39 results
Search Results
2. Public Health Capacity Building in Times of Austerity: A Case Study From the University of East London.
- Author
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Aceijas, Carmen and Foster, Nena
- Subjects
PUBLIC health ,CONTINUING medical education ,LEARNING ,DOCTOR of philosophy degree ,MEDICAL specialties & specialists ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges - Abstract
The University of East London (UEL) offers a BSc and MSc of Public Health (PH). The programmes are designed to build the workforce capacity by enabling access to higher education (HE) for future PH practitioners and specialists, and facilitating promotion possibilities within current employment. In 2009/10, the MSc and BSc programs had 143 and 70 students respectively, with 209 students undertaking PH combined degrees at the BSc level. This paper presents methods and outcomes of aligning the programs with the United Kingdom Public Health Skills and Career Framework (UK PHSCF). The realigned MSc programme is a 1.5 year (full-time), six module (180 credits) programme with strong emphasis on epidemiology and research. The BSc programme lasts three years (full-time) and consists of 36 modules (360 credits) providing an introductory overview of the core functions of PH. The programmes' modules were mapped against the 9 UK PHSCF PH areas. Additional activities were built into the programs to enhance the learning experience and augment transferable skills. After the realignment, the UK Government published in 2010 the White Paper for PH and, in spite of this, announced budget cuts to HE funding along with increased tuition fees. The programme changes are likely to contribute to PH capacity building but in a time when political reform adversely impacts on the development of the PH workforce. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. 'Geography matters': the role distance plays in reproducing educational inequality in East London.
- Author
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Hamnett, Chris and Butler, Tim
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL equalization ,EQUALITY & society ,SECONDARY education ,EDUCATIONAL resources ,GEOGRAPHICAL research - Abstract
There is a longstanding literature on the unequal geographical distribution of welfare. In this paper we argue that increasingly geography is becoming the basis for rationing access to some forms of welfare. Focusing on access to secondary schools in East London, England, where the demand for places at the more popular schools generally far exceeds the number of places available, we show how distance from school has now become the primary means of allocating places. Rather than educational resources attempting to compensate for geographical disadvantage, geography (in the form of distance from school) has become the rationale by which those living in advantaged areas continue to have privileged access to educational resources. Whereas previously the role of the state was to compensate for the unfairness of such geographical inequalities, geography (via distance to school) is now used to justify the unequal allocation of scarce school places. The paper demonstrates that not only does the near universal adoption of distance-based allocation policies in East London lead to the reproduction of social advantage and disadvantage, but also it is creating new hierarchies of school popularity and more important unpopularity which are not always clearly related to issues of school attainment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Legacy Planning, Regeneration and Events: The Glasgow 2014 Commonwealth Games.
- Author
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Matheson, Catherine M.
- Subjects
COMMONWEALTH Games ,URBAN renewal ,URBAN planning & redevelopment law - Abstract
This paper focuses upon the Glasgow 2014 Commonwealth Games (CWG) legacy proposals regarding the regeneration of the East End. It provides a preliminary pre-event evaluation by examining local progress towards urban regeneration legacies, primarily physical and economic renewal. Following an examination of the events' legacy landscape and problems within the legacy planning process, the paper outlines the socio-economic profile of the locale. Thereafter, the relevance of the CWG to the area is highlighted and an evaluation of the progress towards physical and economic urban regeneration goals is charted. Key risks in the legacy planning process are identified. It is suggested that while there are elements of good practice in local progress towards legacy planning and regeneration, there are community issues that could pose tensions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Home Sites: The Location(s) of ‘Home’ for Young Men.
- Author
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Ahmet, Akile
- Subjects
HOME (The concept) ,YOUNG men ,MULTIRACIAL people ,PUBLIC spaces ,IDENTITY (Psychology) ,SOCIAL history - Abstract
‘Home’ is a space which occupies multiple sites, with which come multiple sensory experiences. The geographies of ‘home’ as defined beyond the dwelling and fixed notions of home are what has been called ‘stretched’. This paper investigates ‘home’ for 15 young men of mixed race aged 16 to 19 in East London. Through the use of written electronic diaries, interviews and photo-voice it explores how city spaces became mobile sites of belonging and various ‘public’ urban spaces become ‘homelike’ for young men of mixed race. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. “Keeping Dalston Different”: Defending Place-Identity in East London.
- Author
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Davison, Gethin, Dovey, Kim, and Woodcock, Ian
- Subjects
URBAN planning ,NIMBY syndrome ,GENTRIFICATION ,RESISTANCE to change - Abstract
Urban intensification is a key planning strategy in the UK, but one that is frequently resisted by local residents objecting to transformations of urban character. This paper is concerned with the factors that underlie such resistance, and with the opportunities for addressing them through the planning process. The paper relates a case-study of the East London district of Dalston where a mixed-use redevelopment project, strongly supported by local authorities, was fiercely resisted by residents who claimed that the existing character of the locality was being violated. Reflecting on the case through theories of place, gentrification, and planning process, we argue that resident resistance was not simply a case of self-interested NIMBYism, but a product of important differences in the ways that character was variously constructed and valued by local authorities and community members. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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7. Eastern promise? East London transformations and the state of surveillance.
- Author
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Webster, C.W.R., Klauser, F.R., Töpfer, E., Raab, C.D., and Fussey, Pete
- Subjects
URBAN renewal ,TELEVISION in security systems ,OLYMPIC Games ,ELECTRONIC surveillance ,SECURITY systems - Abstract
Largely catalysed by hosting the XXX Summer Olympic Games, East London is currently experiencing significant urban regeneration at a rate not seen since the period of post-war reconstruction. In doing so, a series of processes that serve to heighten the intensity of cameras in this already saturated video surveillance landscape are occurring. At the same time, these developments, whilst affecting East London, demonstrate a number of key issues, debates and crises germane to the dissemination and operation of video surveillance across the UK as a whole. These include the intensification and cohesion of video surveillance networks; the role of CCTV in urban regeneration schemes; tensions between disparate applications of CCTV and aspirations for a coherent regulatory framework; and, crucially, how CCTV can be justified at a time of severe economic crisis. The paper explores these issues via the identification and analysis of three broad processes operating in East London: the 'additionality' of Olympic-related surveillance measures; the centripetal surveillance-pull of Olympic-related regeneration programmes; and the co-option and integration of extant CCTV facilities. The strong emphasis on surveillant economies of scale and the integration of existing surveillance infrastructures invite reflection on post-Foucauldian theorisations of networked 'societies of control'. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
8. East End Localism and Urban Decay: Shoreditch's Re-Emerging Gay Scene.
- Author
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ANDERSSON, JOHAN
- Subjects
LGBTQ+ culture ,GAY community ,LOCALISM (Political science) ,COUNTERCULTURE ,MARKETING ,CRITICISM - Abstract
This paper explores the recent re-emergence of a gay scene in Shoreditch and argues that its reappraisal of British pub culture and appropriated versions of East End localism can be considered as a countercultural response to the marketed cosmopolitanism of Soho's gay village in the early 1990s. The original marketing of Soho as cosmopolitan was built around the rejection of the public house in favour of more 'continental' bars, signalling a move towards Europeanised consumption habits. In contrast, Shoreditch's gay scene evokes local working-class themes and the area's decaying urban aesthetics in attempts to market itself as an 'authentic' alternative to the 'artificial' West End. This paper begins by discussing a number of reoccurring themes in literary and media representations of East London before analysing specifically how some of these themes have been appropriated on Shoreditch's gay scene. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Social Background, Ethnicity, School Composition and Educational Attainment in East London.
- Author
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Hamnetta, Chris, Ramsden, Mark, and Butler, Tim
- Subjects
EVALUATION of schools ,SOCIAL background ,ETHNIC groups ,DISADVANTAGED schools ,EDUCATION & demography ,SOCIAL classes ,ACADEMIC achievement & society ,EDUCATIONAL sociology ,EDUCATION - Abstract
This paper discusses the effect of social background and ethnicity on educational performance in an area with traditionally poor levels of attainment. It begins by examining the variation in school performance for London and specifically east London. It shows how the disadvantaged nature of the area, as measured by such variables as Mosaic group and ethnic heritage, helps to explain the poor results at GCSE. The paper then changes the focus to schools within a seven-borough area of east London. Using the Pupil Level Annual School Census (PLASC) linked to the geodemographic Mosaic codes based on pupils' home postcode, the authors demonstrate that, although ethnicity accounts for some of the variation in performance, this is considerably less than that accounted for by pupil social background. In addition, they show that it is not simply the social background of the individual pupil that affects school performance at GCSE. The proportion of pupils from a given social background plays some role in boosting or diminishing the overall school performance and will influence the performance of individual pupils whatever their background. It is argued that these social background effects together with the school composition effects have a considerable impact on school performance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Shifting Muslim Gender & Family Norms in East London.
- Author
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Howe, Melissa
- Subjects
MUSLIM women ,SOCIAL role ,INDIVIDUALISM ,WOMEN'S societies & clubs ,RELIGIOUS institutions - Abstract
A major concern of Muslim communities in the West is how to preserve Islamic values in the context of predominantly non-Muslim western societies. Two central and related issues are women's roles and family form/function. This paper examines these issues with a focus on how male Muslim community leaders from ten different mosques in East London represent women's roles and the family. Data are based on in-depth interviews I conducted in East London in 2000. My analysis highlights the diversity of informants' representations of women and the family. At the same time, it suggests that the structural and cultural forces underpinning the shift in British attitudes away from familism and towards individualism also affect East London's Muslim communitiesâ?”and perhaps even divide them. ..PAT.-Unpublished Manuscript [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
11. Salvage Anthropology in a City Without History: East London and Photographic Collections of Joseph Denfield, 1950–1969.
- Author
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Mnyaka, Phindezwa Elizabeth and Bank, Leslie
- Subjects
PHOTOGRAPHERS ,PHOTOGRAPHY & history ,ANTHROPOLOGY & history ,HISTORY ,PICTURES - Abstract
This paper explores the personal and public photography taken in the 1960s by Joseph Denfield, a well-known South African ethnographic photographer and amateur historian in East London. We argue that his collection allows for a critical reflection on the narratives of the history and culture of East London during this period. Drawing attention to the economic, infrastructural, political and cultural changes that the city underwent from the 1950s onward, we place Denfield's images alongside such changes noting the ways they offer a silent critique of the ‘dismantling’ of the city's colonial past, and in turn draw on the discursive trope of ‘salvage anthropology’ to ‘redeem’ such a past. His images are melancholic and nostalgic, documenting a city in ruins. They lament the passing of an era and the collapse of a particular kind of city. Some of his photographs were deeply personal and private, but they are also of great public significance because they now provide the cornerstone of a heritage-driven representational history of a city which, we argue, effectively has no modern history. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. “Fox Tots Attack Shock”: Urban Foxes, Mass Media and Boundary-Breaching.
- Author
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Cassidy, Angela and Mills, Brett
- Subjects
COEXISTENCE of species ,FOX behavior ,INFANTS' injuries ,MASS media & the environment - Abstract
On June 7, 2010, UK media outlets reported that 9-month-old twins living in East London had been rushed to hospital following a “suspected fox attack”: the babies had been seriously injured. This story received sustained coverage for several months, and became the focus of debate over the behavior of urban foxes, and how they and humans should coexist. Using textual analysis to unravel the various discourses surrounding this moment, this paper discusses how the incident became such a prominent “media event.” Alongside the contexts of the “silly season” and a period of political transition, we argue that this incident breached a series of spatial boundaries that many societies draw between people and the “natural world,” from the “safest space” of a child's cot, to the categorizations made about animals themselves. We discuss the consequences of such boundary breaches, pointing to a deep confusion over the assignment of responsibility for, and expertise about, the figure of the “urban fox.” [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Setting up a dual diagnosis service within a forensic inpatient setting: reflections one year on.
- Author
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Wood, Nikki, Patel, Kiran, Skinner, Josephine, and Thomson, Kirsty
- Subjects
DUAL diagnosis ,MENTAL health services ,FORENSIC psychiatry ,MENTAL health planning - Abstract
In 2008 a dual diagnosis service was set up within the forensic services of East London NHS Foundation Trust. This paper provides an outline of the service as it currently stands, and a description of the multidisciplinary staff roles within the service. Each staff member reflects on the success and challenges over the year that the service has been operational. Pointers to our future plans and strategy development are made. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Lesser youth?: particular universalisms and young separated migrants in East London.
- Author
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Sinha, Shamser and Uppal, Shruti
- Subjects
UNIVERSALISM (Theology) ,CITIZENSHIP ,YOUTH ,IMMIGRANTS ,MULTICULTURALISM ,QUALITATIVE research - Abstract
While entitlements are often expressed as universal and linked to the rights citizens should have, young people's access to them is shaped by their social positioning, meaning that whether, and in what sense, they are citizens is pertinent. If citizens have access to universal entitlements, does this position certain young people who do not have such access as 'lesser youth' because their entitlements are reduced and citizenship diminished or non-existent? This paper examines whether and how young, separated migrants wanting refuge may be positioned as 'lesser youth'. It draws on a sample of them and multisector professionals examining qualitative data on accessing health care, sexual exploitation and rebuilding lives. The data suggest that the legislative and institutional framework they face militates against their enjoying the 'universal' entitlements of citizens. This reflects their positioning as 'lesser youth' excluded from the full rights citizens are entitled to. Such a positioning is in large part underpinned by contested notions of nationhood, belonging and entitlement central to communitarian citizenship but which exclude them. We argue that a meaningful citizenship for these youth requires a contestation of restrictive communitarian ideas and practices in ways forwarding a more inclusive and socially just multicultural UK. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Underneath the Arches in the East End: An Evaluation of the Planning and Design Policy Context of the East London Line Extension Project.
- Author
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Haywood, Russ
- Subjects
ARCH design & construction ,URBAN planning ,RAILROAD stations ,GOVERNMENT ownership of railroads ,TRANSPORTATION policy ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Historically the development of principles and practice for integrated planning and urban design around suburban railway stations has not been a core component of British planning. However, over the past decade or so, in response to the growth of a consensus around the need to promote more sustainable transport behaviour, this situation has begun to change. This paper reviews the contemporary literature for integrated planning and design at and around stations and derives a set of analytical criteria which are used to evaluate the policy context for a new railway project in East London: the East London Line Extension. Conclusions are drawn as to whether the principles of good practice are being adhered to and the likelihood of the stations and their environs becoming exemplars of good practice for others to follow. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Living roofs and brownfield wildlife: towards a fluid biogeography of UK nature conservation.
- Author
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Lorimer, Jamie
- Subjects
- *
NATURE conservation , *HABITATS , *BIOGEOGRAPHY , *HUMAN-animal relationships , *CONSERVATIONISTS - Abstract
This paper follows the trials and tribulations of a loose alliance of urban conservationists seeking to create and maintain spaces for brownfield wildlife in East London. It focuses, in particular, on the construction of living roofs—an innovative conservation strategy where wildlife habitat is created on top of new and old buildings in the city. The paper identifies three obstacles that have challenged the development of brownfield conservation, which relate to the urban geographies, lively temporalities, and inconspicuous forms of brownfield wildlife and wild-living. These obstacles differ markedly from those of the nonhumans prioritised in mainstream conservation. Brownfield conservationists have developed a novel and fluid model of practice, whose emergence and characteristics can be linked to wider developments in UK nature conservation. This model chimes clearly with new approaches to theorising human-nonhuman interaction that have been developed in nonequilibrium ecology and relational geography. Drawing together these empirical and theoretical innovations, the paper concludes by outlining the parameters of a fluid biogeography of UK wildlife conservation to help understand and guide future conservation practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Bridgeworks on the East London railway line extension, UK.
- Author
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Place, David and Cox, Roger
- Subjects
RAILROAD design & construction ,CONSTRUCTION industry - Abstract
The East London railway line extension is one of the most intensive railway reconstruction projects undertaken in the UK. An existing operational railway with Victorian infrastructure has been taken out of service so that it can be extended and upgraded to provide a high-quality metro-style passenger service across London. The project encompasses integrating modern bridges into Victorian railway infrastructure, building new bridges and viaducts in the centre of London and minimising disruption while putting new bridges across the mainlines into two of London's railway termini. The paper describes the bridge structures and how they are being built. Two particular design issues with regard to the maintenance of railway bridges are highlighted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Not Lost in Translation: Protocols for Interpreting Trauma-Focused CBT.
- Author
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d'Ardenne, Patricia, Farmer, Elly, Ruaro, Laura, and Priebe, Stefan
- Subjects
POST-traumatic stress disorder ,TRANSLATING & interpreting ,COGNITIVE therapy ,REFUGEES ,MEDICAL protocols - Abstract
This paper describes the development of protocols with interpreters employed in an East London psychological trauma clinic. The service treats traumatized refugee people with cognitive methods, according to the National Institute for Clinical Excellence (NICE) Guidelines for PTSD. NICE states that language should not be a barrier to treatment, but provides no further guidance to achieve this. These protocols for interpreting CBT are designed to be explicit, consistent and ethical. A telephone poll from a recent UK-wide trauma survey, a focus group with local interpreters, and practitioner reflection were all used to develop and refine the protocols and their rationale, which are described, together with implications for future culturally sensitive practice and research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. “Busting with blood and gore and full of passion”: the impact of an oral retelling of the Iliad in the primary classroom.
- Author
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Reedy, David and Lister, Bob
- Subjects
CLASSROOMS ,CURRICULUM - Abstract
This paper describes the impact of an oral retelling of Homer's Iliad on pupils' learning in Key Stage 2 classrooms (children aged 9–11) in schools in East London. We argue that the oral nature of the retelling and responses promoted high levels of engagement and inclusion, leading to enhanced understanding by the pupils. The use of a complex and emotionally powerful text also encouraged a changing of the nature of the discourse between teachers and pupils. Finally we argue for the use of texts like the Iliad as an integral part of the literacy curriculum. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The best, the worst and the average: secondary school choice and education performance in East London.
- Author
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Butler, Tim, Hamnett, Chris, Ramsden, Mark, and Webber, Richard
- Subjects
SCHOOL choice ,SCHOOL census ,HUMAN geography ,PARENTS ,SCHOOL children ,EDUCATION & demography - Abstract
In this paper we investigate whether the distance between school and the pupil’s home is related to social background in a six borough area of East London. Also investigated is the extent to which schools in the area perform in line with expectations on the basis of the social composition of their intake. The research involves analysis of the Pupil Level Annual School Census (PLASC) to which geodemographic codes supplied by Experian have been attached. We demonstrate that the six schools in the area which achieved the highest average points score at GCSE recruit pupils widely from within the area (and to a lesser extent outside), whilst the lowest performing six schools recruit from much more narrowly defined catchment areas. In terms of school performance, we show that whilst we might expect schools to perform better as they become more distant from inner East London and nearer to the M25, this is not necessarily the case. In our conclusions we argue that these data support the claims made on the basis of ethnographic data about the class nature of school selection and parental choice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. HIV in East London: ethnicity, gender and risk. Design and methods.
- Author
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Elford, Jonathan, Anderson, Jane, Bukutu, Cecilia, and Ibrahim, Fowzia
- Subjects
HIV ,GENDER mainstreaming ,HIV infection risk factors - Abstract
Background: While men who have sex with men remain the group at greatest risk of acquiring HIV infection in the UK, the number of new diagnoses among heterosexuals has risen steadily over the last five years. In the UK, three-quarters of heterosexual men and women diagnosed with HIV in 2004 probably acquired their infection in Africa. This changing epidemiological pattern is particularly pronounced in East London because of its ethnically diverse population. Design and methods: The objective of the study was to examine the social, economic and behavioural characteristics of patients with HIV infection currently receiving treatment and care in hospitals in East London. The research focused on ethnicity, gender, sexuality, education, employment, housing, HIV treatment, stigma, discrimination, religion, migration and sexual risk behaviour. People diagnosed with HIV infection attending outpatient treatment clinics at St Bartholomew's, the Royal London, Whipp's Cross, Homerton, Newham and Barking hospitals (all in East London) over a 4-6 month period were invited to participate in the study in 2004-2005. Those who agreed to participate completed a confidential, self-administered pen-and-paper questionnaire. During the study period, 2680 patients with HIV attended the outpatient clinics in the six participating hospitals, of whom 2299 were eligible for the study and 1687 completed a questionnaire. The response rate was 73% of eligible patients and 63% of all patients attending the clinics during the survey period. Discussion: A clinic-based study has allowed us to survey nearly 1700 patients with HIV from diverse backgrounds receiving treatment and care in East London. The data collected in this study will provide valuable information for the planning and delivery of appropriate clinical care, social support and health promotion for people living with HIV not only in East London but in other parts of the capital as well as elsewhere in the UK. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. A Model for Mental Health Needs and Resourcing in Small Geographic Areas: A Multivariate Spatial Perspective.
- Author
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Congdon, Peter
- Subjects
MENTAL health ,PUBLIC health ,PSYCHIATRIC referral ,MEDICAL referrals ,CONSULTATION-liaison psychiatry - Abstract
This paper considers how small area variations in a set of psychiatric referral outcomes in a London health authority of 750,000 people may inform health need assessment and health resourcing for mental illness based on true need. As well as adopting a multivariate perspective, the spatial interdependence of the outcomes is included in the modelling approach outlined. By contrast, existing studies on mental health need tend to focus on single outcomes, and may not include spatial dependence. The analysis relates to three hospital referral outcomes for psychiatric conditions, and to total community mental health referrals across sixty-seven electoral wards in East London. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Can social support protect bullied adolescents from adverse outcomes? A prospective study on the effects of bullying on the educational achievement and mental health of adolescents at secondary schools in East London
- Author
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Rothon, Catherine, Head, Jenny, Klineberg, Emily, and Stansfeld, Stephen
- Subjects
- *
SCHOOL bullying , *MENTAL health of students , *ADOLESCENT psychology , *SECONDARY education , *SOCIAL support , *ACADEMIC achievement , *MENTAL depression , *LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Abstract: This paper investigates the extent to which social support can have a buffering effect against the potentially adverse consequences of bullying on school achievement and mental health. It uses a representative multiethnic sample of adolescents attending East London secondary schools in three boroughs. Bullied adolescents were less likely to achieve the appropriate academic achievement benchmark for their age group and bullied boys (but not girls) were more likely to exhibit depressive symptoms compared to those not bullied. High levels of social support from family were important in promoting good mental health. There was evidence that high levels of support from friends and moderate (but not high) family support was able to protect bullied adolescents from poor academic achievement. Support from friends and family was not sufficient to protect adolescents against mental health difficulties that they might face as a result of being bullied. More active intervention from schools is recommended. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. New spaces of inpatient care for people with mental illness: A complex ‘rebirth’ of the clinic?
- Author
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Curtis, Sarah, Gesler, W., Priebe, Stefan, and Francis, Susan
- Subjects
- *
MEDICAL geography , *MENTAL illness treatment , *HOSPITAL care , *PSYCHIATRIC hospitals - Abstract
Abstract: This paper examines the implications for design of inpatient settings of community-based models of care and treatment of mental illness. The study draws on ideas from relational geographies and expands interpretations based on Foucault''s writing. We analyse material from a case study which explored the views of patients, consultants, and other staff from a new Psychiatric Inpatient Unit in a deprived area of East London, UK. We discuss in particular: the tension between providing a caring and supportive institutional environment and ensuring that patients are returned to the community when they are ready; the links between an acute inpatient facility and its local community; the potential significance of the psychiatric hospital as a relatively stable feature in the otherwise insecure and unpredictable geographical experience of people with long-term mental illnesses. We discuss the relevance of these issues for design of new psychiatric inpatient facilities. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Ground Control.
- Author
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Minton, Anna
- Subjects
SPORTS executives ,OLYMPIC Games (30th : 2012 : London, England) ,LEGACIES - Abstract
This article reports that executives who run the 2012 London Olympic projects including David Higgins had emphasized that the importance of the Games for Great Britain is not sport but legacy. Higgins, the former head of Lend Lease which built Bluewater, Britain's second largest out-of-town shopping center, stresses that everything will be driven by legacy. The article also mentions the possible regeneration of East London including Stratford City as a result of the London 2012 Olympics.
- Published
- 2012
26. The Impact of the London Olympics Announcement on Property Prices.
- Author
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Kavetsos, Georgios
- Subjects
OLYMPIC Games (30th : 2012 : London, England) ,HOME prices ,ECONOMICS ,ECONOMIC history - Abstract
This study estimates the impact of the London 2012 Olympics announcement on property prices. Using a self-constructed dataset of a sample of property transactions, it is estimated that properties in host boroughs are sold between 2.1 and 3.3 per cent higher, depending on the definition of the impact area. A similar investigation based on radius rings suggests that properties up to three miles away from the main Olympic stadium sell for 5 per cent higher. It is estimated that the overall impact on the price of properties in host boroughs amounts to £1.4 billion, having substantial social and financial implications for existing residents. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Playing the Ethnic Card: Politics and Segregation in London's East End.
- Author
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Glynn, Sarah
- Subjects
SEGREGATION ,BENGALI (South Asian people) ,MUSLIMS ,RESOURCE allocation ,HUMAN geography ,SOCIAL history - Abstract
This article takes a critical look at the exploitation of difference and at the impact of political forces of various kinds on ethnic segregation. It examines both external forces and forces from within 'communities' themselves through the case history of Bengali settlement in the East End of London. It assesses the different, though interacting, roles of immigration legislation and resource allocation, community and separatist politics, populism and multiculturalism, and brings the story up to date with an account of the incorporation of faith groups in local governance and of the wooing of the Muslim vote in the context of 'the war on terror'. This understanding is presented as a necessary first step in combating ethnic division and focusing instead on social equality for all ethnicities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Counselling in culturally diverse inner-city communities: The rise and fall of the Kabin counselling project.
- Author
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Green, Roger, Nuttall-Smith Dicks, Serena, and Buckroyd, Julia
- Subjects
CULTURAL pluralism ,PLANNED communities ,GOVERNMENT policy ,COUNSELING - Abstract
The social and economic regeneration of inner-city housing estates has been a common feature of successive UK government policies for a number of years. However, their focus has primarily been on the physical regeneration of communities to the exclusion of individuals' emotional and personal problems. Community-based counselling projects are still a rarity in regeneration projects. This article describes the establishment and subsequent history of a counselling project based on an inner-city housing estate in East London, which was undergoing extensive regeneration. It discusses how the service originated from the ongoing work of a participatory action research project and how it challenged stereotypical images of counselling. It demonstrated that free, accessible and locally based counselling services are needed in the regeneration of communities; that extensive planning is necessary both within the organisation and in relation to funding before the project begins; and that on-going core funding is essential to sustaining such innovative and much-needed projects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. London and the East End as Spectacles of Urban Tourism.
- Author
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Roemer, Nils
- Subjects
GEOGRAPHICAL discoveries ,URBAN tourism ,CITIES & towns ,ETHNIC neighborhoods ,ETHNIC groups - Abstract
The article discusses the significance of London and East End exploration for urban tourism in England. East End exploration and investigation promises urban sociologists, social workers and travelers something different from the West End leisure culture in London. This challenges the identities of individuals and their understanding of social and ethnic differences. It notes that the exploration of ethnic neighborhoods, slumming, originates from commodified urban pastime.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. The 2012 Olympic Games and the communities of East London.
- Author
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Timms, Stephen
- Subjects
OLYMPIC Games (30th : 2012 : London, England) ,UNEMPLOYMENT ,COMMUNITY development ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This article discusses the potential impact of the 2012 Olympic Games in London, England on the East End community that will host the event. The local economic impact of the Olympic games is framed in terms of the construction jobs that it provides and its potential to revitalize the economy of the East End. The goal of reducing unemployment through the course of developing London for the games is described.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. 'Careless talk': A critique of Dench, Gavron and Young's The New East End.
- Author
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MOORE, ROBERT
- Subjects
COMMUNITY studies ,SOCIAL science research ,SOCIOLOGY ,SOCIAL policy ,SOCIAL conditions in England - Abstract
The task of revisiting Young and Willmott's Family and Kinship in East London was probably impossible. Dench, Gavron and Young extended the geographical coverage of their study area to include some fundamentally different zones adjacent to Bethnal Green. The study extended over a decade but the authors' The New East End fails to make clear dates, actors and locations. The theoretical framework is incoherent and especially so when referring to actors outside the area of study who the authors claim have considerable power and influence in the East End. Local people are static informants and so as a 'community study' the book fails to provide a narrative or analysis rooted in local events during a very eventful period of its history. The discussion of social policy changes, which form the background to this study is partial and tendentious. Although there is an illuminating section discussing migration from Sylhet the book is simply bad sociology. One outcome of the publication of The New East End has been that more general readers (including both the BNP and the Chairman of the Commission for Racial Equality) have been able to draw whatever conclusions from the book suit their own agendas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Does Interpreter-Mediated CBT with Traumatized Refugee People Work? A Comparison of Patient Outcomes in East London.
- Author
-
d' Ardenne, Patricia, Ruaro, Laura, Cestari, Leticia, Fakhoury, Walid, and Priebe, Stefan
- Subjects
COGNITIVE therapy ,POST-traumatic stress disorder ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,TRANSLATING & interpreting ,EMPIRICAL research ,REFUGEES - Abstract
There is controversy about the value of psychological interventions offered to refugee people through an interpreter, but little empirical evidence in this field. This study compared routine clinical outcomes of three groups of PTSD patients receiving CBT: refugees who required interpreters; refugees who did not require an interpreter; and English-speaking non-refugees. The aim of the study was to ascertain whether interpreted CBT is feasible. All three groups attended a similar number of sessions and showed significant improvements after treatment. Refugees receiving treatment with and without interpreting did not differ in treatment outcomes. The findings suggest that interpreters can be used with positive outcome in treating PTSD patients with CBT. This study supports NICE (2005) recommendations that CBT should be offered regardless of language need. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Forensic psychiatry assessments and admissions from East London, 1987 - 94.
- Author
-
Coid, Jeremy and Dunn, Warren
- Subjects
FORENSIC psychiatry ,HEALTH service areas ,INPATIENT care ,CLINICAL medicine - Abstract
There is a shortage of information on the relationships between resources available to Regional Medium Secure services, demand from catchment area populations, and clinical factors which determine whether patients assessed are actually admitted. During a 7 year study period, the East London Service had few resources and the assessment process was entirely reactive in that all referrals were generated by external agencies. Patients selected for admission were primarily serious offenders with schizophrenia specifically referred for admission to medium security. The inpatient service was heavily reliant on admissions to the private sector. Needs of the catchment area population could not be met and it was necessary to prioritise a limited subgroup of mentally disordered prisoners at the expense of supporting local services and patients inappropriately remaining in maximum security. These findings are of contemporary relevance to the continuing lack of capacity in other medium secure services in the UK. Future service planning based on the 'rates-under-treatment' approach in the absence of adequate epidemiological data is discredited by these findings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Bengali Muslims: the new East End radicals?
- Author
-
Glynn, Sarah
- Subjects
MASS mobilization ,IMMIGRANTS ,ISLAM ,JEWS ,RELIGIOUS groups ,IDEOLOGY ,SOCIAL history - Abstract
This article analyses the growth of a new revivalist, internationally orientated Islam in Tower Hamlets. It moves beyond discussions of identity to look at the roles of ideology and socio-economic background, and to assess the effect of the new identities and ideologies on social and political action. It looks at why young Bengalis are being increasingly attracted to Islam, and at how this can benefit both themselves and the wider Bengali community; and it also explores where the impact of the new Islam is less positive, ending with an examination of the limits of its power as a vehicle for radical change in a deprived area of London. The article is based on interviews carried out in 2000 and 2001 as part of a wider historical study of political mobilization of Jewish and Bengali immigrants in London's East End. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. East Side Story.
- Author
-
Newman, Cathy
- Subjects
IMMIGRANTS ,NEIGHBORHOOD change ,BENGALI (South Asian people) - Abstract
The article looks at the East End of London, England, or East London. It recounts the changing ethnic composition of the area due to several waves of immigrants, and says that Bengali Muslims are the largest group as of 2012, with African, West Indian, Eastern European, and other groups as well. It notes the East End has long been a poor and overcrowded part of the city.
- Published
- 2012
36. The sociology of the betting shop.
- Author
-
Newman, Otto
- Subjects
GAMBLING ,SOCIAL interaction ,SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
The article focuses on the betting shop located in London, England's East End street market. A market in which the large number of stalls offer a rich variety of commodities, chiefly foodstuffs and apparel. The accent is on price, on repeatable bargains, clearance lines, bankrupt or fire stocks, with occasional innuendoes to bargains owing their value to stuff being nicked. The market is patronized largely by the local population, a heterogeneous mixture of White and Black, Gentile, Jew and Moslem, of firmly rooted and transient, locally born and bred and recently immigrated. They all seem to be able to count on their stable, regular clientele. Although punters, apart from other considerations affecting preferences, will after a prolonged unsuccessful run be inclined to switch custom. Naturally some punters will change under impact of external forces, new job, new home, a new set of mates, and many others, the floaters, will lay their bets at whichever betting shop happens to be most convenient at the time.
- Published
- 1968
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Round & About.
- Subjects
CALENDARS (Publications) ,HISTORY ,HISTORIANS ,EXHIBITIONS ,CONFERENCES & conventions - Abstract
A calender of events for historians in March 2010 is presented which includes the exhibition "Maurice Broomfield: A New Look at Industry" at the Pallant House Gallery in Chichester, England, a panel discussion about writing national history at the British Academy, and a series of walks and debates about the architectural development of East London, England.
- Published
- 2010
38. Evolving theory and practice—the 1997 East London Community Psychology Conference.
- Author
-
Hughes, Gillian
- Subjects
COMMUNITY psychology ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,PSYCHOLOGISTS ,PSYCHOTHERAPY - Abstract
In October 1997, 60 people gathered in the East End of London, England for the third Community Psychology Conference. The previous conference a year earlier in Glasgow had stimulated such exciting debate and a sense of shared purpose, that psychologists in Newham, Tower Hamlets, Haringey and Hackney were keen to take on the organization of the 1997 conference. Being an area with a history of dynamic and growing ethnic diversity combined with a well-defined voluntary sector, East End of London has a wealth of exciting opportunities for the practice of community psychology. During the first day, the emphasis was on project work that had been set up by clinical psychologists in East London. Three commentators from the fields of feminist psychology, social constructionist psychotherapy, and ethnography shared their observations and thoughts after hearing each presentation on how their theoretical perspectives might be used to extend and develop these projects. For many of the conference participants, one of the most important aspects of the conference had been networking and re-establishing contact with like-minded people.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Parents with learning disabilities: a study of gender and cultural perspectives in East London.
- Author
-
O'Hara, Jean and Martin, Hemmie
- Subjects
PEOPLE with learning disabilities ,PARENTS with disabilities - Abstract
Summary The rights of people with learning disabilities to marry and have a family is at the heart of the Government's new strategy (Valuing People ), yet there are few integrated and co-ordinated services to meet their needs. All too often, learning disability is the sole reason why children are removed from their biological parents. Whilst there is a small but growing literature on the quality and extent of the social supports available, little attention has been paid to culture and gender. This study analyses data on parents who came into contact with the specialist community learning disability health team in East London over a 5-year period in respect of culture, gender and outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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