336 results
Search Results
2. Setting sustainability agenda at the local level: a process of compromise making.
- Author
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Arda, Lama, Pichault, Francois, Esposito, Giovanni, and Crutzen, Nathalie
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SUSTAINABILITY ,STAKEHOLDERS - Abstract
This paper examines how local actors set the sustainability agenda. By relying on the economies of worth, we explain how actors dwell upon multiple worlds to evaluate what is valuable, what is not valuable, and to promote their views. Empirically, we draw evidence from the Walloon region in Belgium, by investigating how multiple actors discuss their views in an attempt to set a sustainability agenda. We outline the multiple worlds that actors refer to during their interaction, the moments of critiques and how a compromise is shaped where the green world is given a significant prominence. Furthermore, we identify a set of mechanisms that facilitated the multi-actor interaction to shape a collective compromise as a continuous process. Points for practitioners: (1) Local governments play a crucial role in sustainability policies due to their proximity to local communities, enabling the development of tailored solutions, and direct engagement with citizens to address local environmental and social challenges. (2) Agenda-setting in local sustainability policies is intricate and frequently contentious due to the diverse values, interests, and preferences of all involved stakeholders. (3) Drawing on Boltanski and Thévenot's orders of worth theory, this paper offers researchers and practitioners an approach to unpack and understand the varied values, interests, and preferences of all involved stakeholders. (4) This paper identifies and elucidates three mechanisms (reflection, engagement, and alteration) that facilitate interactions among stakeholders, allowing them to reach a compromise on a shared sustainability agenda. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. Studies from University Hospital Center St. Pierre Yield New Data on Heart Attack (Clinical Paper Postresuscitation Oxygen Reserve Index-guided Oxygen Titration In Out-of-hospital Cardiac Arrest Survivors: a Randomised Controlled Trial).
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MYOCARDIAL infarction ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,CARDIAC arrest ,UNIVERSITY hospitals ,VOLUMETRIC analysis - Abstract
A recent study conducted at the University Hospital Center St. Pierre in Brussels, Belgium, compared the outcomes of oxygen reserve index-supported prehospital oxygen titration with standard oxygen titration in patients who experienced return of spontaneous circulation after cardiac arrest. The study aimed to determine if oxygen reserve index-guided oxygen titration improved outcomes. The results showed no significant difference in the normoxia index, incidence of hypoxia or hyperoxia, mean PaO2 at hospital admission, or serum neuron-specific enolase levels between the two groups. Therefore, the study concluded that oxygen reserve index-guided oxygen titration did not significantly improve outcomes compared to standard oxygen titration. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2024
4. The importance of microAKIS members in the strategic decisions of Flemish horticulture farmers.
- Author
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Moeyersons, Mertijn and Mathijs, Erik
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AGRICULTURE ,HORTICULTURE ,FARMERS ,CONSULTANTS ,AGRICULTURAL innovations - Abstract
Purpose: This paper aims to understand whether different types of strategic decisions warrant the influence of different types of knowledge providers. Design/Methodology/Approach: A survey of 28 horticulture farmers was conducted in Belgium to explore their knowledge providers and recent strategic decisions. Farmers reported their microAKIS configuration, up to three strategic decisions and detailed the interaction with each of their knowledge providers. Findings: Horticulture farmers configure their microAKIS in unique ways partly depending on their subsector, while purposefully mobilizing only part of this configuration for each strategic decision. The findings suggest that the role of knowledge provider can be context- or decision-specific. Practical Implications: Advisors and policy makers should consider the specificity of advisory services when developing support tools aimed at specific innovations, as farmers do not necessarily rely on topic specialists alone. Theoretical Implications: The results highlight the complexity of the influence of knowledge providers on innovation and the need for research on general strategic decisions and multiple decisions per farmer. Originality/Value: The paper applies a broad methodology to study the mobilization of agricultural knowledge providers by utilizing strategic decisions rather than specific innovations and capturing multiple decisions per farmer. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Mapping social protection coverage for platform workers: A comparative analysis of Belgium, Italy and the Netherlands.
- Author
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De Becker, Eleni, Seo, Hyojin, Pulignano, Valeria, and Schoukens, Paul
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SOCIAL security ,UNPAID labor ,INCOME ,INDUSTRIAL relations ,COMPARATIVE studies ,PERSONALLY identifiable information - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to examine if and how the reclassification of platform workers from self-employment status to employment status can provide them with adequate social security protection. Little is known about how this transition would guarantee platform workers adequate social protection within the social protection scheme for employees. National social security schemes, in particular income replacement benefit schemes, often (still) depart from the standard employment relationship, leading to lower protection for atypical work forms. Platform workers combine several of the characteristics of atypical forms of work, such as low earnings, irregular working patterns and working. Integrating platform workers into employee social security schemes faces additional challenges due to the online nature of their work, algorithmic management, high levels of unpaid labor, and employer identification difficulties. This paper focuses on unemployment protection, as EU Member States struggle to provide adequate protection for workers with irregular work patterns and income fluctuations, in the case of (short term) income replacement benefits. By constructing nine ideal work patterns reflective of diverse nature of platform work and current practices among platform work, we analyse how different types of 'employed' platform workers may fare within the legislation of three EU countries (Belgium, Italy, and the Netherlands). This approach allows us to assess the applicability of unemployment protection to different working patterns among 'employed' platform workers, considering formal, effective, and adequate access to unemployment schemes as outlined in the Council Recommendation on access to social protection for workers and the self-employed (2019). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. 'How dare you!': a conceptualization of the eco-shaming discourse in Belgium.
- Author
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Vandenhole, Kimberley, Bauler, Tom, and Block, Thomas
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SOCIAL movements ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,DISCOURSE analysis - Abstract
The rise of Greta Thunberg, the Swedish 'flygskam' (flight shame) movement, and school strikes for climate: the context for apprehending environmental affairs changed significantly in 2018, enabling the construction of a new environmental discourse of which practices of eco-shaming and emotions of eco-shame are visible expressions. This paper conceptualizes this 'eco-shaming' discourse by exposing the complex set of constituents underpinning it. It demonstrates how the eco-shaming discourse embodies a conception of the environment as public good and how it relies on the idea of shared but differentiated responsibilities in caring for the environment. As such, the paper adds the eco-shaming discourse as an eleventh environmental discourse to the ones famously identified in The Politics of the Earth. The paper then compares the eco-shaming discourse with other environmental discourses and discusses its implications for environmental politics. The paper draws upon a specific methodological application of discourse analysis that gives emotion a place it usually lacks in environmental discourse analysis. The empirical analysis includes text documents (n = 2155) from three societal domains (media, policy, and advocacy) in Belgium. This paper contributes theoretical and empirical knowledge on eco-shaming, environmental discourses, policymaking, as well as methodological insights on how to acquire such knowledge. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. The greening of IT use: the impact of environmental concerns on the use of internet systems.
- Author
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Goethals, Frank and Ziegelmayer, Jennifer L.
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INFORMATION technology ,DIGITAL footprint ,STRUCTURAL equation modeling ,INTERNET ,ENVIRONMENTAL reporting ,FOOTPRINTS ,GREEN technology - Abstract
Purpose: Internet use has a high environmental footprint that is often overlooked by end users. This paper contributes to limiting the negative environmental footprint of Information Technology (IT) use by understanding the relationship between environmental concerns and use of IT amongst users who are aware of the environmental footprint of IT use. Second, the paper argues that taking environmental concerns into account in technology acceptance studies is relevant, even in studies concerning ordinary IT (i.e. IT not commonly classified as "green" technology). Design/methodology/approach: The authors conduct two vignette-based surveys in two different countries: the USA and Belgium. Partial least squares structural equation modeling (PLS-SEM) is used to analyse the effect of environmental concerns on the intention to use the webcam during online meetings and binary logistic regression is used to analyse the relationship between environmental concerns and reported actual use of webcams. Findings: The higher the respondents' environmental concerns, the higher their intention to use internet systems in a more environmentally responsible way, provided the respondents are aware of the environmental footprint of internet system use. Moreover, the higher the respondents' environmental concerns, the more likely they are to use internet systems in a more environmentally responsible way. Originality/value: This study is the first to distinguish "Greening of IT Use" from "Greening of IT" and "Greening by IT" and to show that environmental concerns has an impact on the way end users (intend to) use internet systems, provided the users are aware of the environmental footprint of that use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. Students as Teacher Whisperers: A Case Study of Course Co-Creation for and with Students
- Author
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European University Association (EUA) (Belgium), Valérie Vermueulen, and Philippe Emplit
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Since 1999, the Bologna Process has advocated towards a new teaching paradigm, the so-called student-centred approach to learning, as well as towards more coherence of the higher education system across Europe. This paper explores how co-creation of course contents and learning activities, for and with students, may be implemented to sustain a student-centred evolution of teaching. Located at the crossroads between action-research based method and case study, our co-creation initiative strives for the enhancement of the student's learning experience. Using statistical and qualitative data, this paper investigates how a 3-years-long course redesign with the support of co-creating students has induced significant effects on the curriculum, on the members of the pedagogical team and on the student cohort. Consequently, we suggest that in most higher education systems, student-staff partnership through co-creation is a highly adaptive process that may improve multiple dimensions of teaching and learning in a studentcentred way.
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- 2024
9. Digital Practices of Negotiation: Social Workers at the Intersection of Migration and Social Policies in Switzerland and Belgium.
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ANDREETTA, SOPHIE and BORRELLI, LISA MARIE
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DIGITAL technology ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,DOCUMENTATION ,SOCIAL security ,SOCIAL workers ,GOVERNMENT policy ,RESEARCH funding ,NEGOTIATION ,INTERVIEWING ,ETHNOLOGY research ,FIELDWORK (Educational method) ,SOCIAL services ,NOMADS ,DECISION making ,ELECTRONIC data interchange ,INSTITUTIONAL cooperation ,RESEARCH methodology ,COMMUNICATION ,PUBLIC welfare ,AUTOMATION ,REFUGEES - Abstract
Paperwork has always been a central part of bureaucratic work. Over the last few years, bureaucratic procedures have become increasingly standardised and digitalised. Based on interviews and ethnographic fieldwork within welfare offices in Switzerland and Belgium, we reflect on the way evidence is constructed within social policy and cases built for or against noncitizen welfare recipients in order to show how paper truths are established and challenged. The focus on digital practices within public policy implementation highlights how it contributes to enhanced control mechanisms on the implementation level and how migration law continues to guide welfare governance for noncitizens. This allows targeting of the most marginalised groups, whose rights to access state support are institutionally impeded. Through database information flows, official forms, paper reports and face-to-face meetings, we further show how a hybrid form of bureaucratic work emerges, where direct contact with the client is still key, yet highly influenced by standardisation processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. Empirically exploring the veracity of the new stakeholder perspective in strategy: Documenting workforce rents.
- Author
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Neckebrouck, Jeroen and Kryscynski, David
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STAKEHOLDER theory ,RENT (Economic theory) ,HUMAN capital ,WAGES ,VALUE creation ,LABOR market - Abstract
Research Summary: Without compelling empirical proxies for economic profits, we may need to reconsider the decades of empirical research purporting to inform our theories of competitive advantage. The new stakeholder perspective suggests that stakeholders may capture significant shares of the firm's economic profits that should be incorporated into these proxies. In this article, we propose a novel empirical approach to measuring stakeholder rents and then apply our approach to measure workforce rents across the population of all Belgian firms employing workers from 2008 to 2016. Our results demonstrate substantial variance in workforce rents among firms, with some firms allowing most of the economic profits they generate to flow to the workforce. We discuss the implications of our findings in detail and lay out a pathway for future research. Managerial Summary: This article examines the extent to which companies pay their workforces above (below) what the labor market demands as a way of exploring how much of the company's economic profits go to stakeholders other than shareholders. We demonstrate a wide range of over (under) payments to workforces in a large sample of Belgian firms from 2008 to 2016. One of the important contributions of our paper is developing a method to determine over (under) payments for the workforce, but our method can also be applied to other stakeholders. We hope our work provides an empirical approach for others to explore how stakeholders capture portions of the economic profits that companies create. Video abstract [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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11. Angry men and angry women: gender, system-directed anger and populist radical right voting in Belgium.
- Author
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Erzeel, Silvia, Fieremans, Merel, Van Bavel, Anne, Blanckaert, Benjamin, and Caluwaerts, Didier
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RIGHT-wing populism ,VOTING ,RIGHT-wing extremism ,ANGER ,POLITICAL systems ,GENDER inequality - Abstract
Why do men and women vote for the populist radical right? This question, which speaks to the phenomenon of the "radical right gender gap", has been the topic of much scholarly interest. While previous studies refer to the role played by differences in political resources, attitudes, and socialization, this paper examines whether negative emotions towards the political system, and system-directed anger in particular, drive support for populist radical right parties differently for men and women. Drawing on the premise that populist radical right parties tend to appeal to angry voters, and given that acting upon anger is seen as an "agentic" trait, we expect that system-directed anger is more strongly associated with support for populist radical right parties among men compared to women. We test the hypothesis using original data from the RepResent voter survey organized in Belgium during the 2019 federal elections. In line with previous studies, we find that voters of the populist radical right party Vlaams Belang report high levels of system-directed anger. Men and women voters are similar in their display of this emotion, and contrary to our expectations, they are similar in how system-directed anger relates to vote choice as well. More than explaining gender differences in populist radical right voting, our findings confirm the idea that system-directed anger can incite women as well as men to cast a populist radical right vote. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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12. Parties' parliamentary attack behaviour throughout the electoral cycle.
- Author
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Poljak, Željko and Walter, Annemarie S.
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POLITICAL parties ,ELECTIONS ,LEGISLATIVE bodies - Abstract
Studies examining parties' attack behaviour, also called negative campaigning, largely neglect temporal dynamics. Therefoe, this paper examines how the electoral cycle, the period between two elections, impacts parties' attack behaviour in parliaments. We argue that parties attack all the time but that the (i) level, (ii) type, and (iii) nature of attacks are affected by the electoral cycle as parties adapt their objectives. Analysing longitudinal data on parties' attacks in the parliaments of Belgium, Croatia, and the UK (2010–2020), we find that when elections draw closer parties' use of attacks, trait attacks, and uncivil attacks increases. We also find support for the notion that not all parties' attack behaviour is equally impacted by the electoral cycle, as parties differ in sensitivity to the electoral cycle based on risk acceptance. Overall, the impact of the electoral cycle on parties' strategic choices in general, and attack behaviour specifically, should not be ignored. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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13. The co-production process of an assessment programme: Between clarifying identity and developing the quality of French-speaking Belgian community health centres.
- Author
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Capiau, Madeleine, Macq, Jean, and Thunus, Sophie
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COMMUNITY centers ,MEDICAL centers ,PUBLIC health ,COMMUNITY-based participatory research ,SEMI-structured interviews - Abstract
Background: The assessment of primary care organizations is considered to be essential for improving care. However, the assessments' acceptability to professionals poses a challenge. Developing assessment programmes in collaboration with the end-users is a strategy that is widely encouraged to make interventions better targeted. By doing so, it can help to prevent resistance and encourage adherence to the assessment. This process, however, is rarely reported. This paper aims to fill this gap by describing the process of the co-production of an assessment programme for community health centres (CHCs) affiliated to the Federation of Community Health Centres (FCHC) in French-speaking Belgium. Methods: We conducted a documentary study on the co-production of the assessment programme before carrying out semi-structured interviews with the stakeholders involved in its development. Results: CHCs in French-speaking Belgium are increasing in number and are becoming more diverse. For the FCHC, this growth and diversification pose challenges for the meaning of CHC (an identity challenge) and what beneficiaries can expect in terms of the quality of organizations declaring themselves CHC (a quality challenge). Faced with this double challenge, the FCHC decided to develop an assessment programme, initially called Label, using participatory action research. During the co-production process, this initial programme version was abandoned in favour of a new name "DEQuaP". This new name embodies new objectives and new design regarding the assessment programme. When studying the co-production process, we attributed these changes to two controversies. The first concerns how much and which type of variety is desired among CHCs part of the FCHC. The second concerns the organization of the FCHC in its capacity as a federation. It shed light on tensions between two professional segments that, in this paper, we called "political professionalism" and "pragmatic professionalism". Conclusions: These controversies show the importance of underlying challenges behind the development of an assessment programme for CHCs. This provided information about the evolution of the identity of multidisciplinary organizations in primary care. Issues raised in the development of this assessment programme also show the importance of considering assessment methods that reflect and embody the current realities of these organizations and the way of developing these assessment methods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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14. Validation and Application of the Accu-Waves Operational Platform for Wave Forecasts at Ports.
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Makris, Christos, Papadimitriou, Andreas, Baltikas, Vasilis, Spiliopoulos, Giannis, Kontos, Yiannis, Metallinos, Anastasios, Androulidakis, Yannis, Chondros, Michalis, Klonaris, Georgios, Malliouri, Dimitra, Nagkoulis, Nikolaos, Zissis, Dimitris, Tsoukala, Vasiliki, Karambas, Theophanis, and Memos, Constantine
- Subjects
BUOYS ,OCEAN circulation ,FORECASTING ,CONTINENTAL shelf ,OCEAN waves ,SEVERE storms - Abstract
This paper presents a recently developed Operational Forecast Platform (OFP) for prevailing sea conditions at very important ports worldwide (Accu-Waves). The OFP produces reliable high-resolution predictions of wave characteristics in and around ocean ports. Its goal is to support safer navigation, predict possible port downtime, assist vessel approaching, enhance management of towing services, and bolster secure ship maneuvering in busy ports around the globe. Accu-Waves OFP is based on integrated, high-resolution wave modelling over the continental shelf and in coastal areas that incorporates data from global- and regional-scale, open-sea wave and ocean circulation forecasts as boundary conditions. The coupling, nesting, calibration, and implementation of the models are reported and discussed in this paper, concerning 50 selected areas near and inside significant port basins. The detailed setup of the Accu-Waves OFP and its sub-system services is also provided regarding three-day forecasts at three-hourly intervals. The validation of the wave forecast system against in situ observations from wave buoys in coastal areas of the USA, Belgium, and Spain, as well as other model predictions by established OFPs, seems very promising, with performance skill scores ranging from adequate to very good. An exceptional case of stormy seas under severe marine weather conditions with very high wave maxima (>10 m) in the port of Algeciras is further discussed, confirming the good performance of the Accu-Waves OFP. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. Exploring cross-cultural perspectives on adolescent mental health among Congolese immigrant adults in the USA and Belgium.
- Author
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Martin Romero, Michelle Y., Johnson, Dorcas Mabiala, Mununga, Esther, and Stein, Gabriela Livas
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PARENT attitudes ,IMMIGRANTS ,PSYCHOLOGY of parents ,HEALTH services accessibility ,SOCIAL support ,ACCULTURATION ,RESEARCH methodology ,PRACTICAL politics ,MEDICAL mistrust ,MENTAL health ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,HELP-seeking behavior ,HEALTH status indicators ,INTERVIEWING ,ADOLESCENT health ,QUALITATIVE research ,TEENAGERS' conduct of life ,COMMUNICATION ,WOUNDS & injuries ,PARENT-child relationships ,CULTURAL values ,RELIGION ,MENTAL health services ,MENTAL illness - Abstract
Purpose: This paper aims to explore the intersection of cultural processes and immigration in parental understanding of adolescent mental health and mental health seeking behaviors among African immigrants in Western countries. The present study examines the perspectives of Congolese immigrant parents on adolescent mental health in Brussels, Belgium, and Raleigh, North Carolina, USA – two geographic regions with relatively large Congolese migrant populations. This study highlights a needed understanding of cultural and acculturative context in shaping the beliefs of Congolese immigrants and explores potential barriers of seeking health services. Additionally, it recognizes health issues among this underrepresented and underserved population. Design/methodology/approach: Fifteen Congolese immigrant parents, eight in the USA and seven in Belgium, participated in structured qualitative interviews using an adapted version of Kleinman Questions and behavioral scenarios on depression, post-traumatic stress disorder and oppositional defiant disorder. Interviews were audio recorded, and participants were assigned pseudonyms to de-identify responses. English interviews were transcribed verbatim by a trained team of undergraduate research assistants, and French interviews were transcribed verbatim by the first author and a graduate research assistant. Following transcription, the first and second authors used a rapid analytic approach (Hamilton, 2013). The first and second authors conducted a matrix analysis to observe thematic patterns. Findings: Parents interpreted adolescent behavior to be more problematic when the scenarios were overtly outside of their cultural realm of values and beliefs. Parents preferred methods of intervention through religious practices and/or family and community efforts rather than seeking mental health services in their host countries as a secondary option. The authors' findings provide an understanding of the values and beliefs of this underrepresented demographic, which may be useful to guide health professionals on how to support this community in a culturally responsive way. Research limitations/implications: Limitations to the current study include the structured nature of the interview guide that did not allow for in-depth qualitative exploration. Interviewed participants had lived in their host countries for more than 10+ years. Thus, the authors' findings are not reflective of new immigrants' experiences. Parents' perspectives were likely shaped by exposure to Western beliefs related to support for mental health (e.g. knowledge of psychologists). Future studies should focus on recent refugees due to exposure to traumatic events and experiences reflective of the Democratic Republic of Congo's (DRC's) current socio-political situation, and how these are understood in the context of adolescent mental health. Further, due to the hypothetical nature of the scenarios, the authors cannot be sure that participants would engage in the identified approaches with their children. Additionally, hearing from the youth's perspective would provide a clearer insight on how mental health and seeking professional help is viewed in a parent–child relationship. Finally, the data for this study were collected in 2019, prior to the COVID-19 pandemic. Although the authors cannot speak directly to Congolese refugee and immigrant experiences during this significant historical period, given the rise in mental health concerns in refugee populations more broadly (Logie et al., 2022), the authors' findings speak to how parents may have responded to increased mental health symptoms and point to additional barriers that these populations may have faced in accessing support. The authors' study emphasizes the need for dedicating resources and attention to this population, especially the development of culturally tailored messaging that invites community members to support the mental health needs of their community. Practical implications: The authors' findings provide important implications for mental health professionals. This study provides a clearer understanding of how Congolese immigrant parents view mental health and help-seeking within their cultural frame. Although parents may seek professional help, a distrust of mental health services was expressed across both cohorts. This suggests that mental health professionals should acknowledge potential distrust among this population and clarify their role in supporting the mental health of adolescent immigrants. Clinicians should inquire about familial cultural beliefs that are parent- and child-centered and modify their interventions to fit these belief structures. Originality/value: This paper addresses the gap in knowledge about mental health perspectives of Sub-Saharan African immigrant populations, specifically those from the DRC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Mapping the ripple effects of a compassionate university for serious illness, death, and bereavement.
- Author
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Bakelants, Hanne, Dury, Sarah, Chambaere, Kenneth, De Donder, Liesbeth, Deliens, Luc, Vanderstichelen, Steven, Marynissen, Silke, Cohen, Joachim, and Van Droogenbroeck, Filip
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SCHOOL environment ,CORPORATE culture ,DEATH ,PALLIATIVE treatment ,QUALITATIVE research ,FOCUS groups ,RESEARCH funding ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,COMPASSION ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,EVALUATION of human services programs ,INTERVIEWING ,DRAWING ,CATASTROPHIC illness ,COLLEGE teachers ,BEREAVEMENT ,THEMATIC analysis ,COLLEGE teacher attitudes ,PUBLIC health ,DATA analysis software ,PSYCHOLOGY of college students ,COMMUNITY-based social services ,WELL-being ,CONCEPT mapping - Abstract
Background: Compassionate communities have been put forward as a promising model for community-based support for people facing serious illness, caregiving, dying, and loss. In particular, educational institutions are increasingly acknowledged as potential settings to function as compassionate schools and compassionate workplaces, cultivating acceptance and validation of these experiences beyond the university setting. Objectives: This paper investigates the activities and outcomes of a compassionate community initiative—the Compassionate University program at the Vrije Universiteit Brussel in Belgium. Design: Ripple Effects Mapping was used to guide the focus group and individual interviews conducted with core team members responsible for the development and implementation of the Compassionate University program. Methods: During the focus group and individual interviews, the core team members reflected on the program contributions, with their narratives visually depicted via a hand-drawn mind map. Qualitative data derived from this mind map were entered into XMIND mapping software and fine-tuned based on the focus group and individual interview transcripts and additional project records. Results: Thematic analysis identified four outcome areas that encapsulate the key contributions of the Compassionate University program: (i) increased acceptance and integration of topics such as serious illness, death, and bereavement into existing practices; (ii) broader support for and formalization of compassionate procedures and policies; (iii) emergence of informal networks and internal collaboration on the topics; and (iv) diffusion of compassionate ideas beyond the university. Conclusion: The Compassionate University program facilitates a cultural shift within the university environment, fostering greater acceptance of integrating topics such as serious illness, death, and bereavement into existing practices. Additionally, compassionate procedures and policies for students and staff have been formalized, and core team members are increasingly called upon to provide support on these matters. Notably, Compassionate University stands out as one of the pioneering initiatives in Europe, attracting different educational institutions seeking guidance on cultivating a more compassionate environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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17. Temporal contextuality of agentic intersectional positionalities: Nuancing power relations in the ethnography of minority migrant women.
- Author
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Fresnoza-Flot, Asuncion and Cheung, Herbary
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POWER (Social sciences) ,IMMIGRANTS ,QUALITATIVE research ,ETHNOLOGY research ,INTERVIEWING ,FIELDWORK (Educational method) ,ETHNOLOGY ,PSYCHOLOGY of women ,INTERSECTIONALITY ,THAI people ,THEMATIC analysis ,MINORITIES - Abstract
Researchers' reflexivity usually focuses on the spatiality and sociality of their ethnographic fieldwork. As a result, the temporal context of their positionality, whereby their various identities interact with one another at different research phases, is often overlooked. This paper adopts an agentic intersectional approach and draws from our separate studies of Thai migrant women in Belgium and Hong Kong to unpack the temporality of the power dynamics between study participants and us (the researchers). Through this reflexive exercise, we identify three salient aspects: first, different identities of the researchers intersect at each phase of the study; second, researchers are dependent on gatekeepers and study participants, notably during the data-gathering phase; and third, the changing researcher–participant dynamics throughout the research process are embedded in broader relations of power that encompass social institutions and migrant/ethnic networks. Hence, researchers' self-discipline and constant awareness of positionality are of utmost importance for achieving well-situated knowledge (re)production. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Evolution content in school textbooks: data from eight European countries.
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Panayides, Andreas, Sá-Pinto, Xana, Mavrikaki, Evangelia, Aanen, Duur K., Aboim, Sara, Cavadas, Bento, Dvorakova, Radka Marta, Eens, Marcel, Filova, Eliska, Gregorčič, Tanja, Kapsala, Nausica, Nieuwenhuis, Mathijs, Ometto, Lino, Papadopoulou, Penelope, Pinxten, Rianne, Realdon, Giulia, Ribeiro, Nuno, Coelho da Silva, José Luis, Sousa, Bruno, and Torkar, Gregor
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TEXTBOOKS ,SCIENTIFIC literacy ,SCHOOL year ,EDUCATIONAL resources ,CURRICULUM ,DELPHI method - Abstract
Background: Evolution is a unifying theme in biology and its understanding is essential to address sustainability problems. However, many people across the world do not understand evolution. Textbooks are among the most widely used educational resources and the way they depict evolution may greatly impact students' scientific literacy in evolution. In this paper we investigate which evolution concepts are addressed in European science textbooks, from the 1st to the 9th grade. A content analysis using the 'Framework for the Assessment of school Curricula on the presence of Evolutionary concepts", was performed on textbooks from eight European countries: Belgium, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Greece, Italy, Netherlands, Portugal and Slovenia. At least two experienced coders per country independently analysed the texts, images and activities, discussed the results and reached a final consensus. Results: Our results show that textbooks lack or rarely address concepts considered important for evolution understanding, notably the processes driving evolution and their daily life implications, limiting opportunities for education for sustainability. Conclusions: We recommend that science textbooks emphasize evolution and its processes since the first school years. This recommendation is particularly relevant for the analysed textbooks from Cyprus and Belgium, that cover less than 45% of the concepts important to evolution literacy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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19. "If you smile, they smile": Explaining highly educated migrants' feelings of being welcome in the Euregio Meuse‐Rhine.
- Author
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Reinold, Julia, Hooijen, Inge, and Özer, Merve
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PERSONALITY ,IMMIGRANTS ,SMILING ,MIXED methods research - Abstract
Creating a welcoming environment is high on policy makers' agendas to attract highly educated migrants. It is unclear, however, which factors contribute to migrants' feelings of being welcome in the host country. This paper addresses this knowledge gap by exploring the factors influencing highly educated migrants' feelings of being welcome in the host country. We develop a conceptual framework that differentiates between the host country's institutional (e.g., public services for migrants) and societal (e.g., tolerance, friendliness) incorporation capacity and the migrants' personal incorporation capacity (e.g., personality traits). The study follows a mixed methods research design using survey data (n = 391) and serial interviews (wave1: n = 67; wave2: n = 49) with highly educated migrants in the Euregio Meuse‐Rhine, a cross‐border region between the Netherlands, Belgium and Germany. The quantitative and qualitative findings indicate that all three indicators of the incorporation capacity framework contribute to migrants' feelings of being welcome in the host country. The societal incorporation capacity emerges as most important in the analysis. Lastly, interview findings emphasise the importance of language across all incorporation capacity dimensions. The paper contributes to the literature on high‐skilled migration, and particularly on high‐skilled migrants' experiences in the host country. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The transformative potential of AI-enabled personalization across cultures.
- Author
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Mehmood, Khalid, Verleye, Katrien, De Keyser, Arne, and Larivière, Bart
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CRITICAL incident technique ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,WELL-being - Abstract
Purpose: The widespread integration of artificial intelligence (AI)-enabled personalization has sparked a need for a deeper understanding of its transformative potential. To address this, this study aims to investigate the mental models held by consumers from diverse cultures regarding the impact and role of AI-enabled personalization in their lives (i.e. individual well-being) and in society (i.e. societal well-being). Design/methodology/approach: This paper uses the theories-in-use approach, collecting qualitative data via the critical incident technique. This data encompasses 487 narratives from 176 consumers in two culturally distinct countries, Belgium and Pakistan. Additionally, it includes insights from a focus group of six experts in the field. Findings: This research reveals that consumers view AI-enabled personalization as a dual-edged sword: it may both extend and restrict the self and also contribute to an affluent society as well as an ailing society. The particular aspects of the extended/restricted self and the affluent/ailing society that emerge differ across respondents from different cultural contexts. Originality/value: This cross-cultural research contributes to the personalization and well-being literature by providing detailed insight into the transformative potential of AI-enabled personalization while also having important managerial and policy implications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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21. Detecting coordinated and bot-like behavior in Twitter: the Jürgen Conings case.
- Author
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De Clerck, Bart, Fernandez Toledano, Juan Carlos, Van Utterbeeck, Filip, and Rocha, Luis E. C.
- Subjects
SOCIAL media ,NEWS websites ,PUBLIC opinion ,SEMANTIC network analysis ,IMAGE analysis ,VIRTUAL communities - Abstract
Social media platforms can play a pivotal role in shaping public opinion during times of crisis and controversy. The COVID-19 pandemic resulted in a large amount of dubious information being shared online. In Belgium, a crisis emerged during the pandemic when a soldier (Jürgen Conings) went missing with stolen weaponry after threatening politicians and virologists. This case created further division and polarization in online discussions. In this paper, we develop a methodology to study the potential of coordinated spread of incorrect information online. We combine network science and content analysis to infer and study the social network of users discussing the case, the news websites shared by those users, and their narratives. Additionally, we examined indications of bots or coordinated behavior among the users. Our findings reveal the presence of distinct communities within the discourse. Major news outlets, conspiracy theory websites, and anti-vax platforms were identified as the primary sources of (dis)information sharing. We also detected potential coordinated behavior and bot activity, indicating possible attempts to manipulate the discourse. We used the rapid semantic similarity network for the analysis of text, but our approach can be extended to the analysis of images, videos, and other types of content. These results provide insights into the role of social media in shaping public opinion during times of crisis and underscore the need for improved strategies to detect and mitigate disinformation campaigns and online discourse manipulation. Our research can aid intelligence community members in identifying and disrupting networks that spread extremist ideologies and false information, thereby promoting a more informed and resilient society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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22. Silent witnesses: the disputed landscapes of Belgium's black country.
- Author
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Bianchi, Michael
- Subjects
- *
CULTURAL landscapes , *LANDSCAPES , *COAL mining , *INDUSTRIALIZATION , *INDUSTRIAL relations - Abstract
Through historical and anthropological inquiry, this paper addresses the issue of memory antagonisms involving cultural landscapes in the context of a former mining region: the Belgian Black Country. This region, which became increasingly industrialized in the 19th century through the massive development of coal mining and steel industry, subsequently experienced deindustrialization, and now finds itself mobilized in a process of 'post-industrial' mutation. The paper is divided into two parts. In the first part, it examines how the landscapes inherited from industry, and in particular the slag heaps of the coalfield, have over time become repositories of a working-class memory, through the living and working practices of the communities surrounding the mines. It also documents the various representations attached to these landscape objects, whose contradictions echo the oppositions between capital and labor that have marked the development of industrial capitalism. The second part of the paper, which focuses on the present situation, examines how these representations are remobilized in the valorization processes that are initiated by different actors, in the context of a 'post-industrial' urban transition strategy that seeks to produce a unified and pacified historical narrative. We'll be looking at how historical conflicts still permeate the representations of these landscapes, the question of their conservation, and their possible future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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23. The Impact of Partners' Relative Wages on Couples' Gender Division of Paid Work after Parenthood across Origin Groups.
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Maes, Julie and Marynissen, Leen
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COUPLES ,WOMEN'S wages ,PARENTHOOD ,GENDER inequality ,WAGES ,GENDER - Abstract
The transition to parenthood exacerbates gender inequality in couples' division of paid work. While this is widely documented for general populations, in particular, potential underlying mechanisms of this phenomenon remain un(der)explored for couples with different migration backgrounds. Hence, this paper examines how women's pre-birth relative wage potential affects the gender division of paid work after the transition to parenthood in Belgium among native, Southern-European and non-European origin couples. Our results show that, among all couples, the division of paid work is more gender-equal after childbirth when women's wage potential is higher than or similar to that of their male partner. However, there is substantial variation by couples' migration background and relative wage potential in partners' gender division of paid work and the extent to which it changes after parenthood. These findings suggest that both normative and institutional factors moderate the impact of partners' relative resources on couples' division of paid work after parenthood, particularly among non-European origin couples. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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24. Self-Sealing of Boom Clay After Gas Transport.
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Gonzalez-Blanco, Laura, Romero, Enrique, and Levasseur, Séverine
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RADIOACTIVE waste disposal ,GAS injection ,MULTISCALE modeling ,CLAY ,GASES ,PERMEABILITY - Abstract
In the geological disposal of high-level radioactive waste in argillaceous rocks, studying the barrier integrity after gas transport and the pathway closure thanks to self-sealing capacity is a crucial aspect for the safety assessment. This paper presents experimental research in Boom Clay (a potential host rock in Belgium) to evaluate the effectiveness of self-sealing and possible fissure reactivation during a second gas invasion event. Initial water permeability under oedometer conditions was first measured on samples at two bedding orientations, being higher the sample with bedding planes parallel to flow, highlighting marked anisotropy. Then, gas injection tests at a constant volume rate were performed. Results indicated that Boom Clay underwent expansion and degradation during gas injection due to the development of fissures that were quantified using microstructural techniques. The computed effective gas permeability was not significantly dependent on bedding orientation and was slightly larger than the initial intrinsic water permeability. The re-saturation of the samples led to a recovery of the initial water permeability for both orientations, replicating the original anisotropy. The microstructural analyses confirmed the gas pathways' closure, indicating good self-sealing and the regaining of the hydraulic barrier function. However, a small volume of large unconnected pores was detected on undrained unloading before the microstructural study. An additional gas injection after the self-sealing resulted in a higher effective gas permeability and a larger increase in pore volume, suggesting the reopening of fissures generated during the first injection. Finally, the experimental data were compiled within a multi-scale phenomenological model to relate the microstructural information to macroscopic flow transport properties capturing the intrinsic permeability increase on gas invasion and its recovery during self-sealing. Highlights: Gas transport on Boom Clay occurs along fissures, increasing its permeability The re-saturation process induces the recovery of the initial water permeability, demonstrating an excellent self-sealing capacity. A subsequent gas injection after the re-saturation suggests the reopening of previous gas paths. A multi-scale model is proposed to account for the permeability changes derived from a microstructural damage variable. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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25. From Mining to Tourism: Assessing the Destination's Image, as Revealed by Travel-Oriented Social Networks.
- Author
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Nicola, Sanda and Schmitz, Serge
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DESTINATION image (Tourism) ,TOURIST attractions ,SOCIAL networks ,USER-generated content ,TOURISM - Abstract
Mining communities often rely on tourism as a vehicle for post-mining territorial development. Sometimes, these expectations of the locals are justified by the natural setting and/or the well-preserved industrial heritage; however, these potential tourist destinations are disadvantaged primarily by their image, often associated with decay in the perception of travellers. In this paper, we treat travellers as stakeholders, able to decisively influence the image of a destination by uploading content (photos, reviews and ratings) on Google Maps and TripAdvisor, and we emphasise that user-generated content should be considered when shaping the tourism development strategies. Taking as case studies three former mining regions trying to capitalise on their tourist potential—Jiu Valley and Ștei, in Romania and La Louvière, in Belgium—this article proposes a method for assessing the image of the destination, also aiming to identify those aspects that require improvement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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- View/download PDF
26. The BELSAR dataset: Mono- and bistatic full-pol L-band SAR for agriculture and hydrology.
- Author
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Bouchat, Jean, Tronquo, Emma, Orban, Anne, de Macedo, Karlus A. C., Davidson, Malcolm, Verhoest, Niko E. C., and Defourny, Pierre
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SYNTHETIC aperture radar ,HYDROLOGY ,REMOTE sensing ,AGRICULTURE ,WINTER wheat - Abstract
The BELSAR dataset consists of high-resolution multitemporal airborne mono- and bistatic fully-polarimetric synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data in L-band, alongside concurrent measurements of vegetation and soil biogeophysical variables measured in maize and winter wheat fields during the summer of 2018 in Belgium. Its collection was funded by the European Space Agency (ESA) to address the lack of publicly-accessible experimental datasets combining multistatic SAR and in situ measurements. As such, it offers an opportunity to advance the development of SAR remote sensing science and applications for agricultural monitoring and hydrology. This paper aims to facilitate its adoption and exploration by offering comprehensive documentation and integrating its multiple data sources into a unified, analysis-ready dataset. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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27. Ethical perspectives regarding Euthanasia, including in the context of adult psychiatry: a qualitative interview study among healthcare workers in Belgium.
- Author
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Verhofstadt, Monica, Moureau, Loïc, Pardon, Koen, and Liégeois, Axel
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EUTHANASIA laws ,MEDICAL personnel ,EUTHANASIA ,VALUES (Ethics) ,ADULTS ,JUSTICE - Abstract
Introduction: Previous research has explored euthanasia's ethical dimensions, primarily focusing on general practice and, to a lesser extent, psychiatry, mainly from the viewpoints of physicians and nurses. However, a gap exists in understanding the comprehensive value-based perspectives of other professionals involved in both somatic and psychiatric euthanasia. This paper aims to analyze the interplay among legal, medical, and ethical factors to clarify how foundational values shape the ethical discourse surrounding euthanasia in both somatic and psychiatric contexts. It seeks to explore these dynamics among all healthcare professionals and volunteers in Belgium. Methods: Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 30 Dutch-speaking healthcare workers who had encountered patients requesting euthanasia for psychiatric conditions, in Belgium, from August 2019 to August 2020. Qualitative thematic analysis was applied to the interview transcripts. Findings: Participants identified three pivotal values and virtues: religious values, professional values, and fundamental medical values encompassing autonomy, beneficence, and non-maleficence, linked to compassion, quality care, and justice. These values interwove across four tiers: the patient, the patient's inner circle, the medical realm, and society at large. Irrespective of their euthanasia stance, participants generally displayed a blend of ethical values across these tiers. Their euthanasia perspective was primarily shaped by value interpretation, significance allocation to key components, and tier weighting. Explicit mention of varying ethical values, potentially indicating distinct stances in favor of or against euthanasia, was infrequent. Conclusion: The study underscores ethical discourse's central role in navigating euthanasia's intricate landscape. Fostering inclusive dialogue, bridging diverse values, supports informed decision-making, nurturing justice, and empathy. Tailored end-of-life healthcare in psychiatry is essential, acknowledging all involved actors' needs. The study calls for interdisciplinary research to comprehensively grasp euthanasia's multifaceted dimensions, and guiding policy evolution. While contextualized in Belgium, the implications extend to the broader euthanasia discourse, suggesting avenues for further inquiry and cross-cultural exploration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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28. OPTIMAL PARAMETERS OF BLASTING DESTRUCTION IN THE BEN AZOUZ QUARRY BASED ON STUDY OF STRENGTH LIMESTONE ROCK.
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Mahtali, H., Hafsaoui, A., Mezdoud, Z., Bouslama, A., and Idres, A.
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LIMESTONE ,BLASTING ,ROCK mechanics ,QUARRIES & quarrying ,ROCK properties ,ROCK testing - Abstract
Purpose. This paper highlights the importance of taking into account the evaluation of the strength properties of limestone rock in the Ben Azzouz quarry. The purpose is to achieve optimum blasting quality based on the information on petro-physical and mechanical characteristics of the rock. Methodology. Models have been developed to estimate physico-mechanical properties of limestone rock. The models are based on the results of many laboratory tests by petro-physical and mechanical methods. Statistical analysis was performed on simple and multiple regression equations. Findings. Linear regression models have a higher estimated success rate, as expected. The best model for estimating the compressive strength of the rock (UCS, Uniaxial Compression Strength) based on simple regression is the model containing P-Velocity as an independent variable with a coefficient of determination R² of 0.81 and P-value = 0.000000003. Originality. To benefit from the enormous reserves in the quarry of Ben Azouz, knowing that there is no evaluation of the physico-mechanical characteristics of the rock, a set of the tests in the rock mechanics laboratory of polytechnic faculty of Mons in Belgium was carried out and limestone rock strength was estimated. Practical value. to Solid understanding of the physical and mechanical characteristics of the rock mass and the mechanism of blasting the rock is an essential step that must be taken gradually according to the development of mining works with the aim of minimizing the disadvantages in blasting and obtaining an optimal effectiveness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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29. Ethnic Variation in the Link between Women's Relative Employment Positions and Entry into Parenthood in Belgium.
- Author
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Van den Berg, Layla and Neels, Karel
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WOMEN'S employment ,COUPLES therapy ,PARENTHOOD ,PARENTHOOD in literature - Abstract
This study investigates the association between women's relative employment positions and the transition to parenthood, focusing on women of Maghrebi, Turkish, and Southern European origin in Belgium. Whereas gender specialization is associated with higher chances of entering parenthood in the older literature, the economic preconditions to parenthood have shifted and more recent studies indicate that couples where both partners work are more likely to start a family. However, whereas this shift has been extensively studied among majority populations, we lack insight into whether similar patterns can also be found among population subgroups with a migration background. This paper uses Belgian census data from 2011–2015 to explore how women's relative employment positions are linked to the likelihood of entering parenthood and whether this association varies by women's age, generation, and origin of the male partner. The results indicate that couples in which both partners are employed are more likely to enter parenthood regardless of migration background. However, the results for women of Maghrebi or Turkish background suggest that single-earner couples and couples where both partners are unemployed delay entry into parenthood to a similar extent. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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30. 'Like a piece of meat in a pack of wolves': gay/bisexual men and sexual racialization.
- Author
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Boussalem, Alessandro and Di Feliciantonio, Cesare
- Subjects
- *
BISEXUAL men , *RACIALIZATION , *WOLVES , *GAY men , *INTERSECTIONALITY , *SOCIAL services , *LGBTQ+ youth - Abstract
Human geographers have analyzed the co-constitutive relationship between race, gender and sexualities across different spaces and social contexts and have called for intersectional approaches in discussions of identities, power and space. This article applies an intersectional framework to the processes of sexualization, racialization and exoticization that shape the daily lives and erotic/romantic encounters experienced and narrated by participants to two different projects: gay and bisexual men from a North African background living in Belgium; Italian gay men living in England; non-White gay men living in Italy. By discussing qualitative data collected during interviews with these men, and through a continued dialogue about this data between the authors, the paper explores both the effects of these processes on the lives of participants, and the strategies they enact to navigate their social worlds. The focus is on two elements, central to participants' narratives: the specificity of the intersectional experience of encountering men who expect a specifically gendered and racialized performance based on 'roughness' and 'wildness', and the capitalization on these exoticizing and racializing images to increase one's desirability on the dating/hook-up scene and everyday social and work life. By highlighting these elements, this paper shows the importance of applying an intersectional approach to analyses of the entanglements of racialization and sexualization in order to complicate linear accounts of these processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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31. Towards tailored cognitive support in augmented reality assembly work instructions.
- Author
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Vanneste, Pieter, Dekeyser, Kim, Ullauri, Luis Alberto Pinos, Debeer, Dries, Cornillie, Frederik, Depaepe, Fien, Raes, Annelies, Van den Noortgate, Wim, and Said‐Metwaly, Sameh
- Subjects
- *
EFFECT sizes (Statistics) , *DATA analysis , *RESEARCH funding , *HIGH school students , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *COGNITION disorders , *STATISTICS , *SOCIAL support , *COMPUTER assisted instruction , *LEARNING strategies , *AUGMENTED reality - Abstract
Background: Augmented reality (AR) is receiving increasing interest as a tool to create an interactive and motivating learning environment. Yet, it is unclear how instructional support affects performance in AR. Objectives: This study sought to explore how varying the instructional support in AR can affect performance‐related behaviours of students with low cognitive abilities during assembly work. Methods: A total of 90 Belgian secondary school students repeatedly executed four different realistic assembly tasks. Three levels of instructional support (low, medium, and high) in AR as well as a control condition with paper instructions with a high level of detail were systematically varied across tasks and participants. Results and Conclusions: Multilevel regression analyses showed that AR instructions yielded lower assembly times and a lower perceived physical effort than paper instructions. Additionally, participants perceived tasks as less complex when given AR instructions with a high or a medium level of detail than when given a low level of detail. No effects of instructional support were established for other performance‐related behaviours, namely necessary assistance, error‐making, cognitive load, competence frustration, and stress. Effect sizes were small, at least among the instructional support conditions studied, yielding a limited base for adaptivity. Presumably, tailoring the instructional support in AR is only beneficial for highly complex tasks. The results might be useful for the design and implementation of AR in educational settings. Lay Description: What is currently known about the subject matter: Augmented reality is knowing increased use in education.Little is known about how to design effective instructional support in augmented reality. What this paper adds: This study represents an initial insight into how to personalize instructional support.The impact of instructional support on augmented reality performance of students with low cognitive abilities was investigated.The study suggests that varying instructional support may lead to differences in performance outcomes. Implications for practitioners: How instructional support is constructed may affect augmented reality learning.The results may inform the design of effective augmented reality learning environments for students with special needs.How individual, contextual, and task‐specific characteristics moderate the effectiveness of instructional support should be further investigated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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32. Experiences and challenges in the inspection from horticultural and ornamental sprayers (Flanders-Belgium).
- Author
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Declercq, Johan and Nuyttens, David
- Subjects
FIELD crops ,TESTING equipment ,DECORATION & ornament ,PRICES ,NEW business enterprises - Abstract
In Belgium, the mandatory inspection of field crop, orchard and vineyard sprayers was already started up in 1995. Furthermore the inspection of horticultural/ornamental sprayers, soil-disinfection machines and fogging equipment was implemented respectively in 2011, 2014 and 2023 (Figure 1). So Belgium can look back on more than 28 years of experience with the inspection of sprayers (Declercq et al., 2009 and Declercq et al., 2018). At the end of the eighties, the execution of voluntary inspections was started up to gain the necessary experience. It soon became clear that a number of thoughtful choices had to be made at the start of the mandatory inspections. In order to guarantee the impartiality, professionalism and efficiency of the inspections, a centralized organization and implementation by region was chosen. Furthermore, the analytical inspection method (mainly based on pressure and nozzle flowrate measurements) was chosen because of the mobility of the test equipment that could be used. The benefits of the Belgian system are obvious. There are only ten experienced inspectors and two regional contact points for the inspection of all Belgian sprayers, and the inspections are carried out efficiently and at a fair price. The two regional Belgian inspection services are also accredited according to ISO17020, guaranteeing the highest quality standard of the inspections that are carried out. Until now, all horticultural and ornamental sprayers (ISO 16122-4) have been inspected four times (three year cycle). The inspections were started up with a “light” inspection protocol, and the protocol was adapted throughout the different cycles based on the experiences from the inspection services. The “light” start-up protocol allowed owners to gradually adapt their sprayers to the inspection requirements or -if necessary- replace their existing sprayer. This paper presents the actual inspection results from the horticultural and ornamental pesticide application equipment and the evolution of the defects throughout the different inspection cycles. Furthermore some obstacles that were encountered and solved will be discussed. Finally, there is still some PAE that is hard to inspect completely due to its specific usage or construction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
33. How do cancer research scientists deal with machines and consumables? Exploring research ethics from an inductive ethnographic perspective.
- Author
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Mnasri, Salaheddine and Jaber, Fadi
- Subjects
RESEARCH ethics ,RESEARCH integrity ,CANCER research ,COMPROMISE (Ethics) ,RESEARCH protocols ,RESEARCH personnel - Abstract
This paper started from an inductive ethnography conducted within a cancer research lab in Belgium. The primary objective was to explore how researchers make decisions and rationalize their scientific practices. Through data collected from participant observation, interviews, and analysis of research protocols, the study exposes serious knowledge gaps that compromise research ethics. Specifically, the findings reveal the scientists' need for more understanding of the validity of their lab machines and the readymade consumables procured from external providers. Moreover, without questioning this dependency, our participants (scientists) rely heavily on machines and consumables for almost all their research protocols. The findings suggest that cancer researchers place unjustifiable trust in the lab's machines and the external providers' reliability; this compromises the following three fundamental ethical principles: research integrity, responsible conduct, and the responsibility of using resources and technologies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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34. Quality of care in Belgian general practices during the COVID-19 pandemic: results of the cross-sectional PRICOV-19 study.
- Author
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Van Poel, Esther, Vanden Bussche, Pierre, Pétré, Benoît, Ponsar, Cécile, Collins, Claire, De Jonghe, Michel, Donneau, Anne-Françoise, Gillain, Nicolas, Guillaume, Michèle, and Willems, Sara
- Subjects
INFECTION prevention ,CROSS-sectional method ,PUBLIC health infrastructure ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,PEARSON correlation (Statistics) ,MEDICAL quality control ,FAMILY medicine ,PATIENT safety ,RESEARCH funding ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,AT-risk people ,EQUALITY ,EVALUATION of organizational effectiveness ,INDEPENDENT variables ,POPULATION geography ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,PATIENT-centered care ,ODDS ratio ,MULTILINGUALISM ,COMMUNICATION ,TREATMENT delay (Medicine) ,DATA analysis software ,COMPARATIVE studies ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,COVID-19 pandemic ,TIME - Abstract
Background: The COVID-19 pandemic immensely impacted care provision, including quality of care in general practice. This paper aimed: (1) to assess how Belgian general practices acted upon the six dimensions of quality of care during COVID-19; (2) to study differences between the three Belgian regions; and (3) to benchmark the performance of the Belgian practices against the performance in other European countries. Methods: The data collected from 479 Belgian practices during 2020–2021 using an online survey as part of the international cross-sectional PRICOV-19 study were analyzed. Hereby, descriptive statistics, chi-squared tests, and binary logistic regression analyses were performed. Thirty-four survey questions related to the six dimensions of quality of care were selected as outcome variables. The adjusted regression models included four practice characteristics as covariates: practice type, being a teaching practice for GP trainees, multidisciplinarity of the team, and payment system. Results: Belgian practices made important organizational changes to deliver high-quality care during COVID-19. Most practices (n = 259; 56.1%) actively reached out to vulnerable patients. Limitations to the practice building or infrastructure threatened high-quality care in 266 practices (55.5%). Infection prevention measures could not always be implemented during COVID-19, such as using a cleaning protocol (n = 265; 57.2%) and providing a separate doctor bag for infection-related home visits (n = 130; 27.9%). Three hundred and sixty practices (82.0%) reported at least one safety incident related to a delayed care process in patients with an urgent condition. The adjusted regression analysis showed limited significant differences between the Belgian regions regarding the quality of care delivered. Belgian practices demonstrated varied performance compared to other European countries. For example, they excelled in always checking the feasibility of isolation at home but reported more patient safety incidents related to timely care than at least three-quarters of the other European countries. Conclusions: Future studies using different design methods are crucial to investigate which country and practice characteristics are associated with delivering high-quality care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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35. D. G. Rossetti’s Trip to Paris and Belgium: A Journey Between Past and Present.
- Author
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Rigal, Raphaël
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL travel ,ART museums - Abstract
Copyright of Cahiers Victoriens & Edouardiens is the property of Presses Universitaires de la Mediterranee 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
36. Pre-Service Teachers' Perceptions on the Use of Heritage in Secondary Education and Their Reception of Educational Materials from the Heritage and Museum Sector: A Case Study in Flanders (Belgium).
- Author
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Van Doorsselaere, Joris
- Subjects
STUDENT teachers ,SECONDARY education ,LITERATURE reviews ,PROTOCOL analysis (Cognition) ,TEACHER training ,EDUCATIONAL evaluation - Abstract
There has been a growing policy interest in establishing connections between heritage and education. Nevertheless, there seems to be very little evaluation or critical reflection on what actually happens in practice, and it remains unclear how heritage education is employed in countries throughout Europe. The aim of this paper is to assess the current status of heritage education in Flanders (the Dutch-speaking northern part of Belgium) via a literature review and an exploratory case study. The perceptions and opinions of pre-service teachers (n = 17) were investigated using three instruments: a questionnaire, document analysis, and the think aloud method. The results show that the pre-service teachers had a traditional interpretation of heritage, mainly relying on well-known and monumental examples and following a rather historical–artistic conception. However, it was found that their opinions were positive towards the use of heritage as an educational resource, and their evaluations of educational materials from the heritage and museum sector provided detailed information concerning teachers' desires and needs in this regard. The implications of this study should encourage initial teacher training in Flanders to further consider the epistemological and methodological challenges in the emerging field of heritage education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
37. Assessing the Flexibility Potential of Industrial Heat–Electricity Sector Coupling through High-Temperature Heat Pumps: The Case Study of Belgium.
- Author
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Magni, Chiara, Peeters, Robbe, Quoilin, Sylvain, and Arteconi, Alessia
- Subjects
HEAT pumps ,HEAT storage devices ,INDUSTRIAL capacity ,INDUSTRIAL energy consumption ,RENEWABLE energy sources ,ENERGY demand management - Abstract
Thermal processes represent a significant fraction of industrial energy consumptions, and they rely mainly on fossil fuels. Thanks to technological innovation, highly efficient devices such as high-temperature heat pumps are becoming a promising solution for the electrification of industrial heat. These technologies allow for recovering waste heat sources and upgrading them at temperatures up to 200 °C. Moreover, the coupling of these devices with thermal storage units can unlock the flexibility potential deriving from the industrial sector electrification by means of Demand-Side Management strategies. The aim of this paper is to quantify the impact on the energy system due to the integration of industrial high-temperature heat pumps and thermal storage units by means of a detailed demand–supply model. To do that, the industrial heat demand is investigated through a set of thermal process archetypes. High-temperature heat pumps and thermal storage units for industrial use are included in the open-source unit commitment and optimal dispatch model Dispa-SET used for the representation of the energy system. The case study analyzed is Belgium, and the analysis is performed for different renewable penetration scenarios in 2040 and 2050. The results demonstrate the importance of a proper sizing of the heat pump and thermal storage capacity. Furthermore, it is obtained that the electrification of the thermal demand of industrial processes improves the environmental impact (84% reduction in CO
2 emissions), but the positive effect of the energy flexibility provided by the heat pumps is appreciated only in the presence of a very high penetration of renewable energy sources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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38. The role of City Climate Networks in Promoting Citizen Participation in Municipalities: A Critical Multi-Case Analysis.
- Author
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Zapata Arango, Mateo, Hoppe, Thomas, Itten, Anatol, and Blok, Kornelis
- Subjects
POLITICAL participation ,CITIES & towns ,CRITICAL analysis ,GOVERNMENT policy on climate change ,GOAL (Psychology) - Abstract
Background: At the COP21, cities were recognised as key actors in combatting climate change. In supporting cities, climate city networks such as transnational climate networks (TCNs) and national climate networks (NCNs) have emerged to enable cities in building capacities and formulating climate policy whilst also encouraging citizen engagement and participation in public decision-making. This paper addresses the question whether and how TCN or NCN membership enables municipalities to implement citizen participation in public decision-making. Six propositions are presented addressing: presumed influence of TCN membership on citizen participation, organization of citizen participation, initiator capacity, goal setting, involvement of stakeholders, participatory methods used, and planning processes. A multi-case study research design is used to verify these propositions, comprising of four medium-sized cities in the Netherlands and three in Belgium. Results: Results of the analysis of four cities in The Netherlands show that municipalities having membership to climate city networks only to a low extent empower citizen participation via local climate agendas. Citizen participation emerges rather bottom-up via local initiatives or capacity building via EU framework programs—outside TCNs or NCNs—that better suit financial needs and provide more immediate benefits to municipalities. None of the six propositions were confirmed. A more positive image resulted from the Belgian cases that moderately confirmed four out of six propositions (i.e., organizing citizen participation, goal setting, selection of methods, and planning), and featured indirect empowerment via externally funded implementation projects following firm integration of participation in local climate policy through TCN influence. Conclusions: In terms of citizen participation selected municipalities in the Netherlands having TCN and/or NCN membership only to a small extent differ from those not having membership. This is partly due to poor implementation of TCNs and NCNs—with Covenant of Mayors and 'Klimaatverbond' lacking support structure and capacity—having lost importance during the past years. However, there is reason to believe that context makes a difference as revealed by the cases from Belgium, which revealed more positive results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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- View/download PDF
39. Development of a Qualitative Data Analysis Codebook for Arterial Hypertension and Type-2-Diabetes Integrated Care Evaluation.
- Author
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ZAVRNIK, ČRT, STOJNIĆ, NATAŠA, LUKANČIČ, MAJDA MORI, MARTENS, MONIKA, DANHIEUX, KATRIEN, CHHAM, SAVINA, MIHEVC, MATIC, POTOČNIK, TINA VIRTIČ, KETIŠ, ZALIKA KLEMENC, VAN OLMEN, JOSEFIEN, and SUSIČ, ANTONIJA POPLAS
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DOCUMENTATION ,QUALITATIVE research ,HYPERTENSION ,EVALUATION of medical care ,THEMATIC analysis ,TYPE 2 diabetes ,MEDICAL coding ,RESEARCH methodology ,INTEGRATED health care delivery - Abstract
Introduction: Non-communicable diseases, such as arterial hypertension (HTN) and type-2 diabetes (T2D), pose a global public health problem. Integrated care with focus on person-centred principles aims to enhance healthcare quality and access. Previous qualitative research has identified facilitators and barriers for scaling-up integrated care, however the lack of standardized terms and measures hinder cross-country comparisons. This paper addresses these gaps by presenting a generic codebook for qualitative research on integrated care implementation for HTN and T2D. Description: The codebook serves as a tool for deductive or deductive-inductive qualitative analysis, organizing concepts and themes from qualitative data. It consists of nine first level and 39 second level themes. First level codes cover core issues; and second level codes provide detailed insights into facilitators and barriers. Discussion: This codebook is more widely applicable than previously developed tools because it includes a broader scope of stakeholders across micro, meso, and macro levels, and the themes being derived from highly diverse health systems across highand low-income countries. Conclusion: The codebook is a useful tool for implementation research on integrated care for HTN and T2D at global scale. It facilitates cross-country learning, contributing to improved implementation, scale-up and outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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40. Managing business model innovation in a changing environment: the case of SMEs in the pharmaceutical sector.
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Chabanet, Didier, Do Vale, Guillaume, and Weppe, Xavier
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PHARMACEUTICAL industry ,INNOVATIONS in business ,BUSINESS models ,SMALL business ,PHARMACISTS - Abstract
Copyright of Management international / International Management / Gestiòn Internacional is the property of Management International 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.)
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- 2024
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41. It's not only about the leader: Oligarchized personalization and preference voting in Belgium.
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Dodeigne, Jeremy and Pilet, Jean-Benoit
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VOTING research ,PREFERENTIAL ballot ,INTRA-party disagreements (Political parties) ,POLITICAL party leadership ,LOCAL elections - Abstract
Research on the electoral personalization of politics has stressed a trend towards a greater role of top prominent political figures (party leaders and ministers). This trend was described as centralized electoral personalization. Yet, this trend is merely one side of a more complex story. No leader attracts all voters' support, and other candidates manage to stand out despite lower resources and visibility. Using a unique dataset of 47,239 actual ballot papers cast for the 2018 Belgian local elections, we show that candidate-level, list-level and district-level factors result in distinct preference voting behaviour. While these factors lead to unmistakable forms of (de-)centralized personalized forms of elections, we furthermore, show that intermediary situations distinctively emerge. A significant number of 'subtop' candidates stand out among candidates, by attracting support from voters who do not support the mere leader of the list. This 'oligarchized personalization' would deserve greater attention in the literature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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42. The educational gradient in formal childcare use – the role of employment opportunities and (in)formal childcare availability.
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Biegel, Naomi and Maes, Julie
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LOGISTIC regression analysis , *JOB vacancies , *EDUCATIONAL background , *EQUALITY , *CHILD care , *GRANDPARENTS - Abstract
This paper investigates three potential mechanisms of educational differentials in formal childcare uptake in Belgium, a country characterised by high availability, but also pronounced gradients in childcare uptake. We investigate whether and to what extent educational differentials can be accounted for by (i) differences in employment opportunities of mothers with different educational backgrounds, (ii) variation in local childcare availability which may entail different access, or (iii) differential availability of grandparents as an alternative source of affordable and flexible care. We use data from the 2011 Belgian census, which provides us with information on the socio-demographic characteristics of the entire population legally residing in Belgium. The census was linked to tax register data which gives insight into the uptake of formal childcare as childcare expenses are tax-deductible, as well as municipality-level data on childcare availability. Using logistic regression analysis, we investigate the uptake of formal childcare among two-parent families with one child younger than 2.5 years old. Results indicate that educational gradients are mainly due to differences in employment opportunities rather than differential availability of formal childcare at the local level or informal childcare availability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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43. The gendered nature of ethnic minority candidate nomination: An analysis of the moderating role of district diversity, party affiliation and ethnic minorities' visibility.
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Van Trappen, Sigrid, Devroe, Robin, and Wauters, Bram
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MINORITIES ,INTERSECTIONALITY ,FEMINIST theory ,LOCAL elections - Abstract
This paper investigates when party selectors prefer ethnic minority female over male candidates on their lists. We argue that the two competing strategies parties can follow (gaining the ethnic vote ('ethnic community' argument) versus not scaring ethnic majority voters ('deterrence' argument)) are dependent upon party ideology, district diversity and ethnic minorities' visibility. Focusing on the 2018 local elections in Flanders (Belgium), we find that female Turkish/Maghrebi (i.e., visible ethnic minority) candidates outnumber their male counterparts in less diverse districts and rightist parties, whereas an opposite picture emerges in more diverse districts and leftist parties. Surprisingly, however, female candidates with less visible minority backgrounds outnumber their male counterparts in all contexts. These results imply a confirmation of the 'ethnic community argument', while casting doubts on the 'deterrence' argument. Taken together, our findings clearly highlight the conditionality of the selection of ethnic minority male versus female candidates in Proportional Representation list-systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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44. The Trap of Flexibility in 'family-friendly' Professions: Assessing Teachers' Quality of Family Time Through Temporal Indicators.
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Laurijssen, Ilse, Verbeylen, Julie, Mullens, Francisca, and Lemblé, Hélène
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WORK , *PSYCHOLOGY of teachers , *PROFESSIONAL practice , *AUTONOMY (Psychology) , *WORK-life balance , *FAMILIES , *FAMILY relations , *JOB satisfaction , *QUALITY of life , *TIME , *INDUSTRIAL hygiene - Abstract
Using time use diary data collected among 2603 teachers from the Flemish community of Belgium, this article investigates the 'family friendliness' of the teaching profession by exploring the family time of teachers in couple households with children. Teachers are an interesting case as the teaching profession is heavily feminised and considered to be a 'family friendly' occupation; it allows to synchronize the workers' schedule with their children's. Flexible work arrangements such as schedule or work-place flexibility function as so called 'boundary-spanning strategies'. However, research on the impact of flexible work on work-life balance has shown mixed results. This paper develops a number of time-use based indicators to measure the quality of family time and validates these by relating them to work-life balance. Subsequently, it is assessed how teachers' use of work time flexibility affects the quality of family time to evaluate whether this flexibility can be understood as a resource for increasing work-family balance. Results show that teachers with children have a better quality of family time and subsequently a better work-life balance if they work on standard hours rather than using their schedule flexibility to optimize the amount of family time. Highlights: Postponing work from afternoons to evenings and weekends proves to be detrimental for the quality of family time. The quality of family time is more important for self-reported work-life balance than the total amount of family time. Uncontaminated family leisure time is positively associated with the perceived work-life balance. Contaminated non-free time with family and fragmented shared time is negatively associated with the perceived work-life balance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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45. Slow adapters or active players? Belgian regional parliamentarians and European affairs after Lisbon.
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Randour, François, Bursens, Peter, and Laloux, Thomas
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EUROPEAN integration , *LEGISLATORS , *INTERNATIONAL relations , *POLICY sciences , *LEGISLATIVE bodies , *PERSONALLY identifiable information , *REGIONAL differences - Abstract
How do members of regional parliaments engage in EU policymaking? This paper examines how and why members of the Walloon, Flemish and Brussels regional parliaments vary in their EU-contacting activities, by adapting a German survey. Belgium makes a relevant case, as the 'in foro interno, in foro externo' principle entitles regions to conduct foreign policy, including EU affairs in those areas they possess internal competency. Our data show that the level of EU-contacting activities of Belgian regional parliamentarians is overall low, mainly directed towards informational activities and taking place in the direct environment of the parliamentarians. The variation in EU-related activities is best explained by individual-level factors such as the perceived salience of Europe for their own careers, their perceived influence on EU policymaking and their position towards European integration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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46. Egg freezing, genetic relatedness, and motherhood: A binational empirical bioethical investigation of women's views.
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Pérez‐Hernández, Yolinliztli and De Proost, Michiel
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FAMILIES & psychology , *ADOPTION & psychology , *OVUM , *ATTITUDES toward pregnancy , *FAMILY planning , *PREGNANCY , *ATTITUDES toward adoption , *CRYOPRESERVATION of organs, tissues, etc. , *QUALITATIVE research , *INTERVIEWING , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *EMPIRICAL research , *BIOETHICS , *BIRTHPARENTS , *ETHICS , *MARITAL status , *MOTHERHOOD , *GENETICS , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors - Abstract
Genetic relatedness figures heavily in contemporary ethical debates on egg freezing, although the arguments lack empirical‐based evidence. Rather than adding another theoretical view on the moral relevance of genetic connections, this paper instead proposes an empirically grounded perspective based on two independent qualitative interview‐based studies conducted in Belgium and France. Three themes emerge from our empirical data: (1) prioritizing family building; (2) centering the gestational experience of motherhood; and (3) identifying the complexities and limitations of adoption. These themes suggest that the relationship between egg freezing, genetics, biological motherhood, and adoption is highly complex and less straightforward than what is often assumed in the egg freezing debate. Our study provides more detailed insights into women's ambivalent experiences regarding those reproductive options. We discuss the ethical implications of our empirical findings and hold that pursuing genetic desire is not necessarily the main moral reason why women freeze their eggs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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47. Addiction Medicine and Psychology in the French-Speaking Community of Belgium: A Balancing Act between Progress and Challenges.
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Maurage, Pierre, Campanella, Salvatore, Quertemont, Etienne, Desseilles, Martin, Khazaal, Yasser, and de Timary, Philippe
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BEHAVIORAL medicine , *ADDICTIONS , *MENTAL health services , *COMMUNITY psychology , *MEDICAL care , *ALCOHOLISM , *PSYCHIATRIC clinics , *PSYCHIATRIC hospitals - Abstract
A recent paper published in the European Addiction Research journal highlighted the discrepancies in addiction medicine and psychology training across European countries. The paper specifically mentioned Belgium as having no specific training and only four academics working on addictive disorders. However, further investigation revealed that the situation in the French-speaking part of Belgium is less dire than described in the paper. Three universities in this region have research groups focusing on addiction research, and courses related to addiction are routinely provided to students. Additionally, there are inter-university diplomas available for medical professionals and a dense network of care for addictive disorders in the French-speaking part of Belgium. Despite these strengths, challenges remain in terms of the education of caretakers specialized in addiction and the quality of treatment offered. Proposed solutions include improving continuous training, reducing the treatment gap, and strengthening preventive laws and policies. Collaboration between French- and Dutch-speaking clinicians and researchers is also crucial for improving addiction treatment in Belgium. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2024
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48. Integration, Negotiation, Interrogation: Gendered-Racialised Barriers to the Socialisation of Doctoral Students in Belgian Higher Education
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Dounia Bourabain
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In this paper, I discuss the gendered-racialised interactional and contextual dynamics hindering the socialisation of ethnic minoritised women (EMW) within Belgian higher education. Based on in-depth interviews, I develop the concept of 'socialisation climates' to explain the key aspects that determine EMW's socialisation process. Three socialisation climates are identified: integration, negotiation and interrogation. Findings show that insiders play a crucial role in hindering or facilitating EMW's socialisation. Developmental relationships are gendered-racialised relations in which EMW's identity impacts supervisor and peer support. The departmental context in terms of hierarchy, an Equality, Diversity, and Inclusion culture, and team composition is relevant to their socialisation process. EMW are able to socialise rapidly only in a context that is (radically) inclusive which is still rare in academia. This paper informs higher education institutions to be aware of the gendered-racialised climate and interactions that influence EMW's socialisation and increase the risk of pushing them out.
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- 2024
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49. The perceived problem‐solving potential of deliberative minipublics: Evidence from a survey of Belgian citizens.
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VAN DIJK, LISA, WERNER, HANNAH, and MARIEN, SOFIE
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CITIZENS , *PROBLEM solving , *DISCONTENT - Abstract
Concerns about widespread democratic dissatisfaction have prompted a search for remedies, such as increasing citizens' role in politics. While the public seems supportive, it remains unclear whether such newly introduced procedures can effectively tackle citizens' dissatisfaction with present‐day politics. This paper develops a problem‐solving approach to studying this question. It proposes that combining insights on what 'pushes' and 'pulls' people to support procedural reform is crucial: Only then can we uncover if and how people consider procedural reform as addressing the problem(s) they see in the representative system today. Using the example of deliberative minipublics and original, pre‐registered survey data from Belgium (n = 1,579), we find that respondents generally think of minipublics as problem‐solvers rather than problem‐creators, albeit to different degrees. For instance, this perceived problem‐solving potential is more pronounced among discontent citizens. This study sheds new light on the importance of studying citizens' reasoning about the roots and remedies for political dissatisfaction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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50. Study design: The social wellbeing of newly-arrived adolescent migrants in reception education in Flanders (socNAMs).
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Devos, Sarah, Deforche, Benedicte, Derluyn, Ilse, Bracke, Piet, and Delaruelle, Katrijn
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SOCIAL capital , *CROSS-sectional method , *SCHOOL environment , *EDUCATION , *RESEARCH funding , *NOMADS , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *QUANTITATIVE research , *STUDENTS , *EXPERIENCE , *SURVEYS , *MIGRANT labor , *COLLEGE teacher attitudes , *STUDENT attitudes , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) , *WELL-being , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *SELF-perception , *ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
Aims: socNAMs provides a comprehensive and comparative dataset for researchers to identify how students' recent migration and their school setting relates to their social wellbeing, particularly regarding their feelings of loneliness. Results: This study design article delineates a quantitative cross-sectional research study (socNAMs) which successfully developed three questionnaires that were administered with unique and hard to reach populations, newly-arrived adolescent migrants (NAMs) and school staff offering reception education in Flanders, Belgium. Methods: At the individual level, socNAMs collected information on: (1) socio-demographic variables of NAMs; (2) migration and family context; (3) social relationships; (4) school experiences; (5) self-perceived wellbeing (physical and social); and (6) experiences with discrimination. The questionnaire developed for NAMs is available in 16 languages. To gain a further understanding of the impact of the school environment on NAMs, socNAMs collected contextual information primarily concerning school social capital by including data collected from teachers and reception-class coordinators. The final sample included 1379 NAMs, 50 teachers and 26 reception-class coordinators, from 35 schools offering reception education. Conclusions: In this article, we present the rationale for this study, the methodology of sampling and recruitment, the development and content of the questionnaires, some preliminary descriptive results and the strengths and limitations of the study. Future empirical studies will address the research aims outlined in this protocol paper. In addition, we highlight the opportunities that the dataset provides for advancing research regarding the social wellbeing of NAMs in varying school and national contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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