4,327 results on '"public welfare"'
Search Results
2. The politics of beneficiary selection: A case study of Ghana's Livelihood Empowerment Against Poverty (LEAP) cash transfer programme.
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Akyeampong, Betty
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SOCIAL security , *SELF-efficacy , *HUMAN services programs , *QUALITATIVE research , *SOCIAL justice , *RESIDENTIAL patterns , *COST benefit analysis , *COMMUNITIES , *CULTURAL values , *GOVERNMENT aid , *PRACTICAL politics , *EMPLOYEE selection , *PUBLIC welfare , *POVERTY , *POLITICAL participation - Abstract
In communities of Sub-Saharan Africa, where local elites participate in the selection of households for cash transfers, there is a tendency to deviate from laid down rules for various reasons. Using qualitative data from selected districts where Ghana's Livelihood Empowerment Against Poverty (LEAP) programme is implemented, this study investigates the reasons why district and community elites deviate from prescribed selection processes of the LEAP programme. Drawing on the concept of competitive clientelism, the findings suggest that elites are deeply guided by political patronage to fulfil one primary goal, protecting their role in office. Such ambition is facilitated by the discretionary power accorded to elites by the local government system and socio-cultural values deeply rooted in Ghanaian society. In conclusion, the study draws out key lessons from the analysis and suggests a design of beneficiary selection frameworks that acknowledges the nature of domestic politics, institutions of power and powerful actors at the subnational level. The article also highlights the implications of the findings for the broad politics of social protection literature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. Unraveling the Roots of Fiscal Crises in Contemporary Capitalist Nations and Strategies for Overcoming Them.
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Li, Bin
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COVID-19 pandemic , *SOCIAL services , *PUBLIC welfare , *PUBLIC spending , *FINANCIAL crises - Abstract
Since the 1980s, fiscal crises have notably impacted capitalist nations, a situation that intensified during the COVID-19 pandemic. Although theories of capital accumulation and economic crises often serve to explain these events, this study advocates for a broader perspective by viewing fiscal crises as a primary manifestation of the contradiction between socialized production and capitalist private ownership. This study examines the evolution of this contradiction through various stages of capitalism and highlights the potential pitfalls of common strategies adopted by capitalist nations, such as neoliberal policies that cut social welfare and public spending. The study then shifts its focus to China, exploring its unique dual fiscal system, which supports China's rapid economic growth, offering a novel perspective on addressing the global fiscal crisis. JEL Classification : P16, F63, E62 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Machinic, inadequate, entrepreneurial: Uncovering the citizen subject of the human-centric welfare state.
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Räisänen, Santeri
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PUBLIC welfare , *WELFARE state , *CULTURAL production , *CIVIL society , *CULTURAL studies - Abstract
This article argues that in the turn towards the human-centric in Finnish welfare reform, the human is a flexible signifier which arises out of technical metaphor to stand for certain neoliberal fantasies regarding welfare citizenship, market society and the state. I situate my analysis in the preceding literature on the cultural production of the citizen in market-oriented welfare reform. Through a close reading of user representations in a governmental AI Programme seeking transform the welfare state towards human centricity, I identify three dominant articulations of the human : the machinic, the inadequate and the entrepreneurial. These articulations disambiguate the human-in-the-centre as a chimaeral fantasy representing a late-neoliberal policy regime and evince the role of the imagination of engineers in government technopolitics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Pharmacy Prescription Assistance Program: Evaluation of a Health System Retail Model for Outpatients.
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Rockett, Hope, Wilkinson, Samaneh Tavalali, and Daniel, Sarah
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HEALTH services accessibility , *MEDICAL prescriptions , *COST effectiveness , *ESSENTIAL drugs , *ACADEMIC medical centers , *HUMAN services programs , *INSURANCE , *EVALUATION of human services programs , *OUTPATIENT medical care , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *EVALUATION of medical care , *RESEARCH , *GOVERNMENT programs , *PUBLIC welfare , *DRUGSTORES , *MEDICAL care costs , *HOSPITAL pharmacies - Abstract
Background: Access to essential medications remains a challenge, especially among socioeconomically disadvantaged populations. In 2021, 18 million U.S. adults struggled to afford prescribed medications, a problem exacerbated by the prevalence of chronic conditions like diabetes, hypertension, and mental health disorders. The 340B Drug Pricing Program has enabled eligible healthcare organizations to purchase drugs at reduced prices, thus enhancing medication accessibility for financially constrained patients. This study explores the impact of the Retail Pharmacy Prescription Assistance Program within a 340B-eligible health system in addressing this issue. Objective: To evaluate the effectiveness of a Retail Pharmacy Prescription Assistance Program in increasing access to essential medications and reducing financial burden for eligible outpatients within a 340B-eligible health system. Methods: This exploratory study was conducted at a 340B-eligible academic medical center and focused on the implementation of the Retail Pharmacy Prescription Assistance Program (RPPA Program). Eligible patients, already enrolled in the health system's financial assistance program, were identified, and assessed for additional eligibility for the RPPA Program, ensuring prescriptions were written by internal providers and that patients did not have access to other financial assistance resources. Data collected included patient demographics, medication history, dispensed prescriptions, out-of-pocket patient savings, and pharmacist interventions. Results: During the study, 156 patients were enrolled. About half (51%; n = 79) did not utilize its services due to reasons such as the absence of active prescriptions, prescriptions from external providers, or existing coverage by the patients' insurance. Of the 563 prescriptions clinically evaluated, 72% (n = 407) were dispensed free of charge to 77 patients, resulting in $13,945 in out-of-pocket patient savings. Of the total prescriptions assessed, 28% (n = 156) were not included on the RPPA Program formulary and were not changed to a RPPA formulary alternative for various reasons, such as a formulary alternative was not available, or the patient opted not to switch to formulary alternatives. Conclusions: The RPPA Program proved effective in reducing financial barriers to accessing essential outpatient medications. While it yielded positive outcomes, the program's benefit was constrained to a limited patient demographic, underscoring the imperative to expand identification and engagement strategies to include a broader patient population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. The Politics of Social Welfare: The BJP and the Discerning Voter.
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Kailash, K. K.
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PUBLIC welfare ,ELECTIONS ,VOTERS ,VOTING ,SOCIAL services - Abstract
Voting studies tell us that voters reward incumbents who take care of the economic self-interest of voters. However, is the relationship between services and votes simple and straightforward? Are there conditions when welfare provisioning does not convert into votes for the incumbent? Data from the National Election Studies 2024 appears to suggest that voters are discerning and concerned about access issues when it comes to welfare delivery. Voters do not cast their votes only on whether they received private (welfare) benefits but also consider factors such as their experience and well-being while accessing those goods and services. Examining the relationship between welfare services and voting, the article demonstrates that individual-level processes are politically significant enough to influence vote choices between the benefits and the votes. These findings could inform scholarly studies and policy debates on social service delivery and vote choice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. How Consumers Choose the Green Electricity Product Instead of Conventional Electricity? A Welfare Analysis Approach.
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Hadhri, Walid and Abderrazak, Chema
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ELECTRIC rates ,MONOPOLIES ,ELECTRIC power consumption ,ELECTRIC utilities ,PUBLIC welfare - Abstract
The aim of this article is to analyze theoretically whether changes in an access charge pricing policy can promote green electricity use. The model considers two hypothetical firms: One firm offers green electricity product, and the other firm provides conventional electricity. Each firm pays an access charge to the natural monopoly in order to have access to the transportation network. Through using a vertical differentiation model, we try to analyze the link between the access charges paid by the two firms and the qualities offered. We also attempt to explain why the consumers do not often choose green electricity. Finally, we suggest a new policy that can lead the consumers to choose the green electricity product instead of conventional electricity. Our model shows that changes in the access charge pricing policies can constitute a relevant component in the reforms of the electricity sector and can have impacts on the consumption of the green electricity. A differentiating access charge policy could allow a better penetration of the green electricity product and an increase in the social welfare when consumers have greater preferences in environmental qualities. Otherwise, their preservation at a uniform level is desirable in order to maintain the competition. JEL Classifications : B21, C72, L13, Q21, P28 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. Tackling Poverty Through Feminisation of Welfare Schemes.
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Nanda, Aradhana
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POVERTY ,POOR women ,PUBLIC welfare - Published
- 2024
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9. Australian perspectives on environmental practice: A national survey with human service professionals.
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Boetto, Heather, Bowles, Wendy, Ramsay, Sylvia, Shephard, Monique, and Cordoba, Pushkar Sebastian
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POLLUTION prevention , *ENVIRONMENTAL health , *SOCIAL workers , *CONSERVATION of natural resources , *PROFESSIONAL practice , *RESEARCH funding , *OCCUPATIONAL roles , *SOCIAL services , *CLIMATE change , *SOCIAL worker attitudes , *SUSTAINABILITY , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *ECOSYSTEMS , *SOCIAL responsibility , *SOCIAL work research , *SOCIAL case work , *SURVEYS , *THEMATIC analysis , *RESEARCH methodology , *PUBLIC welfare , *DATA analysis software , *SOCIAL support , *PRACTICAL politics , *WELL-being , *INDIGENOUS Australians - Abstract
Summary: This article reports on research exploring the perspectives of Australian social work and human service professionals about environmental practice. An online survey consisting of quantitative and qualitative questions was conducted, recruiting 303 participants from the human services sector. Quantitative data were analyzed descriptively using SPSS and qualitative data analyzed thematically using NVivo. Findings: Overall, results indicated that participants strongly supported an environmental focus in human services at personal and professional levels of practice. However, while participants expressed values supporting environmental practice, its implementation was less frequently reported. The adverse impacts of climate change were reported as strongly impacting the well-being of service users, and a general lack of support from employing organizations to facilitate environmental practice was evident. Despite a strong belief in the value of Australian First Nations knowledges, limited engagement with Australian First Nations peoples was practiced. Applications: Implications suggest the need to examine the practical realities of environmental practice including the disconnect between values and action. Given that participants reported adverse impacts of climate change on people and communities, but faced significant challenges implementing environmental action, the need to disrupt barriers caused by the dominant neoliberal discourse is critical. Likewise, disrupting the prevailing colonialist discourse by working alongside First Nations peoples to decolonize society and the profession is essential for enacting principles of environmental sustainability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. In this issue... exploring identities, methodologies, and lived experiences in social work practice.
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Chen, Yun and Piedra, Lissette M
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SERIAL publications , *PROFESSIONALISM , *IMMIGRANTS , *PROFESSIONAL practice , *SOCIAL workers , *MENTAL health services , *SOCIAL services , *LGBTQ+ people , *PSYCHOLOGY & religion , *SOCIAL work research , *RESEARCH methodology , *CLEFT lip , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *PUBLIC welfare , *HEALTH of indigenous peoples , *CLEFT palate , *PEOPLE with disabilities , *COVID-19 pandemic , *CULTURAL pluralism - Abstract
The article focuses on the final issue of 2024, which compiles nine insightful articles that delve into critical themes in social work practice and policy. Topics include the identity construction of social workers, client perceptions of care, reflexive analyses of participatory research methodologies, and the lived experiences of diverse individuals, emphasizing the significance of context and critical reflection in ethical social work.
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- 2024
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11. Women's High-Conflict Divorce Experiences and Access to Statutory Social Services in Turkey.
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Kelebek-Küçükarslan, Görkem and Atasü-Topcuoğlu, Reyhan
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DIVORCE & psychology , *DIVORCE law , *HEALTH services accessibility , *FEMINISM , *QUALITATIVE research , *ENDOWMENTS , *SOCIAL services , *CULTURE , *INTERVIEWING , *PSYCHOLOGY of women , *JUDGMENT sampling , *SOCIAL norms , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *THEMATIC analysis , *GENDER inequality , *RESEARCH methodology , *FAMILY structure , *PUBLIC welfare , *HEALTH equity , *SOCIAL support , *DATA analysis software , *WOMEN'S rights - Abstract
High-conflict divorce proceedings in Turkey typically span 2 years but can extend to 6, reinforcing the perception that institutional violence against women has been widespread under the conservative Justice and Development Party's 20-year rule. This study poses two primary research questions: (1) What are the legal, sociocultural, financial, and psychological experiences of high-conflict divorced women? (2) Which statutory social services could women access during and after the high-conflict divorce process? Employing a feminist qualitative research approach, this study draws on 20 semi-structured interviews with women in Istanbul who have undergone high-conflict divorces. The goal is to understand these women's experiences and pinpoint the disparities between their needs and the support available from statutory social services. The findings illuminate the challenges women face while dealing with patriarchal norms within societal, cultural, and financial realms amid the divorce process. Additionally, the study reveals the inadequacies of current family-oriented services and emphasizes the urgent need for women's rights-based support, including psychosocial, legal, and financial assistance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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12. Poverty, Neglect, and Child Protection Reform: An Invited Editorial.
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Hughes, Ronald C. and Rycus, Judith S.
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CHILD abuse laws , *PREVENTION of child abuse , *CHILD sexual abuse risk factors , *CHILD welfare , *RISK assessment , *GOVERNMENT policy , *CHILD health services , *PARENTING , *FOSTER home care , *FAMILIES , *CHILD care , *FAMILY assessment , *PUBLIC welfare , *POVERTY , *PSYCHOLOGICAL vulnerability - Abstract
The article discusses the evolution of Child Protective Services (CPS) from a system focused on investigating serious abuse to one that provides social services to impoverished families. Topics include the impact of the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996 on family support, various CPS reform initiatives aimed at assisting vulnerable families and the relation between Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) policies and increased cases of child neglect.
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- 2024
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13. Movements' Dynamics and Government Responsiveness to Violence Against Women: A Study Set Against Political and Social Change in Spain and Italy.
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Corradi, Consuelo and Donato, Stellamarina
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GOVERNMENT policy ,QUALITATIVE research ,FEMINISM ,SEX crimes ,SOCIAL change ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,PUBLIC administration ,PRACTICAL politics ,COMPARATIVE studies ,PUBLIC welfare ,GENDER-based violence ,WOMEN'S rights ,SOCIAL participation ,GOVERNMENT regulation - Abstract
Actions to counter violence against women are a fully fledged policy field with significant differences across countries. Through a comparative analysis of Spain and Italy, this article maps the interplay between women's movements and national governments in launching violence against women (VAW) policies. In Spain, policy formation was the outcome of dual feminist–socialist activism, leading to dialogue between movements and the government. In Italy, movements opposed the government from the outside. In both countries, the critical factor inciting responsiveness on VAW was not one single variable but a combination of political opportunity, movement identity, dedicated women's policy agencies, and the soft power of international institutions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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14. Part Discount Grocer, Part Social Connection: Defining Elements of Social Supermarkets.
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Pettman, Tahna Lee, Pontifex, Katherine, Williams, Carmel P., Wildgoose, Deborah, Dent, Carolyn, Fairbrother, Gavin, Chapman, James, Spreckley, Rory, Goodwin-Smith, Ian, and Bogomolova, Svetlana
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FOOD relief , *NONPROFIT sector , *PUBLIC welfare , *SOCIAL enterprises , *DISASTER relief - Abstract
The community sector performs an important function in providing emergency food relief, yet food insecurity is often a chronic issue due to poverty and social exclusion. Progressive food provision models present opportunities to improve voluntary food relief services that are dominant in many countries. Informed by research with clients indicating a preference for blended service models that go beyond food provision, two government agencies partnered with a social enterprise and academics to pilot a social supermarket model. This research article (a) briefly summarizes international evidence on social supermarkets' characteristics and offerings, (b) describes a process used to collaboratively develop a social supermarket incorporating universal access and social supports, and (c) presents a rubric defining elements of a social supermarket. Applicable to other community sector settings, the rubric emphasizes dignified access and service, plus opportunities for social support and connection, which are important elements in pathways out of food insecurity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. Austerity Measures and the Resilience of Zimbabwe's Healthcare System: Challenges and Solutions.
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Chiwaridzo, Option Takunda
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PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience ,HEALTH services accessibility ,RECESSIONS ,PUBLIC health infrastructure ,STATISTICAL correlation ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,PUBLIC officers ,MEDICAL personnel ,RESOURCE allocation ,MEDICAL quality control ,INCOME ,T-test (Statistics) ,CRONBACH'S alpha ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH policy ,SOCIAL services ,AT-risk people ,RESEARCH evaluation ,COST analysis ,VALUE-based healthcare ,WORK environment ,QUANTITATIVE research ,WAGES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,TAXATION ,JOB satisfaction ,GOVERNMENT programs ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,RESEARCH ,QUALITY of life ,HEALTH equity ,HEALTH care industry ,STAKEHOLDER analysis ,EVIDENCE-based medicine ,FACTOR analysis ,PUBLIC welfare ,COMPARATIVE studies ,WELL-being ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors - Abstract
Austerity measures have become a contentious topic, shaping the landscape of health care systems around the world. As governments grapple with economic challenges, the impact of austerity on health care has emerged as a critical concern. This study focuses on the consequences of austerity actions adopted by the Zimbabwean government under the Transitional Stabilization Program (TSP) from August 2018 to December 2025. This research examines the impact of austerity measures on Zimbabwe's health care sector, exploring its connections with health infrastructure and resources, accessibility and affordability of health care, health funding, health care inequalities, and the health care workforce. Using a quantitative approach and data from 970 participants, including the general populace, health care providers, and government officials, significant positive correlations between austerity measures and these health care variables were identified. The findings indicated a noteworthy positive correlation between the independent variable "austerity measures" and five dependent variables: health care accessibility and affordability, health care inequalities, infrastructure and resources, health care funding, and health care workforce. The t -statistics values exceeded the threshold of 1.96, with values of 5.085, 3.120, 6.459, 8.517, and 3.830, respectively. These findings highlight the importance of considering the effects of austerity on health care access, health funding, health care inequalities, health workforce, health infrastructure and resources development. Policymakers should prioritize equitable resource allocation and targeted investments to strengthen the resilience of the health care system during economic challenges. Understanding these associations is crucial for evidence-based policy decisions and fostering a more equitable and resilient health care system in Zimbabwe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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16. The Hong Kong Shue Yan University Social Work Research Center—A Case Analysis.
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Liu, Ben Chi Pun and Leung, Dion Sik Yee
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INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *HUMAN services programs , *MEDICAL quality control , *PROFESSIONAL practice , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *HUMAN research subjects , *DECISION making , *SOCIAL work research , *INFORMED consent (Medical law) , *INTERDISCIPLINARY research , *EVIDENCE-based medicine , *PUBLIC welfare - Abstract
Hong Kong Shue Yan University (HKSYU) Center for Social Work Research and Practice was established in 2015, aspiring to collaborate with industry partners to conduct research that enhance the industry's understanding of social issues and develop quality services for the community. HKSYU is a self-financing university without direct subsidies from the HKSAR Government to the Center. In the last couple of years, the Center has implemented 11 research and training projects, jointly organizing with local and overseas universities. Two of them adopted the interdisciplinary approach, collaborating with health and nursing disciplines. Using the extended case method, the Center was found to be aligned with the principles of evidence-based practice and research-mindedness in social work. Moreover, the Center normally adopted the "Translational form of collaboration," coproducing research projects with industry partners. Upon reflection, the Center should maximize its involvement with social work practitioners to promote research-mindedness in the practice environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
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17. The Locations of Palestine and the U.S. in the Global Map of Homelessness: Part 2.
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Tanous, Osama and Hagopian, Amy
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SOCIAL determinants of health ,HUMAN rights ,RACISM ,HOMELESSNESS ,HOUSING stability ,PRACTICAL politics ,PUBLIC welfare - Abstract
It's now well appreciated that social determinants of health are the strongest predictors of our health and well-being. A good argument could be made that housing is at the top of the pyramid of these determinants. And, surprisingly, housing is also the social determinant that could rapidly turn on a dime–that is, with sufficient political will, creating access to housing could be radically expanded in short order. (Unfortunately, of course, it's true one can also become suddenly homeless, since few protections exist in policy or capitalist economies to prevent it). That alone sets it apart from social factors such as education and racism–conditions that take a long time to change. In contrast to long-term interventions (education) or culturally stubborn and historically rooted problems (racism), housing is rapidly malleable. In this article, we describe the social condition of homelessness in two settings, comparing and contrasting the concepts, causes, and consequences, along with how people are mobilizing to challenge the conditions that create their housing insecurity. As we review the factors that create housing conditions in each setting, we propose some universal international principles for a new approach to the human right of decent and secure housing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
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18. Fighting for menstrual equity through period product pantries.
- Author
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Glayzer, Edward J, Jennings, Claire T, Schlaeger, Judith M, Watkins, Brynn, Rieseler, Annabelle, Ray, Melissa, Lee, Adrienne, and Glayzer, Jennifer E
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NONPROFIT organizations ,QUALITATIVE research ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,RESEARCH funding ,INTERVIEWING ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,FEMININE hygiene products ,MENSTRUATION ,PUBLIC welfare ,COMPARATIVE studies ,HEALTH education ,CHARITIES ,POVERTY - Abstract
Background: Menstruators facing period poverty often struggle with menstrual hygiene and waste management, which can result in harmful short- and long-term health outcomes such as urinary tract infections, yeast infections, and vulvar contact dermatitis. Research indicates that 42% of menstruators in the United States have difficulty affording period products. Traditional methods of distributing period products through social services may unintentionally undermine menstruators' agency, leading to disempowerment and inefficient resource allocation. Period product pantries are a novel approach aimed at addressing period poverty, inequity, and inadequate menstrual health education in the United States. Objectives: This paper aims to examine the development, organization, and implementation of two distinct period product pantry networks in Ohio and New York. It seeks to compare the advantages and challenges of grassroots versus nonprofit-led models and to provide practical insights for future pantry operators. Design: The study examines two models of period product pantries: a grassroots effort led by three local residents in Ohio and an initiative spearheaded by a nonprofit organization in New York. The design includes a comparative analysis of both models' organization, funding methods, and operational structures. Methods: The authors gathered data on the construction, operation, and usage of two pantry networks, focusing on factors such as accessibility, community engagement, and sustainability. The study employed a combination of qualitative methods, including interviews with organizers, and a review of organizational documents to analyze the effectiveness and scalability of each model. Results: Both pantry networks increased accessibility to period products in low socioeconomic neighborhoods, which are disproportionately affected by period poverty. The grassroots model, while resource-limited, fostered strong community ties and local engagement. The nonprofit-led model benefited from dedicated staff and a more stable funding structure but faced bureaucratic challenges. Despite their differences, both models demonstrated the potential to empower menstruators by preserving their dignity and autonomy. Conclusions: Period product pantries represent an innovative and equitable approach to addressing period poverty and inequity. The analysis of the two models offers valuable insights for organizations and individuals interested in establishing similar initiatives. While each model has its unique benefits and challenges, both are effective in empowering menstruators and providing accessible menstrual hygiene products to those in need. Registration: Not applicable. Plain language summary: Fighting for menstrual equity through period product pantries Period product pantries are a new way to help people who can't afford period products and don't have enough education about menstrual health in the U.S. Many people who experience period poverty, or trouble getting products like pads and tampons, also face barriers to staying clean and managing period waste. This can cause health issues like infections. About 42% of people who get periods in the U.S. say they've had trouble paying for these products. Period product pantries are different from older methods of getting free products, like through social services, because they let people get what they need without feeling embarrassed or losing their sense of control. This paper looks at two types of period pantries: one started by three local people in Ohio and another run by a nonprofit group in New York. Both help people in neighborhoods where it's hard to afford period products. The paper talks about how these pantries were set up, how they are funded, and what worked well or didn't. The goal is to show how these pantries can be a good, fair way to help people while giving advice to others who might want to start their own pantries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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19. Welfare at the Statehouse Democracies: Assessing the Impact of Public Opinion on Welfare Policies at the State Level.
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Molina, Rafael
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PUBLIC welfare policy , *PUBLIC welfare , *WELFARE state , *RESPONSIBILITY , *STATE governments , *PUBLIC opinion - Abstract
A frequent question in discussions about democracy is whether input from the public is ever considered and to what extent by politicians. This influence of public opinion on the realm of welfare policies has not been extensively explored, and most analyses are less precise for being conducted before the passage of the national welfare reform in 1996, better known as the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act (PRWORA). Bringing the analysis to a period after the reform to account for contextual changes since its passage, this study uses the multilevel and poststratification (MRP) model considered superior in analysis of subnational opinion using national survey data to assess the influence of public opinion on welfare policies at the state level. Collecting data from the 2014 CCES and a new developed welfare generosity index, I find that public opinion does not have any influence on how generous welfare programs turn out in their states, unless it is interacted with state government ideology. It seems that the ideology of the state government and the state poverty rate are the major determinants on welfare policies outcomes in the states, although the latter had different effects for TANF and SNAP. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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20. Knowledge, Perceived Competence, and Behaviors Relative to Traumatic Brain Injury Among a Sample of Domestic Violence Emergency Shelter Advocates in a New England State.
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Campbell, Julia K., Howland, Jonathan, Insalaco, Brie, and Lawrence-Soto, Gabriela
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HEALTH literacy ,EMPLOYEES ,CROSS-sectional method ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,HEALTH services accessibility ,INTIMATE partner violence ,RESEARCH funding ,CRONBACH'S alpha ,SEX distribution ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,SURVEYS ,RACE ,SOCIAL skills ,DOMESTIC violence ,BRAIN injuries ,HOUSING ,COMMUNITY services ,DATA analysis software ,MEDICAL screening ,NEEDS assessment ,PUBLIC welfare ,PROFESSIONAL competence ,COMMUNITY-based social services ,MEDICAL referrals ,BRAIN concussion - Abstract
This cross-sectional study describes knowledge, perceived competence, and behaviors relative to intimate partner violence (IPV)-related brain injury (BI) among staff in residential domestic violence shelter programs across a New England state. A 23-item questionnaire was administered to registrants of an online IPV-related BI training series. Within this sample, knowledge about IPV-related BI was high, but relative to providing screening, accommodations, and specialized referrals to survivors with BI, perceived competence was low, and behaviors were infrequent. IPV shelter agencies should facilitate IPV-related BI training programs for staff and prioritize developing and implementing BI screening, accommodation, and referral policies and procedures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
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21. Association of Well-Being in Middle-Aged and Older Adults With Enhanced Personal Health and Social Support: A Nationally Representative Cohort Study.
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Chung, Ping-Chen, Chiang, Yen-Sheng, Liu, Yi-Chien, Chuang, Yi-Fang, Hsu, Hsiao-Han, and Chan, Ta-Chien
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DIGITAL technology ,HEALTH literacy ,MEDICAL care use ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,HEALTH status indicators ,ECOLOGY ,MENTAL health ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,BEHAVIOR ,EMOTIONS ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,MANN Whitney U Test ,CHI-squared test ,LONGITUDINAL method ,SURVEYS ,DRUG efficacy ,SOCIAL support ,HEALTH promotion ,PUBLIC welfare ,DATA analysis software ,FACTOR analysis ,WELL-being ,SOCIAL classes ,PHYSICAL activity ,MIDDLE age ,OLD age - Abstract
Objectives: This study aimed to explore the relationship between multidimensional factors, such as environment, health status, behavior, social support, and the well-being of middle-aged and older adults. Methods: This study utilized data from 2 waves of the nationally representative Taiwan Longitudinal Study on Aging Survey Report (TLSA) conducted in 2015 and 2019. The TLSA assesses socioeconomic status, physical and health status, the 5-item World Health Organization Well-Being Index (WHO-5 index), and social support. Data regarding the degree of digital development were obtained from the 2020 Township Digital Development Report. We applied a generalized estimating equation (GEE) to analyze the influencing factors. Results: This study included 4796 participants. Residing in areas with a higher degree of digital development, having a higher socioeconomic status, and experiencing better physical and mental health were significantly associated with well-being. Furthermore, emotional and attentive support mediated the association between physical and mental status and well-being. Conclusion: People's awareness of searching for and receiving social support and medical resources is important for enhancing their well-being. It is also crucial to pay attention to the living environment and maintain one's health status to promote well-being. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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22. Financial inclusion and the contested infrastructures of cash transfer payments in South Africa.
- Author
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Webb, Christopher and Vanqa Mgijima, Nandi
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SOCIAL security , *DIGITAL technology , *GOVERNMENT policy , *RESEARCH funding , *QUALITATIVE research , *ENDOWMENTS , *SCIENTIFIC observation , *PUBLIC opinion , *CITIZENSHIP , *GOVERNMENT aid , *SOCIAL integration , *PUBLIC welfare - Abstract
Across much of the South, digital technologies are increasingly central to the expansion of state social protection systems. Supported by major development agencies, many of these distributive technologies are developed and implemented by financial technology companies with the specific aim of accelerating financial inclusion. While researchers have documented the influence of these financial actors and logics over social policy, we know less about how these interventions are transforming the experience of receiving social protection. Based on qualitative and observational research with social grant recipients in South Africa, this research demonstrates how digital and financial technologies produce confusion, informational opacities and new forms of exclusion among grant recipients. It suggests that the increasingly prominent role of financial technologies in the delivery of social protection undermines state capacity and further entrenches the influence of neoliberal logics over social policy. Finally, the article suggests that these technologies may be transforming the nature of social citizenship in South Africa, undermining efforts to advance universal and redistributive social protection policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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23. Factory worker welfare and the commodification of labour in market socialist Vietnam: Debates on overtime work in the revised labour code.
- Author
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Luong, Ngoc and Nguyen, Minh TN
- Subjects
- *
POLICY sciences , *DEBATE , *LABOR productivity , *HEALTH status indicators , *WORK environment , *COMPASSION , *RESPONSIBILITY , *SOCIAL responsibility , *FAMILIES , *WORKING hours , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *SOCIAL skills , *LABOR laws , *PUBLIC welfare , *RULES , *WELL-being , *INDUSTRIAL relations - Abstract
State socialist Vietnam formally embraced market reforms in the mid-1980s, and since then advancing marketization under the undisrupted rule of the Communist party. As marketization deepens, the party state's legitimacy continues to rest on socialist practices of governance, structures of feeling and visions of a class-free society. This political-economic context gives rise to struggles between market and socialist logics over the social question in an economy that now powers global production with raw material and cheap labour, much of which is migrant labour. This article highlights these struggles through an analysis of the public debates around the regulation of overtime work during the revision of the 1994 Labour Code by Vietnam's National Assembly in 2019, which foresees limiting it to ensure workers' well-being. While parties to the debate position themselves as pro-business or pro-workers, they all evoke socialist narratives of nation-building, solidarity and care while emphasizing the market ethos of competitiveness and productivity. In arguing for removing the limit, the pro-business camp highlights the workers' responsibility to contribute to the competitiveness of the country and their employers by working overtime to make up for their low productivity. In contrast, the pro-worker camp pleads for limiting overtime work on the grounds of workers' poor health and difficult family lives, portraying their sufferings as deserving compassion. Despite these contrasting justifications, both arguments are characterized by the assumption of self-responsibility as the mainstay of well-being and failure to acknowledge the deeper societal problems posed by the commodification of labour. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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24. Redistributive politics and the temporalities of crisis: Reconfiguring social protection in a post-pandemic South Africa.
- Author
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Fouksman, E. and Dawson, H. J.
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- *
SOCIAL security , *RESIDENTIAL patterns , *CRISIS intervention (Mental health services) , *METROPOLITAN areas , *PRACTICAL politics , *SOCIAL support , *PUBLIC welfare , *COVID-19 pandemic , *POVERTY , *POLITICAL participation - Abstract
How does crisis open-up – or foreclose – new possibilities for alternative economic futures? This article explores the possibilities afforded by crisis for reconfiguring redistribution and welfare in contexts where access to income via work is increasingly tenuous. To do so, we turn to South Africa, where we examine the unfolding political possibilities and support for more generous and universal forms of social protection and (re)distribution during and after the Covid pandemic. In particular, we analyse visions of alternative redistributory policies both from above and from below, via original empirical data on the views of low-income inner-city residents in Johannesburg; interviews with government actors and civil society activists; and a close reading of media and policy discourse around social protection between 2020 and 2023. We argue while framing Covid as a crisis forced the state to embrace less workerist approaches to social protection, the very fact that new policies were rooted in an emergency context may have blunted more radical redistributory visions. This argument is underscored by the vacillations and internal contradictions of the South African government's expansion of its social grant system, as well as by the delimited scope of grassroots demands for more generous or unconditional economic support during and after the pandemic. We make the case that 'crisis temporalities' – and the temporality of work and welfare more generally – is critical to understanding the lack of political will and popular demands for more radical forms of redistribution and economic security beyond work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Blurring 'social justice' with 'market justice' in recent experiments with healthcare and social protection in the Global South.
- Author
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Prince, Ruth Jane
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL security , *MIDDLE-income countries , *HEALTH services accessibility , *SOCIAL justice , *GOVERNMENT policy , *INSURANCE , *HEALTH insurance , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *UNIVERSAL healthcare , *PUBLIC welfare , *LOW-income countries , *POVERTY ,DEVELOPING countries - Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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26. Who benefits? On welfare and accumulation.
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Kar, Sohini
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL security , *SOCIAL capital , *GOVERNMENT programs , *PUBLIC welfare - Published
- 2024
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27. Beyond social policy? 'patchwork' livelihoods.
- Author
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James, Deborah
- Subjects
- *
POVERTY reduction , *SOCIAL security , *GOVERNMENT policy , *PUBLIC welfare , *PRACTICAL politics - Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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28. Debt, land and labour: Cambodian migrant workers' precarious livelihood strategies.
- Author
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Blau, Gavan and Arnold, Dennis
- Subjects
- *
EMPLOYEE psychology , *REAL property , *PERSONAL property , *JOB security , *GOVERNMENT policy , *DEBT , *BLUE collar workers , *MORTGAGES , *FINANCIAL stress , *MIGRANT labor , *PUBLIC welfare , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *EMPLOYMENT - Abstract
This article examines how livelihood security is co-produced through multiple strategies in Southeast Asia's agrarian transformation, by considering the case of Cambodian migrant workers, who cobble together their livelihood through a combination of land, labour and debt. These workers leverage small landholdings as collateral to take on debts to finance migration to Thailand, where low wages and insecure employment inhibit their ability to repay such debts. The traditional social welfare role of land as a safety net is superseded by the use of land as collateral to access microfinance loans, which are also commonly used to respond to livelihood shocks. In this financialised context, social protection schemes insufficiently address the combined livelihood risks that are assumed by workers and do not provide meaningful protection to workers. Drawing on field interviews, we argue that these various supposed sources of livelihood security rather act to increase precarity for workers, by exacerbating labour discipline and dependence on employers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Contradictions at work: Navigating relational autonomy and caste in Delhi, India.
- Author
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Raphael, Riya
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL classes , *WORK , *SOCIAL security , *EMPLOYEES , *AUTONOMY (Psychology) , *INCOME , *WORK environment , *PUBLIC welfare , *SOCIAL support , *EXPERIENTIAL learning , *SELF-employment - Abstract
Ethnographic insights into people's working lives can help us envision social policy to build dignified workspaces. This article explores the interlinkages between work and social protection, by drawing attention to two dimensions of pheriwale's everyday working lives: first, how they relate to their work, and second, how they are situated within the Indian welfare context. Pheriwale are a group of traders in Delhi, India, who collect and sell secondhand/used-clothes. Like much of the Indian workforce, pheriwale's work is classified as 'informal', since they remain outside social security tied to formal employment, they largely rely on irregular flow of income and primarily belong to the lower-caste groups. Low-income groups in India are entitled to various welfare schemes; however, accessing and receiving these welfare benefits may not always be consistent or dependable. In Delhi, pheriwale have been trading used/secondhand clothes for almost a century and they are one of the visibly women-dominated trading groups in the city. This article builds on four months of qualitative fieldwork at pheriwale's marketplace in West Delhi, between 2017 and 2019. By following pheriwale's work experiences through the conceptual lens of relational autonomy, this study highlights two key findings. First, due to the nature of self-employment, pheriwale shared how they have relative control of time and energy in their working routines. Second, in the face of an unreliable welfare state, pheriwale rely on building familial means of social protection to sustain lives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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30. Reconfiguring labour and welfare in the Global South: How the social question is framed as market participation.
- Author
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Nguyen, Minh TN, Rydstrom, Helle, and Mao, Jingyu
- Subjects
- *
WORK , *SERIAL publications , *POLICY sciences , *EQUALITY , *UNEMPLOYMENT , *PUBLIC welfare , *POVERTY ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
This special issue explores the intertwining reconfigurations of labour and welfare in the Global South by bringing together eight empirical studies of different national and transnational contexts and three commentaries. It asks how Global South people and states alike have come to prioritize market logics as guiding principles for welfare systems, moving away from collective risk-pooling towards individual responsibility, and how this reorientation is connected to the restructuring of labour. In this introduction to the special issue, we discuss the genealogies of the social question and review the growing academic discussion on the changing landscape of welfare in the Global South. We then underscore how the contemporary social question is predominantly framed in the terms of people's capacity for market participation in the specific empirical contexts discussed by our authors. The framing of the social question as such, and the accompanying solutions to it, we argue, disregards politics, political economy and social justice at the cost of the more urgent social question that confronts the increasingly asymmetrical power relations between labour and capital. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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31. Social policy as knowledge process: How its sociotechnical links to labour reconfigure the social question.
- Author
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Lammer, Christof
- Subjects
- *
INTELLECT , *POLICY sciences , *GOVERNMENT policy , *LABOR (Obstetrics) , *SOCIAL change , *RURAL conditions , *PUBLIC welfare , *PRACTICAL politics , *POVERTY - Abstract
The relationship between labour and social policy is at the heart of the social question. Scholars often treat this link as either a causal relation out there or a conceptual connection in policy makers' minds. This article examines its sociotechnical materiality instead. It follows anthropologists who ask how bureaucrats practice policy and scholars of science and technology studies who explore how social and technical aspects are interrelated in knowledge processes. China studies has suggested that the minimum livelihood guarantee (dibao) was originally designed as a market-oriented response to transformations of labour such as mass layoffs, peasant proletarianisation and associated unrest but later revamped to only combat extreme poverty. Ethnographic insights into dibao policy in a village in Sichuan show how its designed links to labour were erased and transformed through different methods of bureaucratic targeting, as well as expectations about the bureaucratic ability to know. For a time, dibao was even integrated into alternative rural development projects aimed at decommodification. Studying social policy as a knowledge process uncovers how its sociotechnical links to labour reconfigure it as an answer to the social question. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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32. Welfare as flourishing social reproduction: Polish and Ukrainian migrant workers in a market-participation society.
- Author
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Plomien, Ania and Schwartz, Gregory
- Subjects
- *
IMMIGRANTS , *RESEARCH funding , *QUALITATIVE research , *LABOR market , *EXPERIENCE , *MIGRANT labor , *PUBLIC welfare , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *SOCIAL support , *SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *SOCIAL participation , *EMPLOYMENT - Abstract
The historical link between labour and welfare is increasingly considered in the transnational register, largely because labour mobilities demand a rethinking of nation-based social protection systems. Transnational labour mobilities also illuminate other dimensions of boundary-crossing, including formality–informality, citizenship–non-citizenship and production–reproduction. These additional considerations call for going beyond the problem of transnational welfare access. We argue that the prism of social reproduction enables such a rethinking of the labour–welfare relationship. In this article, we conceptualise an expanded notion of welfare as flourishing social reproduction, in contradistinction to the principle of welfare deriving primarily from paid work and labour market participation. We apply this theorisation of welfare to our qualitative case study of the experiences and interests of Polish and Ukrainian migrant workers in Germany, Poland and the United Kingdom employed in care provision, food production and housing construction sectors. In the geopolitical setting of uneven and combined Europe, embodying high levels of differentiation together with advanced transnational social protection, we explore the role of differentiation of migrants in labour markets (along work, migration and citizenship axes) and the extent to which transnational mobility facilitates the improvement of social reproduction. While the low-waged labour of Polish and Ukrainian men and women working in care, food and housing furnishes their own and local workers' social reproduction needs, we find that migrant workers' welfare as flourishing social reproduction remains wanting, even for those with already privileged access to the current 'gold-standard' transnational social protection offered by the EUs freedoms of movement framework. Welfare remains centred on individualised paid work logic, leaving a vast range of needs unmet and work and workers excluded, bearing implications for prevalent transnational social protection efforts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Trajectories of intimate partner violence and their relationship to stress among young women in South Africa: An HPTN 068 study.
- Author
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Kelly, Nicole K, Bhushan, Nivedita L, Gottfredson O'Shea, Nisha, Gómez-Olivé, F Xavier, Aiello, Allison E, Wagner, Laura Danielle, Mall, Sumaya, Kahn, Kathleen, Pettifor, Audrey E, and Stoner, Marie CD
- Subjects
- *
INTIMATE partner violence , *RESEARCH funding , *CYTOMEGALOVIRUSES , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *PSYCHOLOGY of women , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *GOVERNMENT aid , *LONGITUDINAL method , *ODDS ratio , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *PUBLIC welfare , *HERPES simplex , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *C-reactive protein , *BIOMARKERS - Abstract
Background: One in four South African women will experience intimate partner violence (IPV) in their lifetime, potentially increasing their biological stress. In South Africa, limited IPV and stress research has utilized multiple timepoints or examined modifying factors. Cash transfers (CTs) are associated with reduced IPV and stress and may be an intervention target. Aims: We used data-driven methods to identify longitudinal IPV trajectory groups among South African adolescent girls and young women (AGYW), estimate each group's association with stress, and assess modification by a CT. Methods: A total of 2,183 South African AGYW ages 13 to 24 years from the HIV Prevention Trials Network 068 study were randomized to a CT or control group. Physical IPV was measured five times (2011–2017), and stress was captured once (2018–2019). Stress measures included the Cohen Stress Scale and stress biomarkers (C-reactive protein (CRP), cytomegalovirus (CMV), herpes simplex virus type-1 (HSV-1)). Group-based trajectory modeling identified IPV trajectories; ordinal logistic regression estimated the association between trajectory group and stress. Results: A two-group quadratic trajectory model was identified (higher trajectory group = 26.7% of AGYW; lower trajectory group = 73.3%). In both groups, the probability of IPV increased from ages 13 to 17 years before declining in early adulthood. However, the higher group's probability peaked later and declined gradually. The higher trajectory group was associated with an increased odds of elevated CRP (OR: 1.41, 95% CI [1.11, 1.80]), but not with other stress measures. The CT modified the relationship with CMV: a positive association was observed among the usual care arm (OR: 1.59, 95% CI [1.11, 2.28]) but not the CT arm (OR: 0.85, 95% CI [0.61, 1.19]). Conclusions: Sustained IPV risk during adolescence was associated with elevated CRP in young adulthood. The relationship between IPV and elevated CMV was attenuated among those receiving a CT, suggesting that CTs could possibly reduce biological stress due to IPV. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. "You Can if You Must, but We'd Prefer It if You Didn't": Can We Develop a More Pastoral Theology of Abortion?
- Author
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Percy, Emma
- Subjects
- *
ABORTION , *PUBLIC welfare , *FETUS , *PREGNANCY - Abstract
Some Anglican Churches have adopted permissive acceptance of abortion while expressing the hope it will be rare. This presumes competition between the welfare of the woman and that of her unborn child. In this article, I will critique statements from the Church of England and The Episcopal Church, United States through a feminist-pastoral perspective. I will look principally at early abortions which are often a response to unintended pregnancy. I will discuss abortion alongside miscarriage challenging pro-natal assumptions inherent in the Christian tradition. I will also discuss the costs of pregnancy. In doing so, I will draw on the pragmatic and pastoral strengths of Anglican theology to argue for a position that respects and supports women's moral decision to not bring a new life into being, recognizing this can be a considered response for the welfare of a potential child as well as for the woman. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Fresh meat: Women's motivations to hunt and how they challenge hunting structures.
- Author
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Tickle, Lara, von Essen, Erica, and Fischer, Anke
- Subjects
GENDER role ,FEMININITY ,HUNTING ,FISH & game licenses ,ATHLETIC fields ,UPPER class ,PUBLIC welfare ,RIFLE-ranges ,LEISURE - Abstract
Hunting has a unique status as a sport and leisure activity alongside its practices having high stakes for society related to ecology, biosecurity, animal welfare and public safety. As such, hunting must increasingly legitimate itself before the public both in terms of ethically justifiable motivations for why to hunt and ethical standards for how to hunt. One way in which public acceptance has been sought in recent years has been to frontline 'women hunters' as the hunting community's indirect ambassadors. An effort to recruit more women is also seen as imperative to the survival of hunting in a practical, demographic sense. When women enter hunting, they enter an arena that is opaque and difficult to navigate along with heavy baggage from gender roles, expectations about proximity to wildlife and nature, and masculine norms on behaviour. In this study, we demonstrate through semi-structured interviews, participant observation and auto-ethnography of a hunting license education in Sweden, how women navigate spaces carved out for men. The findings show traps of emphasised femininity, expectations of women as 'softening influences' on male hunters to rein in their potentially unethical behaviour, and as differentially positioned in the learning process of hunting. However, using Bourdieu's social capital, findings also reveal that women negotiate and trade attributes in creative ways – such as landownership, meat handling skills and knowledge – to gain an advantage, status or level the playing field. We argue that regardless of gender, being in a position of sufficient capital to be able to call out unethical behaviour in the hunting team is crucial insofar as it serves the hunting community's ultimate interest. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Young adults with depression: A registry-based longitudinal study of work-life marginalisation. The Norwegian GP-DEP study.
- Author
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Hetlevik, Øystein, Smith-Sivertsen, Tone, Haukenes, Inger, Ruths, Sabine, and Baste, Valborg
- Subjects
- *
DIAGNOSIS of mental depression , *RISK assessment , *POISSON distribution , *SOCIAL security , *RESEARCH funding , *MENTAL health , *HIGH school students , *UNEMPLOYMENT , *NORWEGIANS , *AGE distribution , *RELATIVE medical risk , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *FUNCTIONAL status , *LONGITUDINAL method , *FINANCIAL stress , *ACADEMIC achievement , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *SOCIAL support , *PUBLIC welfare , *EDUCATIONAL attainment , *COMORBIDITY , *POVERTY , *MENTAL depression , *ADULTS - Abstract
Aims: To explore the association between a depression diagnosis in young adulthood and risk of marginalisation at age 29 years, among those who had completed upper secondary school and those who had not completed at age 21. Methods: In a longitudinal cohort study based on nationwide registers we followed 111,558 people from age 22–29 years. Outcomes were risk of marginalisation and educational achievement at age 29. Exposure was a diagnosed depression at ages 22–26 years. Comorbid mental and somatic health conditions, gender and country of origin were covariates. Relative risks were estimated with Poisson regression models, stratified by educational level at age 21. Results: For people who had not completed upper secondary school at age 21 years, a depression diagnosis at age 22–26 increased the risk of low income (relative risk = 1.33; 95% confidence interval = 1.25–1.40), prolonged unemployment benefit (1.46; 1.38–1.55) and social security benefit (1.56; 1.41–1.74) at age 29 compared with those with no depression. Among those who had completed upper secondary school at age 21 years, depression increased the risk of low income (1.71; 1.60–1.83), prolonged unemployment benefit (2.17; 2.03–2.31), social security benefit (3.62; 2.91–4.51) and disability pension (4.43; 3.26–6.01) compared with those with no depression. Mental comorbidity had a significant impact on risk of marginalisation in both groups. Conclusions: Depression in one's mid-20s significantly increases the risk of marginalisation at age 29 years, and comorbid mental health conditions reinforce this association. Functional ability should be given priority in depression care in early adulthood to counteract marginalisation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Drug Dispensation by 'Signature Pharmacists' in South Asia.
- Author
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Lassi, Nicholas
- Subjects
PHARMACISTS ,MEDICAL personnel ,PHARMACY education ,DRUG interactions ,PUBLIC welfare - Abstract
The phenomenon of 'signature pharmacists' in South Asia has allowed allopathic prescription medication to be dispensed without the necessary medical knowledge, specifically of drug interactions, dosages and side effects. This practice, in which qualified pharmacists delegate their professional inputs to often unqualified and unsupervised sales staff, persists due to complicity among pharmacists, other healthcare professionals and regulatory officials. The article discusses the extent of this significant risk to public health in South Asia and argues that pharmacy enforcement and education standards should be reformed to address these huge challenges to ensure consumer protection and the general public's welfare. While the advice is that regulatory authorities should intensify their supervision and inspection efforts to ensure registered pharmacists actively participate in regular pharmacy operations, the article also identifies predicaments related to corruption that are difficult to tackle. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Household's Stressors and Well-Being During the Global COVID-19 Pandemic.
- Author
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Balsa, Ana, Bloomfield, Juanita, Cid, Alejandro, Lorenzo, Martina, and Patrone, Paula
- Subjects
SCHOOL environment ,CHILD welfare ,HOME environment ,FAMILIES ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,PSYCHOLOGY of mothers ,PSYCHOLOGY of parents ,PUBLIC welfare ,COVID-19 pandemic ,WELL-being ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,MENTAL depression - Abstract
Home environments suffered a range of stressors during COVID-19 pandemic. This study examines the impact of these stressors on children's well-being by households' conditions. Participants included main caregivers (N = 615) with a child under the age of 3 in a developing Latin-American country. We use multivariate analysis to explore associations between these shocks, the childrearing environment, and children's well-being. We find that households with lower education and recipients of government assistance were more exposed to negative shocks linked to COVID-19. However, the most educated households were more likely to face an increased burden of childcare. Exposure to negative shocks was associated with a deterioration in the emotional well-being of adults, a higher prevalence of intra-family violence, and behavioral changes in children. Households that reported more time spent caring for children, as well as difficulties in combining care and work, showed higher levels of parental depression and worse indicators of parenting quality. We observe a drop in the frequency of parental involvement in didactic and socializing activities with their children, and a poorer mental health status for the main caregiver (mostly mothers). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Evaluating Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social and Emotional Wellbeing services: A collective case study in Far North Queensland.
- Author
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Furst, Mary Anne, McDonald, Tina, McCalman, Janya, Salinas-Perez, Jose, Fagan, Ruth, Lee Hong, Anita, Nona, Merrissa, Saunders, Vicki, and Salvador-Carulla, Luis
- Subjects
- *
HEALTH services accessibility , *CHILDREN'S health , *ADOLESCENT health , *HUMAN services programs , *RESEARCH funding , *HEALTH policy , *PUBLIC sector , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CHILDREN'S accident prevention , *DECISION making , *PUBLIC welfare , *SOCIAL support , *INDIGENOUS Australians , *WELL-being , *ADOLESCENCE , *CHILDREN - Abstract
Background: Access to a coordinated range of strengths-based, culturally appropriate community-led primary mental health and Social and Emotional Wellbeing services is critical to the mental health and wellbeing of young Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, and is a policy commitment of the Australian government. However, complex and fragmented service networks and a lack of standardised service data are barriers in identifying what services are available and what care they provide. Method: A standardised service classification tool was used to assess the availability and characteristics of Social and Emotional Wellbeing services for young Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in two regions in Queensland, Australia. Results: We identified a complex pattern of service availability and gaps in service provision. Non-Indigenous non-governmental organisations provided a significant proportion of services, particularly 'upstream' support, while Aboriginal Community Controlled Organisations were more likely to provide 'downstream' crisis type care. Most services provided by the public sector were through Child Safety and Youth Justice departments. Conclusions: Our findings demonstrate the complexity of current networks, and show that non-Indigenous organisations are disproportionately influential in the care received by young Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, despite community goals of self-determination, and government commitment to increasing capacity of Aboriginal Community Controlled Organisations to support their local communities. These findings can be used to support decision making and planning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Private Insurance, Public Welfare, and Financial Markets: Alpine and Maritime Countries in Comparative-Historical Perspective.
- Author
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van der Heide, Arjen and Kohl, Sebastian
- Subjects
- *
PUBLIC welfare , *INSURANCE companies , *FINANCIAL markets , *CAPITALISM , *INSURANCE - Abstract
Contemporary capitalist societies use different institutions to manage economic risks. While different public welfare state and financial institutions (banks, capital markets) have been studied across coordinated and liberal market economies, the different worlds of private insurance institutions have been understudied. Building on new insurance data sets (1880–2017), we find that countries with a Maritime (USA, GBR, CAN) in contrast to the more backward Alpine (AUT, DEU, CHE) insurance tradition developed bigger life and nonlife insurance earlier, with less state-associated and reinsurance enterprises, but riskier investments steered toward financial markets. We argue that the larger and more "Maritime" the insurance sector, the more it made welfare states liberal and securities markets large. Insurance is thus a hidden factor for countries' varieties of capitalism and worlds of welfare. The recent convergence on the Maritime model, however, implies that the riskier and risk-individualizing type of private insurance has added to privatization and securitization trends everywhere. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. More than participatory? From 'compensatory' towards 'expressive' remote practices using digital technologies.
- Author
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Börner, Susanne, Kraftl, Peter, and Giatti, Leandro L
- Subjects
- *
DIGITAL technology , *SOCIAL media , *SMARTPHONES , *PHYSIOLOGICAL adaptation , *EMOTIONS , *ETHICS , *MEDICAL research , *ACTION research , *TRUST , *MINORITIES , *PUBLIC welfare , *COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Based on the shift from face-to-face participatory action research (PAR) with groups in situations of vulnerability to digital methods during COVID-19, we reflect on how we can go beyond compensating for the physical absence of the researcher from the field. We argue that instead of simply aiming to replace face-to-face research with a digital equivalent for maintaining 'participatory' and 'inclusive' research practices, remote practices have the potential of being more-than compensatory. We suggest that when producing multi-method digital approaches, we need to go beyond a concern with participant access to remote practices. By rethinking remote PAR in the light of expressive rather than participatory research practices, we critically reflect on the (sometimes experimental) process of trying out different digital research method(s) with Brazilian youth in situations of digital marginalisation, including the initial 'failures' and lessons learned in encouraging diverse forms of participant expression, and ownership using WhatsApp. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. The practical realization of the feminist welfare state: Equal sharing and gender equality in institutional interaction about parental leave in Sweden.
- Author
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Höglund, Frida and Flinkfeldt, Marie
- Subjects
- *
GENDER inequality laws , *PARENTAL leave laws , *LOCAL government laws , *POLICY sciences , *FEMINISM , *CONVERSATION , *INCOME , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *EQUALITY , *HUMAN rights , *PUBLIC welfare , *INFORMATION-seeking behavior - Abstract
Talk about gender equality in relation to parental leave is pervasive in Sweden. The state encourages families to share parental leave and has recurrently tasked the Swedish Social Insurance Agency (SSIA) to promote gender equality. As theories and applications of street-level bureaucracy have emphasized, how policy is practically realized in social interaction with clients is an important question, specifically whether gender equality discourse also permeates such encounters. We use conversation analysis to examine how equal sharing of parental leave is raised in interactions between parents and practitioners at the SSIA. The data consist of 300 telephone calls, 378 email exchanges, and 642 Facebook exchanges. Our analysis indicates that the talk of equal sharing is not as omnipresent as previous research might suggest. When parents orient to equal sharing, they tend to describe parental responsibilities, while practitioners connect equality to regulations that in themselves work to promote equal sharing. Equal sharing is also a resource for negotiating the citizen–state relationship, as parents complain about state interference while practitioners in response must balance provision of personalized support with the state imperative to promote sharing. The study highlights the complex work of practitioners in the "feminist welfare state" and sheds light on nuanced notions of equality promotion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. The moral behaviour of single young women immigrants to Mandatory Palestine: Between nationalism, gender, and professionalism in social work.
- Author
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Shimei, Nour
- Subjects
- *
IMMIGRANTS , *PROFESSIONALISM , *SEX work , *QUALITATIVE research , *GROUP identity , *RESEARCH funding , *SEX distribution , *NOMADS , *SOCIAL services , *BEHAVIOR , *DECISION making , *ETHICS , *SOCIAL case work , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *PUBLIC welfare , *PATRIOTISM , *FEMINIST criticism , *HUMAN trafficking , *HISTORY - Abstract
Summary: Migration has always constituted a meeting point of opportunity, risk, and vulnerability. Concerns surrounding the sex trafficking of women have caused moral panic since the mid-1800s and led to social workers' preventive initiatives and interventions in Europe and the United States. This article explores a historical moment in which Henrietta Szold, who headed the Social Welfare Department in Mandatory Palestine in 1934, decided to send social workers to the Jaffa and Haifa ports to welcome young, single immigrant women from Germany in the light of rumours of the moral dangers they faced upon entering the country. This feminist historical study of social work employed qualitative analysis of archival texts to investigate the professional decision-making processes involved in sending a social worker to the Jaffa port and the results of the decisions that were made. Findings: The findings trace the course of events that took place in 1934 using three categories: the rumours, their investigation, and the results and implications of the investigations. The findings point to intersections of nationalism, gender, and professionalism in social work. Applications: This article contributes to the evolving knowledge on moral panic in social work and reveals the historical practice used in social work policy and interventions in facing moral panic regarding young women immigrants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Understanding social justice in a changing sociopolitical context: The perspective of social workers in Hong Kong.
- Author
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Ngai, Tsz Chung
- Subjects
- *
HUMAN rights , *PROFESSIONALISM , *SOCIAL justice , *QUALITATIVE research , *HUMAN services programs , *PROFESSIONAL practice , *INTERVIEWING , *FIELD notes (Science) , *SOCIAL services , *SOCIAL worker attitudes , *JUDGMENT sampling , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RESEARCH methodology , *SOCIAL values , *INFORMED consent (Medical law) , *PRACTICAL politics , *PUBLIC welfare , *DATA analysis software , *TIME - Abstract
Amid recent political conflicts and the implementation of the national security law, Hong Kong society has undergone tremendous changes. Among other effects, the new law has spawned controversial social discourses, including about social workers' responsibility to uphold human rights and promote social justice per the Hong Kong Social Workers Registration Board's Code of Practice. This article, based on an analysis of interviews with six social workers in Hong Kong, examines how social workers understand social justice according to those discourses. The findings and this article's discussion of them offer insights into social workers' roles in an increasingly turbulent sociopolitical context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Fostering Change: Black Women's Motivations for Participating in Intimate Partner Violence Research.
- Author
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Duhaney, Patrina
- Subjects
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PATIENT selection , *INTIMATE partner violence , *QUALITATIVE research , *FEMINISM , *AFRICAN Americans , *HUMAN research subjects , *INTERVIEWING , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *PSYCHOLOGY of women , *SOCIAL change , *PHILOSOPHY , *BLACK people , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *EXPERIENCE , *POLICE psychology , *THEMATIC analysis , *SOCIAL case work , *MEDICAL research , *ANTI-Black racism , *CRITICAL race theory , *RESEARCH methodology , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *THEORY of knowledge , *CHANGE , *PATIENT decision making , *PRACTICAL politics , *PUBLIC welfare , *PATIENT participation , *DISCLOSURE - Abstract
This qualitative study was informed by critical race feminism and sought to examine Canadian Black women's motivations for participating in the research study that explored their experiences with the police in the context of intimate partner violence (IPV), and the key factors that complicated their decisions. Semistructured interviews were conducted with 25 self-identified women over the age of 18. Findings indicated that Black women's experiences of anti-Black racism and various forms of systemic barriers influenced their decisions to disclose their experiences of IPV. Key themes included the invisibility of Black women's narratives, fostering political change, and the impact of racialized and gendered insider positionality. Given these findings, positioning Black women's narratives at the centre of IPV research creates opportunities for Black women to share their experiences of IPV, recognizes them as experts of their own experiences, identifies their differential experiences accessing services and supports and the barriers that impact their participation in research studies. The study provides strategies on how to increase Black women's participation and engagement in IPV research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. The psychosocial experiences of girls with visual impairment about the ideal spouse and marriage.
- Author
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Khodabakhshi-Koolaee, Anahita and Amoogholi, Zahra
- Subjects
MARRIAGE ,QUALITATIVE research ,SPOUSES ,REHABILITATION of people with mental illness ,EMOTIONS ,EXPERIENCE ,RESEARCH methodology ,BLINDNESS ,PHENOMENOLOGY ,PUBLIC welfare ,SOCIAL stigma - Abstract
Mate choice is one of the biggest psychological, social, and emotional changes in the life of every human being. This issue is associated with challenges and problems for people especially blind and visual impairment (VI) people. Although marriage leads to many changes and transformations in the life of blind and VI people, it is essential for meeting psychological, social, emotional, and sexual needs. Accordingly, this study aimed to analyze the psychosocial experiences of VI girls about the ideal husband and marriage. This qualitative study was conducted with a descriptive phenomenological approach. The data were collected through targeted interviews with 20 single girls with VI who were members of the White Cane Society of Tehran in 2021. The collected data were analyzed using Colaizzi's seven-step method. Four main themes were extracted from the participants' experiences, including "experience of love and freedom," "criteria for selecting an ideal spouse," "fear and worry about the marriage," and "stigma and strict public judgments." Following the findings of the study, it can be argued that paying attention to the experience of girls with VI can shed light on their criteria for mate choice and marriage and clarify their needs and demands. This perspective helps mental health professionals and rehabilitation counseling experts to meet their needs through social welfare planning and family awareness programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. A Randomized Trial to Address Food Insecurity and Promote Smoking Cessation Among Low-Income Adults.
- Author
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Kim-Mozeleski, Jin E., Castele, Madeline C., Nambiar, Pooja, Chagin, Kevin M., Pike Moore, Stephanie, Hardy, Patricia, Cook, Karen, and Sehgal, Ashwini R.
- Subjects
SMOKING cessation ,INCOME ,T-test (Statistics) ,RESEARCH funding ,FOOD security ,PILOT projects ,FISHER exact test ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,HEALTH promotion ,MEDICAL needs assessment ,HEALTH equity ,PUBLIC welfare ,DATA analysis software ,POVERTY ,ADULTS - Abstract
Many low-income adults who smoke also have unmet social needs, such as food insecurity, which can serve as a barrier to smoking cessation. We developed a novel intervention to jointly address smoking cessation and food insecurity and assessed its feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary outcomes. We enrolled participants who screened for food insecurity, reported smoking daily, and were ready to quit. All participants received 3 months of resources navigation from a community health worker through monthly telephone calls for referrals and check-ins for smoking cessation and food access resources. Participants randomized to the intervention group received an economic intervention equivalent to the cost of 1 week of groceries/month for 3 months. We randomized 55 participants who were smoking on average 13 cigarettes/day. The trial was feasible and acceptable based on 3-month retention rates (80%) and end-of-study qualitative feedback (91% would recommend the study to others). At 3 months, participants in the intervention versus control group reported a longer length of abstinence from smoking and had a higher proportion of serious quit attempts. Results from this pilot study suggest the importance of attending to social needs, particularly food insecurity, as a strategy to promote smoking cessation among low-income adults who smoke. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. When growth is not enough: Do government transfers moderate the effect of economic growth on absolute and relative child poverty?
- Author
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Sirén, Sebastian
- Subjects
- *
POVERTY reduction , *MIDDLE-income countries , *POLICY sciences , *GOVERNMENT policy , *INCOME , *RESEARCH funding , *MULTIVARIATE analysis , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RESEARCH methodology , *PUBLIC welfare , *GOVERNMENT regulation , *LOW-income countries , *CHILDREN - Abstract
Economic growth is commonly seen as the main driver of poverty reduction in a global perspective, but its impact varies substantially across cases. Meanwhile, the literature has been relatively silent regarding the role of social policy in explaining this variation. In light of an emerging attention to redistribution and social protection in promoting inclusive growth, this article analyses how government cash transfer systems moderate the effect of economic growth on both relative and absolute child poverty across low- and middle-income countries. The empirical analyses compare trends within 16 countries, using data from the Luxembourg Income Study (LIS), by means of descriptive analyses and multivariate regression techniques. Findings show that both economic growth and the expansion of government transfer schemes were associated with falling absolute child poverty rates. While the association between growth and relative child poverty was on average more muted, the analyses found growth to be related to reductions in relative child poverty when combined with sufficiently extensive government transfers, while the opposite effect was found in the face of inadequate levels of transfers. The study provides a framework for studying interrelated effects of national institutions and economic processes, with the findings highlighting the fruitfulness of including indicators on social protection policies when inquiring about enabling conditions for inclusive growth in a development context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Discursive malleability of a global policy model: How conditional cash transfers transcend political boundaries in Chile.
- Author
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Heimo, Lauri
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POLICY sciences , *GOVERNMENT policy , *SCHOLARLY method , *DECISION making , *GOVERNMENT aid , *PUBLIC welfare , *PRACTICAL politics , *GOVERNMENT regulation , *POVERTY - Abstract
In Chile, a conditional cash transfer (CCT) programme was established by a left-wing government in 2004 and then re-established by a right-wing coalition in 2014. Despite some revisions and adjustments, Ingreso Ético Familiar maintained the core characteristics of its predecessor Chile Solidario. This reflected a wider trend of CCT adoption by an ideologically diverse group of governments. Against this background, it is obvious that the CCT policy model appeals to political decision-makers on a wide scale, or at least makes it acceptable to them. However, questions remain: how was this model embraced by the ideologically opposing coalitions in Chile? And more broadly: how do CCTs appeal to such a wide range of policymakers? The article explores the argumentation of Chilean Members of Parliament and examines how the ideological and political consensus around these programmes was discursively attained. Through this case, the article also sheds light on how domestic policy dynamics interact with global policy processes. The analysis revealed points of confluence, which serve to illustrate the CCT model's capacity to convey different meanings to different people – allowing it to be interpreted to fit a variety of different perspectives. I define this quality as discursive malleability and argue that it is an important quality not only in explaining how a policy model can resonate among or appeal to such a wide range of policymakers, but also in the process where a global model is adopted in a country and becomes part of the domestic political debate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Global Social Policy Digest 24.1: How inequalities and the climate crisis are entangled.
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WORK , *GOVERNMENT policy , *CLIMATE change , *NOMADS , *EDUCATIONAL technology , *HUMAN rights , *WORLD health , *GENDER inequality , *ENVIRONMENTAL justice , *HEALTH equity , *PUBLIC welfare , *COVID-19 pandemic , *REFUGEES , *SOCIAL isolation , *POVERTY , *INDUSTRIAL safety , *EMPLOYMENT - Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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