites and Structures Inventory. Recommendations include greater communication between the funeral industry and preservationists, and the establishment of guidelines for sensitive additions that are addressed specifically to the needs of the funeral industry. / Department of Architecture
17

Stories of life and death: undertakers' perspectives

Nel, Elsie Petronella 25 August 2009 (has links)
Like death, the defining human reality underlying our relationships and views of life's meaning, the experiences and activities of undertakers, remains an uncommon subject for psychological research. Existential anxiety roots a society-wide denial of the fundamental nature of death. which necessitates the development of institutions to take responsibility for the dying and dead. As the image and service of the stigmatised funeral industry improves, society's experience of death should become more meaningful. The overview of the research into these topics noted the need for further studies. Within a holistic, ecosystemic epistemology, this study adopted a qualitative approach and case study method, which provided descriptions of the ecology, contexts, and relationships characteristic .of the undertaker's vocation by focussing on patterned expressions of views and attitudes. The aim was to gain insight into the undertaker's experience of the many faces of death, with a genuine interest and deep respect for their world. / Psychology / M.A. (Clinical Psychology)
18

Stories of life and death: undertakers' perspectives

Nel, Elsie Petronella 25 August 2009 (has links)
Like death, the defining human reality underlying our relationships and views of life's meaning, the experiences and activities of undertakers, remains an uncommon subject for psychological research. Existential anxiety roots a society-wide denial of the fundamental nature of death. which necessitates the development of institutions to take responsibility for the dying and dead. As the image and service of the stigmatised funeral industry improves, society's experience of death should become more meaningful. The overview of the research into these topics noted the need for further studies. Within a holistic, ecosystemic epistemology, this study adopted a qualitative approach and case study method, which provided descriptions of the ecology, contexts, and relationships characteristic .of the undertaker's vocation by focussing on patterned expressions of views and attitudes. The aim was to gain insight into the undertaker's experience of the many faces of death, with a genuine interest and deep respect for their world. / Psychology / M.A. (Clinical Psychology)

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