2,079 results
Search Results
2. Comment on Papers by Riesman, Sills, and Tax
- Author
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Tumin, Melvin H.
- Published
- 1959
3. Comments on Mr. Pray's Paper
- Author
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Igel, Amelia M., Rebeck, Anne H., Greving, Frank Theodore, and Murray, Clyde
- Published
- 1946
4. Rural community tourism and sustainable advantages in Nicaragua
- Author
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Artal-Tur, Andres, Briones-Peñalver, Antonio Juan, Bernal-Conesa, Juan Andrés, and Martínez-Salgado, Oscar
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. YÃMĨY.
- Author
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MAXAKALI, SUELI
- Subjects
INDIGENOUS peoples of South America ,ENVIRONMENTAL protection ,LITERARY criticism ,COMMUNITY life ,RITES & ceremonies - Published
- 2023
6. The training and development needs of nurses in Indonesia: paper 3 of 3.
- Author
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Hennessy, Deborah, Hicks, Carolyn, Hilan, Aflah, and Kawonal, Yoanna
- Subjects
- *
NURSE training , *OCCUPATIONAL training , *COMMUNITY life , *CONTINUING education , *WORK environment - Abstract
Background: Indonesia's recent economic and political history has left a legacy of widespread poverty and serious health problems, and has contributed to marked inequalities in health care. One means of responding to these challenges has been through a reconsideration of the professional roles of nurses, to enable them to deal with the range and complexity of health problems. However, there are currently a number of obstacles to achieving these aims: there is a serious shortfall in trained nurses; the majority of nurses have only limited education and preparation for the role; and there is no central registration of nurses, which means that it is impossible to regulate either the profession or the standards of care. This study aimed to establish the occupational profiles of each grade of nurse, identify their training and development needs and ascertain whether any differences existed between nurses working in different regions or within hospital or community settings. Methods: An established and psychometrically valid questionnaire was administered to 524 nurses, covering three grades and coming from five provinces. Results: Significant differences in job profile were found in nurses from different provinces, suggesting that the nature of the role is determined to some degree by the geographical location of practice. The roles of hospital and community nurses, and the different grades of nurse, were fairly similar. All nurses reported significant training needs for all 40 tasks, although these did not vary greatly between grade of nurse. The training needs of nurses from each of the provinces were quite distinct, while those of hospital nurses were greater than those of community nurses. Conclusion: The results suggest that the role of the nurse is not as diverse as might be expected, given the different levels of preparation and training and the diversity of their work environments. This may reflect the lack of a central registration system and quality framework, which would normally regulate clinical activities according to qualifications. The differences in training needs between subsections of the sample highlight the importance of identifying skills deficits and using this information to develop customized post-registration education programmes. Together, these results provide a rigorous and reliable approach to defining the occupational roles and continuing education needs of Indonesian nurses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Can hotels be used as alternative care sites in disasters and public health emergencies--A narrative review.
- Author
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Khorram-Manesh, Ruedeerat and Khorram-Manesh, Amir
- Subjects
EMERGENCY management ,DISASTER victims ,EMERGENCY medical services ,COMMUNITY life ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
Managing disasters and public health emergencies poses a complex challenge, particularly in maintaining the crucial elements of surge capacity, often referred to as the 4S: staff, stuff, space, and system. While discussions surrounding the management of these emergencies typically emphasize their impact on emergency healthcare services, resources, and capabilities, it is essential to recognize the inherent limitations of these resources. Therefore, integrating nonmedical resources such as community staff, supplies, and spaces into the response chain is equally important. Among community facilities, hotels are particularly intriguing due to their organizational and structural capabilities to serve as alternative care sites for lightly injured or non-injured emergency victims. This narrative review explored the potential use of hotels as alternative care sites and the legal implications associated with such utilization. The results confirmed a high potential for using hotels as alternate care sites. However, data concerning its practical and legal implications are insufficient. This paper suggests further research to investigate the criteria for utilizing hotels in this capacity, including admission guidelines for disaster victims and relevant ethical and legal considerations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. An Analysis of Approaches to Reduction of HIV Stigma across the World through educational interventions: A Scoping Review.
- Author
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Ebrahimi, Hamideh, Shoorideh, Foroozan Atashzadeh, Sohrabi, Mohammad Reza, Ebrahimi, Masoumeh, and Hosseini, Meimanat
- Subjects
PATIENT education ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,COMMUNITY support ,FEAR ,HIV-positive persons ,CINAHL database ,HIV infections ,TEACHING methods ,FAMILIES ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,MEDLINE ,HOSPITAL medical staff ,MEDICAL students ,LITERATURE reviews ,MEDICAL databases ,COMMUNITY life ,ONLINE information services ,SHAME ,SOCIAL support ,HEALTH education ,SOCIAL stigma - Abstract
Copyright of Investigacion & Educacion en Enfermeria is the property of Universidad de Antioquia, Facultad de Enfermeria and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. The urban digital lifestyle: An analytical framework for placing digital practices in a spatial context and for developing applicable policy.
- Author
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Hatuka, Tali, Zur, Hadas, and Mendoza, Jose Antonio
- Subjects
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BUILT environment , *ELECTRONIC paper , *SOCIAL background , *DIGITAL technology , *EVERYDAY life , *COMMUNITY life - Abstract
While people's social backgrounds clearly shape their adoption of digital technology and the Internet, their urban lifestyles and place of residence better explain their digital activities when they are online, and how they use technology. Most studies investigating individuals' use of digitization have neglected the effects of the physical built environment and the daily life of the community. Addressing this gap, this paper places digital practices in the socio-spatial world, and conceptualizes the term "urban digital lifestyle," which refers to the dynamic relationships among three dimensions: (1) the user's socioeconomic status, (2) the user's residency, with a focus on the locale's socio-spatial characteristics, and (3) the user's digital practices. Empirically, this paper uses a mixture of methods to analyze the digital usage of residents in four neighborhoods in Tel Aviv. The methods used are neighborhood prototype analysis, digital practices survey (n = 490), and spatial and GIS analyses. Although the results may at first glance support the argument that education and socioeconomic status have significant influence on digital practices, these practices also reflect many other factors associated with the urban lifestyle. Thus, locales, places and neighborhoods remain crucial socio-spatial categories that have a major influence on daily life in the digital age. • Conceptualization of Urban Digital Lifestyle (UDL) offers a new temporal reading of digital differences in a city. • UDL is a helpful category for juxtaposing user's socioeconomic status, user's digital practices, and locale's sociospatial characteristics. • UDL is a helpful tool to identify (1) types of digital lifestyles, and (2) clustering of these digital lifestyles in geographical context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Is Increasing Community Participation Always a Good Thing?
- Author
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Khwaja, Asim Ijaz
- Published
- 2004
11. Beyond the conflict: youth militants, amnesty, and challenges of post-conflict life in the oil-rich Niger Delta of Nigeria.
- Author
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Anugwom, Edlyne E.
- Subjects
- *
YOUTH services , *AMNESTY , *COMMUNITY life , *RADICALS , *PEACE - Abstract
This paper argues that there is need for current efforts to reintegrate youth militants in the Niger Delta of Nigeria into normal community life to be anchored on a thorough understanding of the peculiar agency of youth and the socio-cultural challenges of post-conflict reintegration. Such efforts should also take cognisance of the complex nature of the problem. The paper contends that while the on-going amnesty programme in the region has achieved partial success, it was founded on a parochial philosophy, which creates a booming economic environment for the managers. Therefore, it recommends that the initiative should be anchored on both a thorough understanding of the youth as social agency and the deleterious impact of the conflict on ideal socio-cultural norms of expectations and roles among different generations of the population in the region. In effect, a proper sociological framing and nuancing of the programme would appear imperative for sustainable peace in the region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. <italic>“Awe</italic>, <italic>Masekinders!”: Kullid</italic> Identities from Eden Park, Johannesburg in the Work of Bougaard.
- Author
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Bougaard and Bronner, Irene Enslé
- Subjects
- *
MIXED media (Art) , *INSTALLATION art , *IDENTITY (Psychology) , *PAPERMAKING , *COMMUNITY life , *PRINTMAKING - Abstract
Bougaard, an emerging South African creative practitioner, examines games from her “Coloured” childhood community in Eden Park, Johannesburg, and how these games may offer a window into a reframed
Kullid identity. She considers the rhymes used in these games and the role of language—specificallyAfrikaaps —in identity formation, and explores through papermaking and art installations the social contexts and meanings embedded in these games. In this article, the authors analyse Bougaard’s use of sculpture, papermaking and printmaking techniques both to mediate and to subvert conventionalised tropes and stereotypes of “Coloured” communities as well as to empower a sense of her familial and community-based identity through an emergentKullidness . The authors focus on selected paper works and on three mixed media installations (2021–2022). The authors complicate any reading of these works as uncritically affirmative of a declamatory and essentialist identity position by proposing Bougaard’s visual strategies as premised upon mediation, ambivalence, indexicality, and refuting iconicity. The authors identify Bougaard as deploying elements of strategic essentialism in her desire for community visibility and visual sovereignty, and the authors therefore critique the benefits and the limitations of this approach, concluding that Bougaard’s choice of mediating strategies avoids a simplistic narrative of community life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Micro Community Renovation Based on Life Cycle Concept: The Case of Gejiaying Community in Wuhan.
- Author
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Huang Jingnan, Huang Xintong, Li Danzhe, Duan Xiang, and Zhou Jun
- Subjects
LIFE cycles (Biology) ,CITIES & towns ,DEMOLITION ,COMMUNITY life ,BULLDOZERS - Abstract
As Chinese cities undergo a transition from incremental development to retrofit development and urban governance tends to be more refined, the renovation mode of old residential communities is also under the transformation from large-scale bulldozer demolition and reconstruction to small-scale refined renovation and regeneration. However, the practice of micro community renovation has encountered a number of challenges throughout the implementation process, including conflicts between multiple stakeholders in the initial stage of planning, unconcordance between different implementation bodies in the intermediate stage of construction, and the lack of guarantee mechanisms in the later stage of maintenance. Based on the concept of life cycle, this paper divides the practical process of micro community renovation into seven steps, i.e., establishing communal platforms, identifying community features, cultivating communal organizations, designing community activities, formulating planning schemes, conducting participatory constructions, and establishing long-lasting mechanisms. It takes the Gejiaying Community in Wuhan as a case to verify the above analysis, in the hope of providing a reference for the current practice of urban regeneration and community renovation in China. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Social Sustainability Analysis in Szigetköz: A Study of Four Case Locations.
- Author
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Kóbor, Krisztina
- Subjects
SUSTAINABILITY ,COMMUNITY life ,SOCIAL change ,ECONOMIC development ,QUESTIONNAIRES - Abstract
This paper is based on research that examined civil and community life in 34 settlements of Szigetköz in 2021 and 2022. A total of 337 NGOs and countless informal groups operate in the region. The examination is based on questionnaire research (43 fillings), interviews (25 pieces), observations (9 times) and document analysis, and one of the results is four case studies about four settlements (Dunasziget, Kimle, Mecsér and Győrladamér). The goal of this paper is to summarize the knowledge related to social sustainability and analyze its operation in these settlements. The principal finding of the research is that the four settlements coped with the challenges posed by their geographical location, economic situation and infrastructural capabilities in four ways. These roads show creative solutions using local resources, which are the key to the social sustainability of settlements. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Food and meal consumption according to St. Isidore’s Rule in comparison to contemporary Western monastic regulations.
- Author
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Sadowski, Piotr
- Subjects
FOOD safety ,FOOD consumption ,FOOD security ,NUTRITION ,COMMUNITY life - Abstract
Copyright of Acta Iuris Stetinensis is the property of Wydawnictwo Naukowe Uniwersytetu Szczecinskiego / University of Szczecin Press and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Los petroglifos del complejo arqueológico de Illomas (Chuquibamba, Arequipa. Perú): grafías en contextos domésticos, económicos y rituales de los Andes meridionales.
- Author
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Talavera Dávila, Fany C. and Atoche Peña, Pablo
- Subjects
ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations ,HUMAN settlements ,PETROGLYPHS ,COMMUNITY life ,ENGRAVING - Abstract
Copyright of Vegueta: Anuario de la Facultad de Geografía e Historia is the property of Vegueta: Anuario de la Facultad de Geografia e Historia and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Mapping everyday community life in suburban shrinking areas around Tokyo: case study of Minamiashigara, Kanagawa prefecture.
- Author
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Pineda, Alejandro, Ortiz-Moya, Fernando, and Almazán, Jorge
- Subjects
- *
SUBURBS , *COMMUNITY life , *CITIES & towns , *EVERYDAY life , *METROPOLITAN areas , *PLACE attachment (Psychology) - Abstract
Although the suburbs of numerous cities worldwide are shrinking, research on how to address suburban decline remains scarce. This paper explores participatory mapping in shrinking suburbs as a tool to articulate knowledge co-creation between local officials and communities to inform planning decisions. The paper argues that participatory planning helps to identify sweet spots, everyday life community spaces upon which to anchor regeneration strategies. Using as a case study Minamiashigara, a shrinking suburb of Tokyo, the paper discusses how sweet spots can be integrated into existing municipal strategies to alleviate the consequences of shrinkage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Using Buddhist Principles to Promote Fish Conservation in the Community Water Resources of Lower Northeastern Thailand.
- Author
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Phramaha Ting Tonglor and Somkhit Sukerb
- Subjects
FISH conservation ,WATER conservation ,WATER supply ,FISH communities ,COMMUNITY life ,ENVIRONMENTALISM ,BUDDHISTS - Abstract
This qualitative investigation examines fish conservation practices in the community water resources of three northeastern Thai provinces. Data was gathered from documentary review and field study, through observation, interviews, and focus group discussions. The findings revealed that fish resources are decreasing in Northeastern Thai communities. This is due to a combination of factors, including unsystematic conservation methods and negative human impact. In acknowledging the ecocontextual nature of Thai Buddhism, this investigation argues a case for the adoption of Buddhist principles toward environmentalism as a means for more sustainable and successful fish conservation. The paper outlines eight key religious principles compatible with conservation approaches and recommends their inclusion in government policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. LAW ENFORCEMENT TOWARD ILLEGAL LIMESTONE MINING IN GUNUNGKIDUL REGENCY, INDONESIA.
- Author
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Harjiyatni, Francisca Romana, Hartanti, and Katu, Chrismayanti Angelia Y.
- Subjects
LAW enforcement ,LIMESTONE ,MINERAL industries ,LIMESTONE quarries & quarrying ,ENVIRONMENTAL protection ,RESEARCH personnel ,COMMUNITY life - Abstract
Copyright of Environmental & Social Management Journal / Revista de Gestão Social e Ambiental is the property of Environmental & Social Management Journal and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The Community Life of Wheeling, West Virginia: The Challenge of the "Upper Ohio Valley Historical Review"
- Author
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Nodyne, Kenneth R.
- Published
- 1981
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. The Evaluation Method of Community Emergency Resource Allocation Based on Coordination Sensor Information Collection.
- Author
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Wang, Peixian, Wang, Fuguang, and Zhu, Zhu
- Subjects
RESOURCE allocation ,COMMUNITY life ,EVALUATION methodology ,TELECOMMUNICATION systems ,DISPLAY systems ,DIGITAL cameras - Abstract
This paper analyzes the information collection data of coordination sensors and designs a corresponding evaluation method to conduct an in-depth assessment of the configuration of community emergency resources. Based on the principles of assessment index system construction and the actual research, an assessment index system of community emergency resource allocation level is established. In this paper, the G1 method was selected to determine the weights of the evaluation indexes, and the gray clustering method was applied to construct the whitening weight function, determine the gray level to which each index belongs and the affiliation degree of each gray class, and establish a comprehensive evaluation model of the community emergency resource allocation level. In response to the problem that the increase of state variables leads to a decrease in real-time map building, a dynamic local window size mechanism is proposed, which can reduce the time consumption and save computational resources under the condition of ensuring the accuracy of positioning and map building. Therefore, it is urgent to design an efficient self-interference cancellation mechanism to resist the influence of self-interference on the signal-to-noise ratio of the first-hop link. For example, the IMU pre integration theory is combined with the wheel range method to solve the problem of frequency synchronization; An initialization algorithm is proposed to recover the scale information of the camera and optimize the external parameters; Design a graphic optimization framework integrating IMU, wheel range finder and camera. The monitoring terminal sends the data information of coordination transportation to the monitoring platform in real-time, and the monitoring platform is responsible for storing and displaying the data information, thus realizing the real-time monitoring of the coordination transportation process. Finally, the functions of the monitoring terminal and the display system of the monitoring platform experiment, respectively, and the test results verify the effectiveness and integrity of the system data communication, which proves the correctness of the terminal design of the integrated coordination monitoring system based on multidimensional information and has practical engineering value. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. A Unique Project in High-School Journalism
- Author
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Fawcett, Vera E.
- Published
- 1924
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. UNIVERSAL EXPANSION: Students take to the field to demonstrate Hubble's law
- Author
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McARDLE, HEATHER K.
- Published
- 1997
24. How Faculty Members Spend Their Time: A Closer Look
- Author
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Shelton, Beth Anne and Skaggs, Sheryl
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Best practices for measuring community resources across Canada: A comparison of coding classifications.
- Author
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Young, Marisa, Leipe, Sean, and Singh, Diana
- Subjects
- *
INDUSTRY classification , *SOCIAL scientists , *INDUSTRIALISM , *BEST practices , *COMMUNITY life - Abstract
Social scientists, geographers, criminologists, and health scientists are often tasked with finding data to best capture the impact of "community context" on individual outcomes, including residential services, physical resources, and social institutions. One outlet for such data in Canada is Digital Map Technologies Inc. (DMTI) Spatial, which offers a national repository of over one million businesses and recreational points of interest. The database is generated through CanMap Streetfiles, which includes geocodes of each point's precise location. These data are available to researchers from their university data library and Esri Canada, but primarily available to private sector and government markets. That said, the goal of the current paper is to encourage researchers to access this rich yet under‐utilized data source. Each service, business, or resource in the DMTI Spatial database is assigned to a respective category using Standard Industrial Classification codes and North American Industrial Classification System codes. It is not clear, however, which is the more reliable coding criteria. We provide an overview of our review of DMTI Spatial data and take‐away suggestions for using this valuable resource for future research on meso‐level residential markers. Key messages: The goal of this paper is to outline existing data source(s) and measures from DMTI Spatial that might help capture meso‐level residential institutions.We recommend "best practices" for using DMTI Spatial data in researchers' own work to capture neighbourhood resources/amenities, or the social infrastructure of the community using either Standard Industrial Classification codes or North American Industrial Classification System codes.We conclude that Standard Industrial Classification codes in DMTI Spatial enhanced points of interest data are more complete—and more accurate—than North American Industrial Classification System codes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Realizable accessibility: evaluating the reliability of public transit accessibility using high-resolution real-time data.
- Author
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Liu, Luyu, Porr, Adam, and Miller, Harvey J.
- Subjects
LOCAL transit access ,LOCATION data ,PUBLIC transit ,SPATIAL resolution ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,COMMUNITY life - Abstract
The widespread availability of high spatial and temporal resolution public transit data is improving the measurement and analysis of public transit-based accessibility to crucial community resources such as jobs and health care. A common approach is leveraging transit route and schedule data published by transit agencies. However, this often results in accessibility overestimations due to endemic delays due to traffic and incidents in bus systems. Retrospective real-time accessibility measures calculated using real-time bus location data attempt to reduce overestimation by capturing the actual performance of the transit system. These measures also overestimate accessibility since they assume that riders had perfect information on systems operations as they occurred. In this paper, we introduce realizable real-time accessibility based on space–time prisms as a more conservative and realistic measure. We, moreover, define accessibility unreliability to measure overestimation of schedule-based and retrospective accessibility measures. Using high-resolution General Transit Feed Specification real-time data, we conduct a case study in the Central Ohio Transit Authority bus system in Columbus, Ohio, USA. Our results prove that realizable accessibility is the most conservative of the three accessibility measures. We also explore the spatial and temporal patterns in the unreliability of both traditional measures. These patterns are consistent with prior findings of the spatial and temporal patterns of bus delays and risk of missing transfers. Realizable accessibility is a more practical, conservative, and robust measure to guide transit planning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. LIFE AND ITS TRANSITS AS AN ART STUDIO: A CONVERSATION WITH ARISSANA PATAXÓ.
- Author
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BUROCCO, LAURA and DE SOUZA, ARISSANA BRAZ BOMFIM
- Subjects
ARTISTS' studios ,COMMUNITY life ,INDIGENOUS art ,EVERYDAY life ,AUTHORSHIP collaboration ,CONVERSATION - Abstract
The interview is an excerpt from a dialogue that took place in two video calls between the author and co-author and visual artist Arissana Pataxó as part of the "A South-North Dialogue on Afro-Indigenous Art" project led by the interviewer. The interview is organized through an open dialogue that covers the artist's ways of producing, linked to community life and her daily life as a community educator. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Conceptualizing linkages between community well-being and access to public space: an environmental justice perspective.
- Author
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Godwyll, Josephine Marie and Buzinde, Christine N.
- Subjects
PUBLIC spaces ,ENVIRONMENTAL justice ,COMMUNITIES ,WELL-being ,COMMUNITY life - Abstract
This conceptual paper explores theoretical linkages between community well-being and key dimensions of public spaces (i.e., physical characteristics, technical experts, and communities). It draws on environmental justice literature and the Tripartite Framework to contextualize the concept of access to public spaces. The nexus between the key dimensions of public spaces and community well-being are explored by drawing on the Network Theory of Wellbeing. The main contribution of this paper is its merging of the aforementioned seminal work (i.e., Tripartite Framework and Network Theory of Wellbeing), two important bodies of scholarship that have yet to intersect but which offer a formidable platform to advance knowledge on how technical (e.g. planners), social (i.e. communities) and physical (e.g. built spaces like parks) dimensions of public space production can contribute to communal benefits derived from a public resource and community well-being. The applicability of the conceptual synthesis is illustrated through the discussion of specific examples in Maryvale. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Global development, diasporic communities, and civic space.
- Subjects
DIASPORA ,NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations ,COMMUNITY life ,EVERYDAY life ,PUBLIC spaces ,PARTICIPATION - Abstract
Over the last twenty years increasing attention has been paid to the ways in which diasporic communities can shape global development processes, thorough a variety of intersecting scales and spatialities. This promotion of diasporic‐centred development has occurred in parallel to a narrowing of civic space and it is these juxtaposing narratives that this paper interrogates. This paper firstly considers diasporic‐centred development before moving on to think about how the contemporary narrowing of civic space may be (re)shaping diasporic civic life and participation in global development processes. The paper concludes that the spaces for diasporic civic participation in development are vulnerable to being squeezed in multiple intersecting ways, including through the racialised marginalisation of diasporic communities in everyday life, restrictions on diasporic associational life, the delegitimising of diasporic organisations in the (formal) development sphere and the extra‐territorial narrowing of diasporic civic space by state (and non‐state) actors. It is imperative that we explore the intersections in the diasporic‐civic space‐development nexus, with further research needed to understand how diasporic communities are responding to these changes, how diasporic civic spaces are reconfiguring and reconstituting themselves in this context, and what this means for global development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. LIM-CD: A LARGE-SCALE REMOTE SENSING CHANGE DETECTION DATASET FOR INCREMENTAL MONITORING.
- Author
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Zhang, H., Zhang, R., Ning, X., Huang, X., He, Y., Chen, Y., Li, M., Cui, W., and Wang, J.
- Subjects
SCIENTIFIC community ,REMOTE sensing ,LAND use ,COMMUNITY life ,METADATA - Abstract
In this paper, we introduce a new large-scale change detection dataset called LIM-CD, designed for training and evaluating change detection algorithms on high resolution remote sensing images. The dataset currently consists of 9,259 images with labels covering six construction land use change types (i.e., residential land, industrial land, commercial land, public facilities, transportation land, and special land). The image annotations contain not only newly added regions of construction land as change annotations but also auxiliary information about construction land present in pre-change image (image T1), which serves as secondary annotations. These annotations offer crucial information for incremental monitoring applications. The remote sensing images are carefully selected to cover a broad range of imaging variations, including different image sources, years, backgrounds, and terrain. Additionally, we have provided comprehensive metadata labels, which can serve as additional features to aid model training and optimization. To establish a baseline for future algorithm development, we applied seven widely used and state-of-the-art change detection algorithms to the LIM-CD dataset. We are confident that our dataset can serve as a valuable resource for the research community, enabling the development of more accurate and robust change detection models. More information about the project can be found at
https://github.com/xiaoxiangAQ/LIM-CD-dataset
. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Child labour or child work? Complexities of socio-cultural life of the Wataturu community of Igunga, Tanzania.
- Author
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Ayo, Stephano Lazaro
- Subjects
CHILD labor ,COMMUNITIES ,COMMUNITY life ,PARTICIPANT observation ,ARCHIVAL research ,PASTORAL societies - Abstract
For a long time the world has campaigned against child labour, both with local and global efforts. These initiatives however tend to ignore contextual forces such as, specific socio-cultural contexts and societal interpretation of child labour. Scholarship on this subject uncovers several circumstances, reasons, consequences, processes, and challenges of child labour among different communities in Africa. Extant literature also reveals information regarding the complexities of sociocultural dimension in examining child labour practices. Building on the already existing evidence, this paper uncovers sociocultural complexity in explaining child labour practices among semi nomadic pastoral Wataturu communities in Igunga. The paper exploits various information collected through library and archival research, participant observation, and oral interviews to demonstrate how sociocultural set up of Wataturu challenges the mainstream approach to the claimed child labour practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
32. Between Hope and Loss: Peruvian Women Activists' Visual Contestations of Extractive-led Development.
- Author
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Jenkins, Katy
- Subjects
- *
DESPAIR , *ACTIVISTS , *EVERYDAY life , *NOSTALGIA , *COMMUNITY life , *GRASSROOTS movements - Abstract
This paper critically explores how women anti-mining activists conceptualize development, in the context of living with and resisting large-scale resource extraction in Cajamarca, Peru. I contend that participatory photography provides an opportunity to contest hegemonic development narratives and the notions of 'lack', 'poverty' and 'progress' that are bound up with such narratives, enabling participants to simultaneously evoke both hoped-for alternative futures and nostalgic renditions of a threatened present. Moving beyond an explicit and immediate focus on the socially and environmentally destructive nature of large-scale mining, I explore how the women instead document productive Andean livelihoods and everyday ways of life, capturing the ways in which hoped-for futures are enacted in the present. The women activists articulate their resistance through photography, identifying and celebrating practices of hope in their everyday lives and communities and providing an emotive counter-narrative to extractive-led neoliberal development discourses. The paper reveals that participatory photography approaches generate critical insight into the emotion-suffused ways in which development is understood by grassroots activists in contexts of extractivism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. IDENTITET GLAVNOG JUNAKA U ROMANU ĐUKA BEGOVIĆ IVANA KOZARCA.
- Author
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Tadić-Šokac, Sanja and Brdar, nevena
- Subjects
IDENTITY crises (Psychology) ,SATISFACTION ,DECISION making ,PEACE ,COMMUNITY life - Abstract
Copyright of Croatica et Slavica Iadertina is the property of University of Zadar, Department of Croatian & Slavic Studies and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Towards Agrirobot Digital Twins: Agri-RO5—A Multi-Agent Architecture for Dynamic Fleet Simulation †.
- Author
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Gutiérrez Cejudo, Jorge, Enguix Andrés, Francisco, Lujak, Marin, Carrascosa Casamayor, Carlos, Fernandez, Alberto, and Hernández López, Luís
- Subjects
DIGITAL twins ,DYNAMIC simulation ,COMMUNITY support ,DECISION making ,COMMUNITY life - Abstract
In this paper, we propose a multi-agent-based architecture for a Unity3D simulation of dynamic agrirobot-fleet-coordination methods. The architecture is based on a Robot Operating System (ROS) and Agrobots-SIM package that extends the existing package Patrolling SIM made for multi-robot patrolling. The Agrobots-SIM package accommodates dynamic multi-robot task allocation and vehicle routing considering limited robot battery autonomy. Moreover, it accommodates the dynamic assignment of implements to robots for the execution of heterogeneous tasks. The system coordinates task assignment and vehicle routing in real time and responds to unforeseen contingencies during simulation considering dynamic updates of the data related to the environment, tasks, implements, and robots. Except for the ROS and Agrobots-SIM package, other crucial components of the architecture include SPADE3 middleware for developing and executing multi-agent decision making and the FIVE framework that allows us to seamlessly define the environment and incorporate the Agrobots-SIM algorithms to be validated into SPADE agents inhabiting such an environment. We compare the proposed simulation architecture with the conventional approach to 3D multi-robot simulation in Gazebo. The functioning of the simulation architecture is demonstrated in several use-case experiments. Even though resource consumption and community support are still an open challenge in Unity3D, the proposed Agri-RO5 architecture gives better results in terms of simulation realism and scalability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Integrating Life Safety Concepts into College Physical Education Curricula: A Health and Life Community Perspective.
- Author
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Ting Li, Hongyan Yu, and Xiaoling Zhu
- Subjects
PHYSICAL education ,CURRICULUM ,HIGHER education ,PUBLIC health ,COMMUNITY life - Abstract
This paper adds and divides the concepts related to life and health community and life safety, and integrates the common parts of both with the curriculum of physical education in colleges and universities. Through the study of life and health community, the position of human health in the society is analyzed, and the correlation between both physical education and health is analyzed, so that the main factors affecting human health can be derived. The relevance of the life safety concept to physical health is analyzed, and the integration of the life safety concept and physical health is mainly studied. The teaching effects of the integration of the two were explored in conjunction with the concept. The results showed that the physical education curriculum incorporating the life safety concept as one of the teaching objectives is conducive to improving teaching effectiveness. The effectiveness of physical education teaching after the integration was 75%, and 70% of the teaching forms were diversified. 99.1% of the students thought the life safety education course was important, and 96.5% of the students thought the content they learned about life safety education was helpful. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Scientific concept and practices of life community of mountains, rivers, forests, farmlands, lakes, grasslands, and deserts in China.
- Author
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Liu, Shiliang, Dong, Yuhong, McConkey, Kim R., Tran, Lam-Son Phan, Wang, Fangfang, Liu, Hua, and Wu, Gang
- Subjects
STREAM restoration ,RESTORATION ecology ,COMMUNITY life ,GRASSLANDS ,DESERTS ,BIODIVERSITY conservation - Abstract
China prioritizes ecological civilization construction and embraces the concept of "lucid waters and lush mountains are invaluable assets." Great achievements have been made in ecological protection and restoration through implementing a series of policies and projects. This paper reviews the history of ecological restoration in China and the current development of the "integrated protection and restoration project of mountains, rivers, forests, farmlands, lakes, grasslands, and deserts (IPRP)." Furthermore, the characteristics of IPRP were systematically elaborated from the perspectives of the ecological civilization thought, the policy management, and the key scientific issues. Also, the current achievements were summarized in the fields of national ecological space management, biodiversity conservation, and ecological protection and restoration. Existing challenges in management policy, scientific issues, and engineering practices were highlighted. Future perspectives include ecological space control, nature-based Solutions, biodiversity big data platform, modern techniques, and value realization mechanisms of ecological products. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Music in the Bektashi Order in RN Macedonia: Aspects of Performance.
- Author
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ISLAM, AIDA, GÜVEN, MEHTAP DEMİR, and ZELENKOVSKA, STEFANIJA LESHKOVA
- Subjects
TURKS ,OTTOMAN Empire ,COMMUNITY life ,RITES & ceremonies ,FIELD research ,SACRED music ,SOCIAL dominance ,DRAWING - Abstract
The spiritual tradition of the Turkish population in RN Macedonia is rich and still nurtures some segments of Sufism from the Ottoman period such as the Bektashi dervish order. In the period before the arrival of the Ottomans (around the 13th century), numerous Sufis were active in these territories, which in some way represented a transition point for the conquest and settlement of the Turks. Numerous Bektashi tekkes were built during the Ottoman period, several of which are still active today. Depending on the ethnic composition of the followers, the linguistic dominance of these Sufi structures also changes. The only Bektashi tekke whose members are Turks is the tekke ‘Dikmen Baba’ located in the village Kanatlarci near Prilep. This tekke is one of the few in the Bektashi orders that, despite several divisions in the spiritual leadership, has operated without interruption since its founding in the 16
th century. Such divisions did not affect the essence of the spiritual beliefs nor the ritual forms of this dervish order which remain almost identical to those practised at the very beginning. The main focus of this paper will be the musical tradition of the ritual, and for the following reasons: 1. music, as the main activity of the Bektashi rituals, is the essential vehicle for spreading and reinforcing beliefs and wisdom for everyday community life, 2. its importance as a fundamental tool in the expression of mystical theosophy, and 3. variations in the repertoire as a result of drawing upon and integrating sacred music from local populations. For this purpose, field research, interviews, and the analysis of audio materials from the sacred rites of the Bektashi tekke Dikmen Baba in the village of Kanatlarci have been carried out. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Recursos para la inclusión educativa del alumnado con enfermedades minoritarias.
- Author
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LUIS MÉNDEZ-ULRICH, JORGE, PARRA RAMAJO, BELÉN, PADILLA-PETRY, PAULO, and NEGRE BENASSAR, FRANCISCA
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MEDICAL personnel ,EDUCATIONAL support ,RARE diseases ,COMMUNITY life ,EDUCATION associations - Abstract
Copyright of Educatio Siglo XXI is the property of Servicio de Publicaciones de la Universidad de Murcia and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Influence of cross-scale measures on neighborhood resilience.
- Author
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Buck, Kyle D., Dunn, Rebecca J., Bennett, Mary K., and Bousquin, Justin J.
- Subjects
NEIGHBORHOODS ,COMMUNITY life - Abstract
The increasing severity and frequency of disasters across the USA is revealing a landscape that is not entirely prepared to cope with these exposures. Resilience as a socio-ecological concept has become progressively more important as a means of assessing and mitigating these losses. Technological advances and planning have improved many outcomes, but all populations have not experienced the benefits. In this paper, we focus on the shortcomings of current resilience measures in capturing neighborhood disparities. Much like vulnerability and sustainability, local disparities will have a deleterious impact on the community as a whole. We use the Baseline Resilience Indicators for Communities (BRIC) framework and downscale the index using neighborhood-level Census data (tracts) and variations in household access to community resources. These added variables represent the variation of resilience indicators across a community and capture cross-scale relationships that exist between county and Census tract characteristics. We apply scaled variables in the Pensacola Bay Watershed to demonstrate cross-scaled interactions in the Florida panhandle. Potential modifications and applications of the concepts are also discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Analysis and optimization of 15-minute community life circle based on supply and demand matching: A case study of Shanghai.
- Author
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Wu, Haoyuan, Wang, Liangxu, Zhang, Zhonghao, and Gao, Jun
- Subjects
ANIMAL population density ,SUBURBS ,SUPPLY & demand ,URBAN fringe ,INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) ,CENTRAL business districts ,COMMUNITY life - Abstract
The 15-minute community life circle (15min-CLC) strategy is one of Shanghai's important methods for building a global city and facing a society with a more diverse population structure in the future. In the existing research, the balance between the construction of the life circle and the needs of the people in the life circle still needs to be further fulfilled. This paper is based on the city's multi-source large data set including 2018 AutoNavi POI (Point of Interests), OSM (OpenStreetMap) road network data and LandScan population data set, and evaluates the current status of Shanghai's 15min-CLC through the fusion of kernel density estimation, service area analysis and other statistical models and proposes relevant optimization suggestions. The results show that there are the following shortcomings: (1) From the perspective of different types of infrastructure service facilities, the spatial construction of Shanghai's overall life service facilities and shopping service facilities needs to be optimized. (2) From the perspective of comprehensive evaluation, the comprehensive service convenience of infrastructure service facilities in the downtown area is relatively high, while the comprehensive service convenience of urban infrastructure service facilities in the suburbs and outer suburbs is relatively low; The diversity of basic service facilities in the 15min-CLC in the downtown area is more consistent with the population distribution; However, in the peripheral areas of the urban area, too many infrastructure service facilities have been constructed. Based on the above shortcomings and the perspective of supply and demand matching, relevant optimization strategies are proposed in different regions and different types of infrastructure service facilities: (1) focus on the construction of basic service facilities in the urban fringe and urban-rural areas, improve the full coverage of the basic service facilities, and appropriately reduce the number of basic service facilities in the downtown area. (2) The development of community business models can be used to promote the development of new life service facilities and shopping service facilities. (3) Improve community medical institutions through facility function conversion, merger and reconstruction, etc. (4) Optimize the hierarchical basic service facility system and improve the population supporting facilities of basic service facilities in the 15min-CLC. This paper incorporates people's needs and concerns on the living environment into the 15min-CLC evaluation model, and uses Shanghai as an example to conduct research, summarizes the existing shortcomings, and proposes corresponding optimization strategies based on the matching of supply and demand. This article attempts to explore a replicable 15min-CLC planning model, so that it can be extended to the Yangtze River Delta urban agglomeration, to provide reference for further research on the 15min-CLC, and to promote urban construction under the concept of sustainable development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. The effectiveness of ūloa as a model supporting Tongan people experiencing mental distress.
- Author
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Vaka, Sione, Hamer, Helen Paris, and Mesui‐Henry, Anau
- Subjects
CULTURE ,COMMUNITY life ,SPIRITUALITY ,MEDICAL care ,PSYCHOLOGY ,INTERVIEWING ,FISHING ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,CONCEPTUAL models ,INDIGENOUS peoples ,JUDGMENT sampling ,THEMATIC analysis ,PSYCHOLOGICAL distress ,MENTAL health services - Abstract
This article is based on a larger research project, which investigates the effectiveness of a culturally appropriate model, namely ūloa, when working with Tongan people. Ūloa is a communal method of fishing in Tonga, which includes all members of the community. A previous paper described the three phases of ūloa: presenting the concept to health providers and community groups; phase two amended the model based on phase one. This paper reports on phase three and findings related to the increased awareness of ūloa model within the mental health services and to raise awareness of how to work with Pacific people and adjust the health service to suit the needs of this population to test its effectiveness. Using reflexive thematic analysis, results highlighted a number of patterns both across the groups, described as napanapangamālie (harmony, balance), ngāue fakataha (working together/oneness), and toutai (fisher). These findings continue to support that the conventional biomedical approach employed in the mental health services overlooks elements of Tongan constructions of mental illness and the intersections between Tongan and biopsychosocial themes. Care that is based only on the 'medicine' rather than bringing the spiritual aspect into care planning (fake leaves) will not serve the needs of the Tongan community. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. An Ethnographic Study Of Paliyar Tribes Of Kodaikanal Region In India.
- Author
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Denisia, S. P., Suresh, Vidya, Kan, Mustafa, and Ubaidullah, Vaheed Z.
- Subjects
TRIBES ,COMMUNITY life ,MARRIAGE ,EDUCATION - Abstract
The Paliyar tribes have a traditional identity with certain territories of community living especially in the Palani hills, Kodaikanal hills, and Sirumalai hills of Tamil Nadu, located on the Western Ghats continuing from the Anamalai hills of Kerala. The tribal economy is labelled as primitive economy. Most of the tribes depend on agriculture, by collecting fruits, cultivating vegetables and honey for their existence. This paper is contemporary ethnographic research to understand the health, social, economic, and level of education attained by the Paliyar tribes who live in Sirumalai hills in India. This paper also highlights the various ceremonies and rituals celebrated by them on several occasions of their day-to-day life like birth ceremonies, naming functions, marriage, life, and death. The paper relies on the explored authentic facts stated through quantitative and qualitative methods to understand the various dimensions of life and livelihood of the Paliyar tribes in association with their inseparable life in the forest and the influencing determinants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
43. The Watersheds Speak: The Voice of Ecosystems in Northern New York's Environmental Movements☆.
- Author
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Lavia, Blake, Aguilar‐Izzo, Tzintzun, and Avery, Leanne M.
- Subjects
- *
COLONIZATION (Ecology) , *WATERSHEDS , *PERSONALITY (Theory of knowledge) , *STORYTELLING , *COMMUNITY life - Abstract
This paper explores how connectivity to place has brought life to contemporary environmental struggles in what is now known as New York State. Layers of memory, colonization, and stewardship are embedded within a community's relationship with their environment. By focusing on two case studies, the authors will illustrate how this relationship shaped successful place‐based resistance. Throughout our work, we offer the alternative methodology of ecocentric storytelling and artistic representation to elevate the voice of both ecosystems and all their inhabitants. Both case studies are centered on environmental/social movements that foreground the inherent personhood of the natural world. The first will focus on the Ashokan Reservoir, in the Catskill Mountains, on land guarded by the Lenape. It is a location that has suffered multiple waves of colonization and successfully resisted a large damming operation. The second case study will be centered on the Upper St. Lawrence River/Kaniatarowanénhne Watershed, Haudenosaunee Territory, where rural communities are uniting to grant Rights to the Rivers that bring life to their communities. Both cases exemplify the story of communities that defended their livelihoods and environments by uniting with their most reliable allies, the Water, and all their more‐than‐human guardians. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Managing retreat? An empirical reflection on adopting relocation initiatives as adaptation policy in Louisiana.
- Author
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Birch, Traci, Nelson, Marla, and Ehrenfeucht, Renia
- Subjects
ACQUISITION of property ,INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) ,RESTORATION ecology ,BUYOUTS ,COMMUNITY life - Abstract
Coastal Louisiana is experiencing climate-related impacts at rates substantially higher than other areas worldwide. Unique coastal communities face imminent impacts requiring adaptation and possible relocation. As such, Louisiana's strategies for ecosystem-scale flood management and ecological restoration are relevant globally. In this paper, we trace the idea of managed retreat as a nonstructural adaptation mechanism through the analysis of Louisiana's Coastal Master Plan and LA SAFE documents, and interviews with residents and planning professionals. Although Louisiana's plans and policies increasingly recognise increasing risk, and relocation as a necessary adaptation strategy, planning goals for relocation have weakened over time. Our analysis found two reasons for this. First, professionals and residents view risk and relocation differently. Low- and moderate-income residents had varied claims and constraints that influenced the adoption of relocation programmes and highlighted the need for community-driven initiatives. Second, no social infrastructure was implemented with the technical capacity or financial resources to work with communities to develop and implement relocation initiatives. As climate impacts increase, policies facilitating managed retreat will also need to expand. This work provides insights into the evolution of large-scale relocation planning, and a better understanding of the challenges facing states and communities as these efforts are expanded. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Effects of Community Assets on Major Health Conditions in England: A Data Analytic Approach.
- Author
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Moustakas, Aristides, Thomson, Linda J. M., Mughal, Rabya, and Chatterjee, Helen J.
- Subjects
SAFETY ,STATISTICAL models ,DATA analysis ,CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) ,NATURE ,MENTAL health ,CARDIOVASCULAR diseases ,RESEARCH funding ,MEDICAL care ,HYPERTENSION ,MUSCULOSKELETAL system diseases ,EVALUATION of medical care ,ANALYTIC hierarchy process ,RESPIRATORY diseases ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,PUBLIC spaces ,LIVER diseases ,COMMUNITY life ,POLLUTION ,ANALYSIS of variance ,PUBLIC health ,DEMENTIA ,KIDNEY diseases ,TUMORS ,DATA analysis software ,COMORBIDITY ,POVERTY ,OBESITY ,DIABETES - Abstract
Introduction: The broader determinants of health including a wide range of community assets are extremely important in relation to public health outcomes. Multiple health conditions, multimorbidity, is a growing problem in many populations worldwide. Methods: This paper quantified the effect of community assets on major health conditions for the population of England over six years, at a fine spatial scale using a data analytic approach. Community assets, which included indices of the health system, green space, pollution, poverty, urban environment, safety, and sport and leisure facilities, were quantified in relation to major health conditions. The health conditions examined included high blood pressure, obesity, dementia, diabetes, mental health, cardiovascular conditions, musculoskeletal conditions, respiratory conditions, kidney and liver disease, and cancer. Cluster analysis and dendrograms were calculated for the community assets and major health conditions. For each health condition, a statistical model with all community assets was fitted, and model selection was performed. The number of significant community assets for each health condition was recorded. The unique variance, explained by each significant community asset per health condition, was quantified using hierarchical variance partitioning within an analysis of variance model. Results: The resulting data indicate major health conditions are often clustered, as are community assets. The results suggest that diversity and richness of community assets are key to major health condition outcomes. Primary care service waiting times and distance to public parks were significant predictors of all health conditions examined. Primary care waiting times explained the vast majority of the variances across health conditions, with the exception of obesity, which was better explained by absolute poverty. Conclusions: The implications of the combined findings of the health condition clusters and explanatory power of community assets are discussed. The vast majority of determinants of health could be accounted for by healthcare system performance and distance to public green space, with important covariate socioeconomic factors. Emphases on community approaches, significant relationships, and asset strengths and deficits are needed alongside targeted interventions. Whilst the performance of the public health system remains of key importance, community assets and local infrastructure remain paramount to the broader determinants of health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Databases in Volcanology.
- Author
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Andrews, B. J., Costa, F., Venzke, E., and Widiwijayanti, C.
- Subjects
DATABASES ,MACHINE learning ,VOLCANIC eruptions ,VOLCANOLOGY ,SCIENCE publishing ,COMMUNITY life - Abstract
The varied and episodic nature of volcanic eruptions requires numerous and diverse observations for study and successful forecasting. Volcanological databases are important resources for the community because they enable investigation of questions that are not answerable by single datasets. Large-scale or synoptic studies are increasingly accessible through the use of machine learning applied to those often complex databases. In this paper, we describe the existing volcanological database landscape, the complexity of linking between various resources, the challenges of data standardization, and the challenges associated with long-term growth and sustainability of databases. Many challenges to database interoperability can be addressed through use of global unique identifiers and standardized data formats when populating databases and when publishing scientific studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Construction of community life circle database based on high-resolution remote sensing technology and multi-source data fusion.
- Author
-
Zuo, Jin, Meng, Lei, Li, Chen, Zhang, Heng, Zeng, Yun, and Dong, Jing
- Subjects
REMOTE sensing ,COMMUNITY life ,MULTISENSOR data fusion ,DATABASES ,CITIES & towns ,INFORMATION technology ,WIRELESS Internet - Abstract
To provide supporting tools for the community life circle scientific planning and efficient management, the paper takes the urban central area as the research object, and constructs the community life circle database based on multi-source data fusion. High-resolution remote sensing technology and mobile internet complement traditional planning institute data and provide effective ways to obtain multi-source data. When multi-source data describes the same feature, the data content could be repetitive or conflicting, which causes the data to be inaccurate. Multi-source data fusion coordinates repetitive or conflicting data contents, and forms a unified, accurate and useful description on the same feature. The results: (1) Land use, building, supporting facility, and road are important construction elements of community life circle. (2) The planning institute, Baidu place API interface and high-resolution remote sensing technology are the main data acquisition channels. The Baidu POI data is an effective supplement to planning institute facility data. (3) Based on the high-resolution remote sensing images change detection and vector extraction technology, the paper updates planning institute building data. The new information technology has enriched the data sources, the paper contributes to take full advantage of multi-source data and improve the reality, completeness and accuracy of database. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Fairies, Environmental Justice, and Re-Enchantment in Modern Pagan Narratives.
- Author
-
Magliocco, Sabina and Rittman, Sadie
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTAL justice ,FAIRIES ,HUMAN beings ,COMMUNITY life ,ENVIRONMENTALISM - Abstract
This paper examines contemporary Pagan narratives about fairies, revealing themes of re-enchantment, environmental grief, and environmental justice. In these narratives, fairies are often portrayed as nature spirits and protectors of the environment who warn humans of impending disaster and suggest techniques for re-enchanting the physical environment through practices that create reciprocal relationships between humans and nature, change consciousness, and allow humans to experience an interconnected, ensouled universe. These narratives can be interpreted as belonging to a category of folk environmentalism in which expressive cultural forms provide resources for communities coping with environmental grief. They also reflect emergent vernacular ontologies which reflect contemporary Pagan efforts to re-enchant the world and shift perceptions from a naturalistic frame to one that is more animistic, in which otherthan- human beings are thought to have consciousness and interiority. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. A társadalmi élet alszférái: A mindennapi társadalmi élet és a politikai élet szférája.
- Author
-
ZOLTÁN, FARKAS
- Subjects
COMMUNITY life ,EVERYDAY life - Abstract
According to my conception, we can distinguish the four main spheres of modern human life: the spheres of private life, community life, social life, and coercive life. The modern state (or national) society is a heterogeneous society in which the main life spheres mentioned have been developed, and in which the sphere of social life is of fundamental importance. In this paper, the focus of inquiry is that the sphere of social life is also complex, from the point of view that it is differentiated into social sub-spheres. First, I point out the main conceptions regarding the differentiation of society into subsystems, fields, or spheres, especially Bourdieu's field theory, and then I define the concept of social sub-sphere. After that, I distinguish the sphere of everyday social life on the one hand, and the sphere of political life on the other; and within the former sphere (or partly in the area of other life spheres) I make a distinction between further sub-spheres: the relatively pure social sub-sphere, the semi-social sub-sphere, and the mixed life sphere. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Wondering Animals: Reflections on Human Exceptionality.
- Author
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SCHINKEL, ANDERS
- Subjects
ANTHROPOCENTRISM ,ANIMAL species ,COMMUNITY life ,HUMAN beings ,CURIOSITIES & wonders - Abstract
Both historically and in common human practices, attitudes, and beliefs, a sense of human exceptionality in comparison with other animals undergirds normative anthropocentrism, i.e. prioritization of human interests. The question I wish to address in this article is whether we can use a particular element of the cognitive apparatus or toolkit that supposedly makes us special, namely our sense of wonder, to decenter us. Several authors have argued that when we view other beings or the natural world with wonder, we are inclined to care for and wish to protect them. But here I am interested in what happens when we turn our sense of wonder onto ourselves as the peculiar animal, the strange evolutionary experiment that we are. Not, as has historically been done, in an admiring way, but in an evaluatively more neutral way, characterized by puzzlement, an attunement to mystery, and a sense of unlikeliness and contingency. In particular, how might our thinking about ourselves change when we think from a wonder that revolves around our embodiment, around that which roots us most firmly in the world, in “nature,” and reminds us most clearly of our membership of a community of earthly life? Wondering at and about ourselves as an animal species may remind us of our material embeddedness in the world, but what could its ethical import be? More specifically, the paper explores whether there is an escape from the ethical quandaries of human exceptionality, which relate to the impossibility of doing with or without that exceptionality. I argue that there is not, but that in wonder we can hold together incompatible possibilities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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