Tesis sobre el tema "Care negotiations"
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Harris, Mary C. "The social construction of prematurity : negotiations in neonatal intensive care /". Thesis, Connect to this title online; UW restricted, 1998. http://hdl.handle.net/1773/7310.
Texto completoTempleton, Karen Jobe. "In tandem or in tension? Patient-nurse negotiations from ICU to hospital discharge". Thesis, The University of Arizona, 1988. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/292039.
Texto completoBlaxland, Megan. "Everyday negotiations for care and autonomy in the world of welfare-to-work the policy experience of Australian mothers, 2003-2006 /". Connect to full text, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/4134.
Texto completoSubmitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy to the Dept. of Sociology and Social Policy, Faculty of Arts. Includes bibliographical references. Also available in print form.
Blaxland, Megan. "Everyday negotiations for care and autonomy in the world of welfare-to-work: The policy experience of Australian mothers, 2003-2006". Thesis, The University of Sydney, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/4134.
Texto completoBlaxland, Megan. "Everyday negotiations for care and autonomy in the world of welfare-to-work: The policy experience of Australian mothers, 2003-2006". University of Sydney, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/4134.
Texto completoA significant new direction in Australian income support policy was introduced in 2002. Known as Australians Working Together, this development changed the basis of social security entitlement for parents. Throughout most of the twentieth century, low-income sole mothers, and later sole fathers and parents in couple families, could claim income support throughout most of their children’s school years. The primary grounds for their entitlement were low income and parenting responsibilities. Australians Working Together introduced compulsory employment-oriented activities to Parenting Payment entitlement for parents whose youngest child had turned 13. This thesis investigates mothers’ experience of this new welfare system. Using Dorothy Smith’s ‘everyday life’ approach to research, it draws upon qualitative and quantitative methods to analyse Australians Working Together. The research is grounded in a longitudinal interview survey of Australian mothers of teenage children who were subject to these changes. The analysis moves from their experience outwards through the four levels of analysis in Williams and Popay’s welfare research framework. The thesis examines mothers’ day-to-day worlds, the opportunities and constraints they navigate, the policies and institutions which shape their opportunities, the political framing of those policies, and wider social and economic transformations. In their negotiation of the social security system, mothers are striving for recognition of autonomy and care. They want their capacity to determine for themselves how to live their lives to be acknowledged. They would like the social contributions they make through employment, education and voluntary work to be recognised. They struggle for their unpaid work caring for their families to be valued. They wish that they had sufficient material resources to care well for their families. The thesis develops a theoretical framework to examine these struggles drawing on the work of Honneth, Fraser, Lister, Sennett, Fisher and Tronto, Daly and Lewis. This multi-level, everyday life analysis reveals the possibility of reframing the social security system around mutual respect.
Aeyelts, Renee. "Negotiating care : how care is negotiated between a young carer and a parent facing mental illness and addiction". Thesis, University of British Columbia, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/28597.
Texto completoDesbruyères, Clément. "L’épreuve du cancer à un âge avancé : pratiques médicales et négociations du soin en oncogériatrie". Electronic Thesis or Diss., Brest, 2024. http://www.theses.fr/2024BRES0036.
Texto completoThis research aims at understanding the trial of cancer when it is diagnosed at an advanced age, considering it at the interface of professional practices and individual and family reasoning. Some older patients already live with various frailties, which can reduce the expected benefits of the treatment envisaged by physicians. Facing the risk of seeing their chronological age determining the access to therapies, oncogeriatrics is believed to guide medical decision-making processes towards greater fairness, through the assessment of patient’s frailty. The implementation of this approach questions the ways in which oncologist engage with aging, as well as how the trial of cancer is conceptualized, expressed, and addressed by elderly individuals included in such a care system. To do so, I conducted a qualitative investigation combining in situ observations in two healthcare establishments in Brittany (France) and semi-structured interviews with healthcare professionals, patients, and some of their relatives. The analysis allowed to highlight the trial of cancer at an advanced age as shaped by different times and temporalities, both from the perspective of patients and professionals. It has also led to shed new light on care negotiations in the field of oncology, partly determined by the age and qualified frailty of cancer patients
Van, Graan André. "Negotiating modernism in Cape Town: 1918-1948 : an investigation into the introduction, contestation, negotiation and adaptation of modernism in the architecture of Cape Town". Doctoral thesis, University of Cape Town, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/11100.
Texto completoShearn, Melanie Victoria. "Jostling for position : fathers negotiating work and care". Thesis, University of Leeds, 2009. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.509869.
Texto completoHaghshenas, Abbas Public Health & Community Medicine Faculty of Medicine UNSW. "Negotiating norms, navigating care: the practice of culturally competent care in cardiac rehabilitation". Awarded by:University of New South Wales. School of Public Health and Community Medicine, 2006. http://handle.unsw.edu.au/1959.4/32280.
Texto completoAcosta, García N. (Nicolás). "Chocó challenges:communities negotiating matters of concern and care on Colombia’s margin". Doctoral thesis, Oulun yliopisto, 2018. http://urn.fi/urn:isbn:9789526218458.
Texto completoTiivistelmä Chocó on syrjäinen ja biologisesti monimuotoinen alue Pohjois-Tyynenmeren rannikolla Kolumbiassa. Kyseinen alue on koti useille Embera-alkuperäiskansan jäsenille sekä Afrikasta polveutuville yhteisöille. Ryhmät jakavat ja haastavat kolonialismin, väkivaltaisuuksien, riiston sekä sorron värittämän historian. Tämä väitöskirja tarkastelee tapoja, joilla Chocón paikalliset yhteisöt haastavat ja muokkaavat heitä koskevia kysymyksenasetteluja. Se keskittyy yhteisöjä koskeviin huolenaiheisiin, jotka liittyvät biologisen monimuotoisuuden suojelun vaikutuksiin, kehitysinfrastruktuuriin ja huumekauppaan Ensimmäiseksi väitöskirja tarkastelee haasteita, jotka liittyvät maailmanlaajuisten muutosten ja paikallisten huolenaiheiden tutkimiseen. Tämän jälkeen työ kehittelee Chocóssa kerätyn etnografisen aineiston perusteella metodologiaa käsittelemään ympäristöön liittyviä arvoristiriitoja liittyen alueella sijaitsevan Utrían kansallispuiston käyttöön. Kolmanneksi väitöskirja tutkii paikallisyhteisöjen sosiaalista protestia liittyen pienen vesivoimalan rakentamiseen puiston alueelle. Havainnot haastavat tulkinnan, jonka mukaan infrastruktuurin hyväksyntä tai vastustaminen alkuperäiskansojen toimesta liittyy suoraan myös alkuperäiskansojen elämäntapojen puolustamiseen tai uhmaamiseen. Neljänneksi, ajelehtivaa kokaiinia on viime aikoina päätynyt Chocón rannikkoalueelle maan huumeiden vastaisen sodan seurauksena. Chocóssa ilmiöön viitataan nimellä Valkoinen kala, ja tässä työssä aihetta lähestytään tarkastelemalla siihen liittyviä käytänteitä ja muutoksia paikallisessa kontekstissa. Viidenneksi, Utrían kansallispuistoa tutkitaan visuaalisesti rytmien ja ajallisuuksien paikkana. Lopuksi esitetään, että paikallisten yhteisöjen hyödyntämät mekanismit heitä koskevissa keskusteluissa horjuttavat valtasuhteita epävarmoissa oloissa ja tarjoavat vaihtoehtoisia solidaarisuuden ja rinnakkaiselon narratiiveja, joilla lähestyä huolenaiheita
Thackwell, Nicola Donna. "“We waited for our turn, which sometimes never came” : registrars negotiating systemic racism in Western Cape medical schools". Thesis, Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/86641.
Texto completoENGLISH ABSTRACT; In order for the transformation objectives of racial and gender diversity to be adequately reflected in the South African medical profession, it is crucial to understand how Black medical registrars experience the training environment. This qualitative study presents the experience of ten Black African medical specialists who completed their registrar training in the Western Cape in the past five years. Using both thematic and discourse analysis the study aimed to identify and describe the interpersonal, structural and institutional factors that may impede or promote Black advancement during registrar training. Participant experiences where contextualised in relation to discourses around the medical profession as a site of cultural reproduction that has been historically constructed as the exclusive domain of the White male. The analysis unearths experiences of systemic racism where the organisational culture of training institutions is experienced as alienating and unwelcoming to Black professionals. The findings raise the need for a more thorough evaluation of how transformations efforts are being received in specialist medical education. Key Words: Black doctors, Transformation in Higher Education, Systemic Racism, Medical training
AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Met die oog op die realisering van die transformasiedoelwitte rakende ras- en geslagsdiversiteit in die Suid-Afrikaanse mediese professie, is dit deurslaggewend om te verstaan hoe Swart mediese spesialis studente die opleidingsomgewing ervaar. Hierdie kwalitatiewe studie gee die ervaring weer van tien Swart Suid-Afrikaanse mediese spesialiste wat die afgelope vyf jaar hulle opleiding in die Wes-Kaap voltooi het. Deur gebruik te maak van beide tematiese- en diskoersanalise, poog die studie daarin om die interpersoonlike, strukturele en institusionele faktore wat Swart bevordering tydens professionele opleiding kan belemmer of bevorder, te identifiseer en te beskryf. Deelnemers se ervarings is gekontekstualiseer in verhouding tot die diskoerse rondom die mediese professie as terrein van kulturele voortsetting van wat histories as eksklusiewe domein van Wit mans gegeld het. Die studie ontbloot ervaringe van sistemiese rassisme, waarin Swart professionele beroepspersone vervreem en onwelkom voel in die organisasiekultuur van opleidingsinstansies.Die bevindinge beklemtoon die behoefte aan ‘n meer diepgaande evaluasie van hoe transformasie-pogings ontvang word in mediese spesialis opleiding. Sleutelwoorde: Swart dokters, transformasie in tersiêre opleiding, sistemiese rassisme, mediese opleiding
Mitchell, Sharrone CJ. "Women's negotiation of alternative sexualities in the Western Cape: A Cape Town case study". University of the Western Cape, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/11394/8435.
Texto completoThis mini thesis is an exploratory study of the lived experiences of bisexual and lesbian women in the Western Cape with regard to how they claim agency and negotiate their individual sexualities. Using mixed methodologies this study aims to look at the ways in which bisexual and lesbian women negotiate their sexuality in a landscape dominated by heterosexual discourses. Also considered are the contradictory ways in which these women assert their roles as lesbians and bisexual individuals and how these roles serve to simultaneously reinforce and challenge the dominant order of heterosexuality. The conflicting views of the respondents are documented which further demonstrates the complexities surrounding sexuality. This research identifies and explores both international and local research already conducted on alternative sexualities and address the lack of black researchers' conduct of these studies on the African continent. The study also records an acknowledgement of the researcher's reflection that she too holds contradictory views on some of these issues.
Brown, S. P. W. "Negotiating priorities : An ethnography of health service management". Thesis, University of Essex, 1985. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.371863.
Texto completoHodges, Rebecca. "Negotiating Culture and Care: Challenges and Opportunities in Mental Health and Reproductive Health Care in the Sultanate of Oman". Thesis, University of Oregon, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/1794/19329.
Texto completoMai, Magdaline Mbong. "Negotiation of identities and language practices among Cameroonian immigrants in Cape Town". Thesis, University of the Western Cape, 2011. http://etd.uwc.ac.za/index.php?module=etd&action=viewtitle&id=gen8Srv25Nme4_4581_1363780852.
Texto completoThis thesis is an exploration of the historical, socio-cultural, economic, and political settings in which identities are negotiated and performed among Cameroonian immigrants in Cape Town. Focusing on language as localized practices and different interaction regimes, the thesis investigates how Cameroonian immigrants maintain and reconfigure the Anglophone/Francophone identity options in novel and hybrid ways. In addition, the study examines how ideologies favouring different languages are reproduced and challenged in translocal and transnational discourses. Guided by the poststructuralist theories the thesis explores the stance that reality is socially constructed, based on symbolic and material structural limitations that are challenged and maintained in interaction. That is, whatever we do or believe in, is supported by some historical or cultural 
frames of meanings in our lived world, which often gives room to some manoeuvre to do things in a new way. The study adopts a multiplex interpretive approach to data 
collection. This entails a qualitative sociolinguistic approach where interviews, discussion and observations at different socio-economic places namely
meetings, workplaces, 
homes, restaurants, drinking spots and many sites from all over Cape Town, were explored. The study suggests that Cameroonians have a multiplicity of identity options, which are manifested and negotiated performatively through language, dress code, song, food, business, and other practices that comprise their lifestyles. These identities are 
translocal and transnational in nature, and tend to blend South African, Cameroonian, and even American traits. It is also suggests that the different identity options which they manifest are highly mobile, enabling Cameroonians to fit into South African social structures as well as the Negotiation of Identities and Language Practices Cameroonian ways of doing things. Additionally, the multiplicity of identities that Cameroonians manifest, blur the fault-line between Anglophone/Francophone identities. It is evident from the study that hybridity and the reconstruction practices are not only confined to languages. Hybridity also extends to discourse orders especially in terms of how meetings are conducted. The Cameroonian meetings captured through the activities of Mifi Association and CANOWACAT are characterised by &lsquo
disorder of discourse&rsquo
in which both formal and informal versions of English and French are used separately or as amalgams alongside CPE and their national languages, not only in side talks, but also when contributing to the meeting proceedings. Ultimately, the study concludes that Cameroonians are social actors making up an indispensable part of the social interaction in the Cape Town Diaspora. Just as they influence the languages, the entrepreneurial practices, and spaces in which they interact, the Cameroonian immigrants are also transformed. The major 
contribution of the study is that it adds to the recent debates about the nature of multilingualism and identities in late modern society. It emphasises that languages and identities are fluid, complex, and unstable. The distinction or boundaries between the various languages in multilingual practices are also not as clear-cut. This leads to a reframing of voice and actor hood as meaning is constructed across translocal and transnational contexts and domains in a networked world transformed by the mobility of endless flows ofinformation, goods, ideas, and people. Thus, the study contributes to those arguing for a paradigm shift in sociolinguistic theory in which language is not a property of groups, nor is it an autonomous and bounded system fixed in time and space. Thus, identities, languages and the spaces of interaction are not fixed systems
identities, languages, and spaces are dynamic and in a state of flux. This in turn questions the notions of multilingualism and language itself, as well as the veracity of concepts such as code-switching, 
speech community, language variation, as the search for a sociolinguistic framework that can deal with phenomena predicated by motion, instability, and uncertainty, continues.
Knezevic, Danica. "The negotiation of Self and Other in Performative Art Practice as a site of Caregiving". Thesis, The University of Sydney, 2019. https://hdl.handle.net/2123/21911.
Texto completoOlaison, Anna. "Negotiating needs : Processing older persons as home care recipients in gerontological social work practices". Doctoral thesis, Linköpings universitet, NISAL - Nationella institutet för forskning om äldre och åldrande, 2009. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-15968.
Texto completoStudien tar sin utgångspunkt i de bedömningsprocesser äldre personer genomgår för att få tillgång till hjälp i hemmet. Bedömningsprocessen där äldre, deras anhö-riga och kommunala behovsbedömare deltog studerades ur ett kommunikativt perspektiv. Interaktionen vid behovsbedömningssamtalet fungerar som en pro-blemlösningsprocess. Den äldre personens redogörelse för behov förhandlas diskursivt i interaktionen och tre olika berättelselinjer identifierades, baserade på om de sökande betraktar hemtjänsten som ett intrång, som ett komplement och stöd eller som en rättighet. När olika åsikter uttrycks har de äldre sista ordet i enlighet med Socialtjänstlagens föreskrifter. En slutsats är att de anhörigas roll i behovsbedömningsprocessen inte är definierad och att ett familjeperspektiv sak-nas. I studien analyserades också bedömningsprocessens institutionella struktur. De äldre behovssökande processas till att bli klienter, deras behov anpassas till dokumentationens ramverk och kategoriseras i enlighet med institutionella kate-gorier. I transfereringen av tal till text redovisas inte samtliga element i samtalet. Två typer av utredningstext identifierades, den faktaorienterade och den händelse-orienterade. I studien diskuteras det marknadsekonomiska tänkande som kommit att påverka bedömningsprocessen genom byråkratisering vilket står i motsatsställ-ning till det individcentrerade perspektiv som lagen förespråkar. Introduktionen av marknadsmodeller i det gerontologiska sociala arbetet har medfört en inbyggd motsättning och utgör ett välfärdspolitiskt dilemma. Förbättrade kommunikativa metoder behövs för att uppnå en holistisk bedömningsprocess.
Platzer, Hazel Katherine. "Negotiating sexual identities : the experiences of lesbians and gay men accessing mental health care". Thesis, University of Southampton, 2004. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.415238.
Texto completoHunter, Shona Dorothy Jane. "Negotiating Professional And Social Identities: Race, Gender and Profession in Two Primary Care Organisations". Thesis, University of Birmingham, 2005. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.668526.
Texto completoJere, Nobert Rangarirai. "Implementation of a rewards based negotiation module for an e commerce platform". Thesis, University of Fort Hare, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/10353/267.
Texto completoMatthews, Waseem. "Multimodality and negotiation of Cape Flats identity in selected Daily Voice front pages". Thesis, University of the Western Cape, 2009. http://etd.uwc.ac.za/index.php?module=etd&action=viewtitle&id=gen8Srv25Nme4_4688_1315294286.
Texto completoThis thesis explores the social semiotic relationship of visual and verbal signs of the Daily Voice tabloid as a way to show how the social context influences meaning of the signs used in its multimodal frontpages. The Daily Voice tabloid largely uses Kaapse English/ Afrikaans as spoken by Coloureds on the Cape Flats on its frontpages rather than standard English or standard Afrikaans associated with White people. The study assumes that the meaning constructed by and through the verbal and visual signs on the Daily Voice frontpages is interdependent on the relationship the multimodal texts have with the largely Cape Flats readership. This study maintains the importance of the idea of the localisation of meaning in socio-cultural specific contexts throughout. I conclude that Kress and Van Leeuwen&rsquo
s (1996/2006) design could be extended beyond Westernised contexts and that marginalised discourses such as those unique to the Cape Flats are not static, but indeed dynamic. I also extend the appraisal theory by Martin and White (2005) to marginalised bilingual discourse and establish that Appraisal theory can be used to not only evaluate verbal discourse but also that visual discourse needs to be considered as a tool within the appraisal framework. I also conclude by suggesting a monolectal view of Kaapse English/Afrikaans discourse. That is, the meaning potential of Kaapse English/Afrikaans by Cape Flats speakers would be lost if perceived or analysed as emanating from two languages, (White) English and (White) Afrikaans. Therefore the conclusion is that the Daily Voice uses Kaapse English/Afrikaans as is used in Cape Flats socio-cultural contexts to construct meaning-making options across its frontpages.
Lawrie, Sabina Louise. "Negotiating work and masculinities through care and development in community groups in Dar es Salaam". Thesis, University of Glasgow, 2018. http://theses.gla.ac.uk/8713/.
Texto completoKasstan, Benjamin James. "Immunities at the margins : negotiating health and bodily care among Haredi Jews in the UK". Thesis, Durham University, 2016. http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/11936/.
Texto completoMayoma, Jaclisse Lorene. "The identity construction and negotiation of 1.5 generation Congolese migrant youth in Cape Town, South Africa". University of the Western Cape, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/11394/6678.
Texto completoGlobalization has evidently led to an increase in the flow of immigrants across the world, a fact that has and continues to play a significant role in the development of studies on immigration, immigration patterns and the psycho-social struggles that immigrants face; of which identity negotiation in the new context is included. A number of works have been done on the identity negotiation and identity-forming process of immigrant youth. This study attempts to highlight, rather specifically, the unique challenges that 1.5 generation immigrant youth have in forming their identities. Rumbaut coined the term “one-and-a-half generation” to describe “children of Cuban exiles who were born in Cuba but have come of age in the United States” (1976:8). Thus the 1.5 generation immigrant youth constitutes children who were born in their country of origin but was raised and received the education and important experiences in the host country. Hence, the issue of identity becomes important for adolescents such as the 1.5 generation growing up in Diasporic settings. How they come to define who they are, their place in the world and others’ perception of them have significant implications for their successful integration into their new societies (Ogbuagu, 2013). This study takes a socio-cultural approach to investigating the identity negotiation and construction of 1.5 generation Congolese immigrant youth. Sociocultural linguistics refers to an interdisciplinary field which considers language as a sociocultural phenomenon; hence positioning identity as a phenomenon that is socially constructed through language and hence, performed within interaction and conversations.
Chiwarawara, Kenny. "Contestations, connections and negotiations: the role of networks in service delivery protests in Gugulethu, Cape town". Thesis, University of the Western Cape, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/11394/3886.
Texto completoThis study revealed the key role that social, historical, economic and political networks play in initiating and maintaining service delivery protests. While networks help in communicating service delivery problems among protestors and in mobilizing, protests that ensue are a means of communicating anger at the municipal authorities’ actions and or inactions. Using a reference to a hostage situation that occurred, I argued that there is a progression and intensification of protest tactics especially after ‘peaceful and legal’ means of engagement fail. Also, my research findings show that networks used for protest purposes can be used for other purposes. In light of this, I suggested that a better understanding, by protestors, of networks at their disposal and how they can use such networks for other community building projects is needed. Additionally, such an understanding by protestors may prove helpful for protestors to better organize and utilize their network resource and stage more effective but peaceful protests. Municipalities may use this information (networks) to communicate and connect with the communities they serve in a better way. In sum, the study further found that networks are important before the protest, during the protest and after the protest
Holland-Muter, Susan. "Negotiating normativities: Counter narratives of lesbian queer world making in Cape Town". Doctoral thesis, University of Cape Town, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/27892.
Texto completoStephens, Anthea Clare. "Negotiating boundaries : (co)-managing natural and urban areas on the Cape Peninsula". Master's thesis, University of Cape Town, 1998. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/9594.
Texto completoThe opportunities and constraints experienced in managing abutting urban and natural areas represent a microcosm of the issues facing future conservation practices. The focal areas for this study are Kommetjie and Ocean View -- two adjacent but insulated communities, that reflect basic socio-economic characteristics of South African cities, and situated amidst the natural areas of the Cape Peninsula. Current theoretical perspectives on natural and urban areas fail to offer a practical approach to inform integrated and equitable management of these ostensibly disparate realms of the environment. Although largely based in rural research, political ecology, which embraces a multidisciplinary perspective, promotes an integrated framework for managing adjacent urban and natural boundaries of the kind associated with the Cape Peninsula. Using conventional botanical methods, evidence in the case studies suggests that a relationship exists between environmental degradation in natural areas and the proximity of urban settlements. Moreover, the nature of environmental degradation seems contingent on the level of economic development of local communities. A social analysis of the communities reveals that co-operative management between landowners and key-players on either side of the boundary is similarly hindered by socio-economic factors. Using an adaptation of Blaikie's (1995b) "Chain of Explanation", the interactions between Kommetjie and Ocean View, and surrounding natural areas are integrated in an analysis which crosses disciplinary divides, and exposes the relationship between local environmental conditions and broader social issues. The boundary of a national park is not sufficient to manage the interactions between protected areas and neighbouring communities, but must be supported by partnerships between city and conservation authorities, NGOs, private landowners and residents in ways that address the needs of neighbouring communities. To facilitate local involvement in the management of the environment, residents, both rich and poor, must understand how the state of the environment directly affects their lives.
Huynh, Thuy Phuong Hong. "The positioning of nurses in health care in Vietnam: Interactions, organisations and space". Thesis, Queensland University of Technology, 2020. https://eprints.qut.edu.au/199694/1/Thuy%20Phuong%20Hong_Huynh_Thesis.pdf.
Texto completoJameson, Elizabeth M. "Review, analysis and operational readiness of Crisis Negotiation Cadre, Correctional Service of Canada, Pacific Region". Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 2001. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk3/ftp04/MQ62022.pdf.
Texto completoManning, Alexandra. "Nurses negotiating the pensions between bed management and individual atient care : the case of medical assessment units". Thesis, University of Nottingham, 2010. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.523596.
Texto completoMcLean, Stacy Avril. "Negotiating identity in multilingual parliamentary discourses in the Western Cape: a discourse analysis". Thesis, University of the Western Cape, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/11394/4282.
Texto completoSouth Africa transitioned from an apartheid system of government, with one ruling party to a new democracy; a transition that is still currently in progress. With this transition came many new freedoms, such as the ability to choose and freely express one’s linguistic and cultural preferences, amongst many others. This study analyses the negotiation of identity in constitutionally multilingual parliamentary discourses in the Western Cape in order to create a better understanding of the influence the new South Africa has on the identities constructed in parliamentary discourses whereby polylingualism is used as a linguistic resource. The parliamentary discourse is deemed constitutionally multilingual due to the fact that before 1994, African languages were not considered official, but presently Afrikaans, English and isiXhosa are credited provincial official languages in the Western Cape and are amongst the eleven national official languages. In order to investigate how performative identities are constructed discursively in the relatively new spaces of linguistic democracy, this study conducted a multisemiotic analysis on political manifestos in conjunction with a discourse analysis of a randomly selected Hansard Report of the Western Cape Provincial Parliament, which is the only parliament of the national nine to have an alternate political party in government. In collaboration with consulting the Standing Rules of the House, the National Language Policy Framework, the Western Cape Language Policy and observing the actual sitting, scholarly literature pertaining to language use, multisemiotic features and identity negotiation were evaluated to better understand the discursive spaces in which identity is negotiated as well as to achieve the objectives of this study.
Miller, Paul K. "The social reality of depression : on the situated construction, negotiation and management of a mental illness category in primary care". Thesis, Lancaster University, 2003. http://insight.cumbria.ac.uk/id/eprint/75/.
Texto completoTang, Pui-yee y 鄧珮頤. "Understanding informal caregiving in Hong Kong : a public health perspective on the negotiation between traditional values and modern living". Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/10722/206947.
Texto completopublished_or_final_version
Public Health
Master
Master of Public Health
Klenk, Andreas [Verfasser], Georg [Akademischer Betreuer] Carle y Alexander [Akademischer Betreuer] Schill. "Bilateral and Multilateral Negotiation for Agreement Discovery and Formation / Andreas Klenk. Gutachter: Alexander Schill. Betreuer: Georg Carle". München : Universitätsbibliothek der TU München, 2012. http://d-nb.info/1024567451/34.
Texto completoSchermbrucker, Noah. "A tenuous middle ground : conflicting rationalities and the lived negotiation of low income housing in Cape Town". Master's thesis, University of Cape Town, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/11705.
Texto completoThis thesis explores debates surrounding the social production and interaction of divergent housing rationalities through qualitative research in a low income housing development called Stock Road and in the offices of the para-statal company that developed and administered the area, the Cape Town Community Housing Company (CTCHC). Investigations draw on literatures of the state, development and critiques of South African housing policy to "sketch" the predominant characteristics of the CTCHC’s housing rationality. The contours of residents housing rationalities are explored through an engagement with literatures and case studies that stress the social and historical aspects of home-ownership.
Ridley, Tamerin Amy. "Negotiating identity and belonging: perspectives of children living in a disadvantaged community in the Eastern Cape Province". Thesis, University of Fort Hare, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/10353/d1019871.
Texto completoTrif, Georgiana. "Lost in transition? : the mitigating role of social capital in negotiating life after care of youth from Romania and England". Thesis, University of Kent, 2018. https://kar.kent.ac.uk/66432/.
Texto completoSandin, Niklas. "“Jag har inte tid” : En kvalitativ studie om föräldrapars förhandlingar vid vård av sjukt barn". Thesis, Södertörns högskola, Institutionen för samhällsvetenskaper, 2014. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:sh:diva-26288.
Texto completoBreen, Keith. "Negotiating the 'iron cage' : Jürgen Habermas, Hannah Arendt, and Alasdair MacIntyre in response to Max Weber". Thesis, University of Edinburgh, 2004. http://hdl.handle.net/1842/23765.
Texto completoWilson, Joanne. "A mixed-method psychosocial analysis how senior health care professionals recognise dying and engage patients and families in the negotiation of key decisions". Thesis, University of Bath, 2017. https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.725396.
Texto completoPaul, David. "Casting shadows and struggling for control : silence, resistance and negotiation in Australian Aboriginal health". University of Western Australia. School of Primary, Aboriginal and Rural Health Care, 2007. http://theses.library.uwa.edu.au/adt-WU2008.0015.
Texto completoEzechukwu, Rebecca Nneoma. "Negotiating (Un)Heard Voices: Exploring A Fourth Generation Evaluation Approach to Examining the Wraparound Process". Oxford, Ohio : Miami University, 2009. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc%5Fnum=miami1260316500.
Texto completoBroadbridge, Helena Tara. "Negotiating post-apartheid boundaries and identities : an anthropological study of the creation of a Cape Town Suburb". Thesis, Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University, 2001. http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/52353.
Texto completoENGLISH ABSTRACT: This study explores the complex and contested processes of drawing boundaries and negotiating identities in the post-Apartheid South African context by analysing how residents in a new residential suburb of Cape Town are working to carve out a new position for themselves in a changing social order. Drawing on data gathered through participant observation, individual and focus group interviews, and household surveys between November 1998 and December 2000, the study examines how residents draw and negotiate boundaries in their search for stability, status, and community in a society characterised by social flux, uncertainty, ambiguity and contradiction. It explores the construction and shifting of identities believed to be embodied in those boundaries, at the levels of the individual, the household and the community. A range of everyday social and spatial practices - including streetscape design, its use and contestation, neighbourliness and sociality, .household livelihoods and strategies, home maintenance and improvements - are shown to reveal residents' own conceptualisations of boundaries, their practical significance and symbolic power, as well as their permeability and transgression. The marking and maintenance of boundaries convey how social relationships, practices and power in the suburb are structured and continually negotiated. By analysing these actions and responses, the study illustrates some of the ways in which recent changes in South African society have unsettled the relationship between class, race and space to construct new boundaries and shape new identities. The fmdings suggest that although social differentiation among the residents is increasingly being restructured around class, race remains a salient variable in residents' constructions of themselves and each other. Ethnic-religious prejudice is also shown to influence local conflict and constructions of community. The study draws out four discourses through which residents contemplate and formulate circumstances and processes in their neighbourhood. The first emphasises racial integration, the second middle class suburban living, the third safety from crime, the fourth distrust and disorder. The discourses are significant, not only in their practical manifestation in everyday interaction but also because they suggest some of the ways in which connections and disconnections with the past, with (he old identities and the old affiliations, are managed in a new, post-Apartheid South Africa.
AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Hierdie studie verken die komplekse en betwiste prosesse van die trek van grense en die onderhandeling van identiteite in die Suid-Afrikaanse post-Apartheid konteks, deur te analiseer hoe inwoners in 'n nuwe Kaapstadse residensiële voorstad te werk gaan om 'n nuwe posisie in 'n veranderende sosiale orde vir hulself daar te stel. Op grond van data bekom deur deelnemende observasie, onderhoude met indiwidue en fokusgroepe, en opnames in huishoudings tussen November 1998 en Desember 2000, ondersoek die studie hoe inwoners grense trek en onderhandel in hulle soeke na stabiliteit, status, en gemeenskap in 'n samelewing gekenmerk deur sosiale vloeibaarheid, onsekerheid, dubbelsinnigheid en teenstrydigheid. Dit verken die konstruksie en die verskuiwing van identiteite wat gesien word as dat dit binne hierdie grense tuis hoort, op die vlakke van die indiwidu, die huishouding en die gemeenskap. 'n Reeks alledaagse sosiale en ruimtelike praktyke - insluitende omgewingsbeplanning, die benutting en betwisting daarvan, buurskap en gemeenskapsin, huishoudelike bestaansmiddele en strategieë, huisonderhoud en verbeterings - toon inwoners se eie voorstellings van grense, hulle praktiese betekenis en simboliese invloed, sowel as hulle deurdringbaarheid en oorskryding. Die afbakening en handhawing van grense deel mee hoe sosiale verhoudings, praktyke en mag in die voorstad gestruktureer en voortdurend onderhandel word. Deur hierdie optredes en reaksies illustreer die studie sommige van die wyses waarop onlangse veranderings in die Suid-Afrikaanse samelewing die verhouding tussen klas, ras en ruimte beïnvloed het om nuwe grense te konstrueer en nuwe identiteite te vorm. Die bevindings suggereer dat, hoewel sosiale differensiasie tussen die inwoners toenemend geherstruktureer word wat klas betref, ras 'n duidelik waarneembare onderliggende veranderlike in inwoners se siening van hulleself en mekaar bly. Etniesgodsdienstige vooroordeel word ook getoon 'n invloed op plaaslike konflikte en die konstruksie van gemeenskappe te wees. Die studie onthul vier diskoerse waardeur inwoners omstandighede en prosesse in hulle omgewing bedink en te kenne gee. Die eerste beklemtoon rasse-integrasie, die tweede voorstedelike middelklas lewenswyse, die derde misdaadsbeveiliging, die vierde wantroue en wanorde. Die diskoerse is betekenisvol, nie slegs in hulle praktiese manifestering in die daaglikse omgang nie, maar ook aangesien hulle sommige van die wyses waarop koppelings en ontkoppelings met die verlede, en sy ou identiteite en ou affiliasies, in 'n nuwe, post-Apartheid, Suid-Afrika hanteer word, suggereer.
Hammett, Daniel P. "Constructing ambiguous identities : negotiating race, respect and social change in 'coloured' schools in Cape Town, South Africa". Thesis, University of Edinburgh, 2007. http://hdl.handle.net/1842/2084.
Texto completoHammett, Daniel Patrick. "Constructing ambiguous identities negotiating race, respect and social change in 'Coloured' schools in Cape Town, South Africa". Doctoral thesis, University of Cape Town, 2007. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/10655.
Texto completoSouth African social relations in the second decade of democracy remain framed by race. Spatial and social lived realities, the continued importance of belonging - to feel part of a community, mean that identifying as 'coloured' in South Africa continues to be contested, fluid and often ambiguous. This thesis considers the changing social location of 'coloured' teachers through the narratives of former and current teachers and students. Education is used as a site through which to explore the wider social impacts of social and spatial engineering during and subsequent to apartheid. Two key themes are examined in the space of education, those of racial identity and of respect. These are brought together in an interwoven narrative to consider whether or not 'coloured' teachers in the post-apartheid period are respected and the historical trajectories leading to the contemporary situation. Two main concerns are addressed. The first considers the question of racial identification to constructions of self-identity. Working with post-colonial theory and notions of mimicry and ambivalence, the relationship between teachers and the identifier 'coloured' is shown to be problematic and contested. Second, and connected to teachers' engagement with racialised identities, is the notion of respect. As with claims to identity and racial categorisation, the concept of respect is considered as mutable and dynamic and rendered with contextually subjective meanings that are often contested and ambivalent. Political and social changes affect the context within which relations to identities are constructed. In South Africa, this has shaped a shift away from the struggle ideology of non-racialism and the respect that could be accrued through this. This process also complicated the status recognition respect historically associated with teaching. As local, national and global contexts have shifted and processes of globalisations have impacted upon cultural and social capital, the prestige and respect of teaching have changed. Appraisal respect has become increasingly important, and is influencing contested concepts of respect and identity. As these teachers exert claims to identities which include assertions of belonging in relation to race and attempts to earn respect, these processes are shown to be elusive and ambiguous. As a trans-disciplinary thesis, this work is located at the intersection of, and between, geography, education, history, anthropology, politics and sociology. Utilising a wide range of materials, from documentary sources, archives, participant observation, interviews and life histories, a multilayered story is woven together. The work's originality stems from this trans-disciplinary grounding and its engagement with wide ranging theoretical approaches. This thesis argues that the lived experience of educators reflects the ambiguous and contentious experience of 'coloureds' in Cape Town. Drawing upon wider literature and debate, the contested location of education - its commodification - in South Africa reflects broader concerns of educationalists in the North and South, and is imbued within concerns over development and sustainability.
Dietrich-Jones, Natalie. "The ma(r)king of complex border geographies and their negotiation by undocumented migrants : the case of Barbados". Thesis, University of Manchester, 2014. https://www.research.manchester.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/the-marking-of-complex-border-geographies-and-their-negotiation-by-undocumented-migrants-the-case-of-barbados(ca2236a6-0905-4512-ab27-a881362febda).html.
Texto completoMartin, Heidi. "Recollections and representations the negotiation of gendered identities and 'safe spaces' in the lives of LGBTI refugees in Cape Town, South Africa". Master's thesis, University of Cape Town, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/3592.
Texto completoSalles, Nanci Nunes Sampaio. "CIB-BA: cenário de negociação, pactuação e decisão da Política Estadual da Atenção Básica". Instituto de Saúde Coletiva-ISC, 2014. http://repositorio.ufba.br/ri/handle/ri/18261.
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As Comissões Intergestores Bipartite (CIB) foram instituídas com a NOB 93 para contribuir com a operacionalização do SUS. Com a sanção da Lei nº 12.466 e o Decreto nº 7508 que legalizaram a existência destas instâncias foi ratificado dentre as atribuições destas comissões, pactuar os aspectos operacionais do SUS, sendo a formulação de políticas de saúde um mecanismo possível de operacionalização deste Sistema. Entendendo a CIB como instância capaz de democratizar o processo de formulação das políticas, analisar como se deu o processo de negociação, pactuação e decisão intergestores na formulação da Política Estadual da Atenção Básica, atinente à esfera municipal, no período 2007-2013, pode proporcionar o suprimento de uma lacuna de conhecimento sobre a sua participação nesse processo. Portanto, trata-se de um Estudo descritivo, qualitativo sobre a CIB – BA, no período de 2007-2013, o qual utilizou a Análise Documental de Atas e Resoluções aprovadas nas Reuniões da CIB e reuniões do COSEMS no período supracitado. Para tanto, foi feita a análise de conteúdo destas Atas, à luz das Portarias da Atenção Básica, nas suas duas versões nacionais e a versão estadual, dos Regimentos da CIB e dos instrumentos de Planejamento – Plano Estadual de Saúde dos dois períodos. Buscou-se observar com isso como se deu o processo de negociação, pactuação e decisão da CIB para a formulação da Política da Atenção Básica, tendo como pano de fundo a Teoria do Jogo Social de Carlos Matus, identificando as situações de conflito e cooperação em momentos do processo decisório. Este estudo permitiu observar que estes momentos do processo decisório foram marcados por situações significativas de cooperação entre os representantes dos entes federados, município e estado, valendo ressaltar que tal movimento pode ter sido fruto de momentos de negociação em grupos de trabalho Bipartite e nas reuniões do COSEMS, que antecederam as reuniões da CIB. Tendo em vista as limitações do método adotado, a importância do aprofundamento da reflexão sobre os resultados apontados e a ponderação sobre os avanços da Política da Atenção Básica no Estado da Bahia, sugerimos a realização de outros estudos para maior avaliação sobre a formulação e implantação desta Política no estado, bem como, apresentamos proposta de desenvolvimento de Grupo Focal para promoção deste processo.
Thomson, Lisa. "Clerical workers, enterprise bargaining and preference theory : choice & constraint /". Access full text, 2004. http://www.lib.latrobe.edu.au/thesis/public/adt-LTU20050801.172053/index.html.
Texto completoIncludes bibliographical references (leaves 283-294). Also available via the World Wide Web.