6 resultados para non-profit
em Universidad Politécnica de Madrid
Resumo:
La investigación tiene como objetivo principal analizar la experiencia de la Asociación Instituto de Desarrollo Comunitario de Cuenca, en la práctica del desarrollo local en los territorios rurales de esta provincia. La necesidad de estimular a la población para que ésta forme parte de su propio desarrollo, pone de manifiesto la existencia de determinadas instituciones externas que a través de procesos como la facilitación, movilizan y crean capacidades en las personas y las empujan hacia la participación. Este es el caso del IDC de Cuenca que nace en 1985 como entidad privada —declarada de utilidad pública y sin ánimo de lucro—, con la voluntad de sus fundadores de trabajar en el desarrollo local de las zonas deprimidas de Cuenca. La labor desarrollada en estos más de 25 años tiene como centro la promoción de la persona como ser individual y como parte de su comunidad. Para la elaboración de la Tesis, se ha utilizado la metodología del caso de estudio centrado en el análisis de la experiencia del IDC respecto de las cuatro investigaciones realizadas centradas en el proceso de facilitación, las herramientas de formación e información, y la dinamización del tejido asociativo como resultado del proceso. La labor del IDC en la provincia de Cuenca se ha desarrollado a través de la ejecución de proyectos. Éstos se han llevado a cabo por medio de procesos de facilitación donde la creación de grupos de trabajo ha permitido mejorar la estructuración social de las zonas rurales. Los grupos de trabajo son creados y apoyados por el IDC a través de la utilización de las herramientas de información y formación, que deben estar adaptadas a las necesidades de los individuos y en este caso cuentan con una metodología de aplicación propia. La creación de diferentes entidades —asociaciones, cooperativas, clubes, etc.—, ha sido uno de los resultados del trabajo desarrollado por el IDC a través de los procesos de facilitación que han mejorado la estructuración de la sociedad rural. Pese a la complejidad tanto de los procesos de desarrollo como de la evaluación final de dichos procesos, la creación de grupos capaces de alcanzar determinados objetivos propuestos en su comunidad potenciando sus propios recursos, son el ejemplo de la dinamización social que se lleva produciendo en la provincia de Cuenca desde hace más de 25 años. The research's main objective is to analyze the experience of the Asociación Instituto de Desarrollo Comunitario de Cuenca, in the practice of local development in rural areas of this province. The need to encourage more people to take part of their own development, reveals the existence of certain external institutions which through processes such as facilitation, mobilize and create capacities in people to foster their participation. This is the case of the IDC of Cuenca that was born in 1985 as a private entity —declared of public utility and as non profit entity— with the intention, as stated by its founders, of working in the local development of the disadvantaged areas of Cuenca. The work carried out in these more than 25 years focused on promoting the person as an individual and as part of their community. In this research, the methodology of the case study has been used in the analysis of the experience of the IDC in four investigations carried out regarding the process of facilitation, training and information tools, and the improvement of social involvement as a result of the development process. The work of the IDC in the province of Cuenca has been developed through the implementation of projects. They have been carried out through processes of facilitation, where the creation of working groups has improved the social structuring of rural areas. The working groups are created and supported by the IDC through the use of tools of information and training, which must be adapted to the individual needs in each case, and even count with their own implementation methodology. The creation of different entities —associations, cooperatives, clubs, etc.— has been one of the results of the work carried out by the IDC through processes of facilitation which have improved the structure of rural society. Despite the complexity of development processes and the final assessment of these processes, the creation of groups able to reach certain objectives proposed in their community promoting its own resources, is an example of the social involvement that has been taking place in the province of Cuenca for more than 25 years.
Resumo:
From its creation, Spanish Young Generation in Nuclear (Jóvenes Nucleares, JJNN), a non-profit organization that depends on the Spanish Nuclear Society (SNE), has as an important scope to help spread knowledge about nuclear energy, not only pointing out its advantages and its role in our society, but also trying to correct some of the ideas that are due to the biased information and to the lack of knowledge. To try to have success in that goal, some high school lectures were taught and it has been organized regularly a Basic Course on Nuclear Science and Technology
Resumo:
From its creation, Spanish Young Generation in Nuclear (Jóvenes Nucleares, JJNN), a non-profit organization that depends on the Spanish Nuclear Society (SNE), has as an important scope to help transferring the knowledge between those generations in the way that it can be possible.
Resumo:
The main objective of this course, conducted by Jóvenes Nucleares (Spanish Young Generation in Nuclear, JJNN), a non-profit organization that depends on the Spanish Nuclear Society (SNE) is to pass on basic knowledge about Science and Nuclear Technology to the general public, mostly students and introduce them to its most relevant points. The purposes of this course are to provide general information, to answer the most common questions about Nuclear Energy and to motivate the young students to start a career in nuclear. Therefore, it is directed mainly to high school and university students, but also to general people that wants to learn about the key issues of such an important matter in our society. Anybody could attend the course, as no specific scientific education is required. The course is done at least once a year, during the Annual Meeting of the Spanish Nuclear Society, which takes place in a different Spanish city each time. The course is done also to whichever university or institution that asks for it to JJNN, with the only limit of the presenter´s availability. The course is divided into the following chapters: Physical nuclear and radiation principles, Nuclear power plants, Nuclear safety, Nuclear fuel, Radioactive waste, Decommission of nuclear facilities, Future nuclear power plants, Other uses of nuclear technology, Nuclear energy, climate change and sustainable development. The course is divided into 15 minutes lessons on the above topics, imparted by young professionals, experts in the field that belongs either to the Spanish Young Generation in Nuclear, either to companies and institutions related with nuclear energy. At the end of the course, a 200 pages book with the contents of the course is handed to every member of the audience. This book is also distributed in other course editions at high schools and universities in order to promote the scientific dissemination of the Nuclear Technology. As an extra motivation, JJNN delivers a course certificate to the assistants. At the end of the last edition course, in Santiago de Compostela, the assistants were asked to provide a feedback about it. Some really interesting lessons were learned, that will be very useful to improve next editions of the course. As a general conclusion of the courses it can be said that many of the students that have assisted to the course have increased their motivation in the nuclear field, and hopefully it will help the young talents to choose the nuclear field to develop their careers
Resumo:
Jóvenes Nucleares (Spanish Young Generation in Nuclear, JJNN) is a non-profit organization and a commission of the Spanish Nuclear Society (SNE). The Universidad Politécnica de Madrid (Technical University of Madrid, UPM) is one of the most prestigious technical universities of Spain, and has a very strong curriculum in nuclear engineering training and research. Finishing 2009, JJNN and the UPM started to plan a new and first-of-a-kind Seminar in Nuclear Safety focused on the Advanced Reactors (Generation III, III+ and IV). The scope was to make a general description of the safety in the new reactors, comparing them with the built Generation II reactors from a technical point of view but simple and without the need of strong background in nuclear engineering to try to be interesting for the most number of people possible.
Resumo:
Over the last few decades, the ever-increasing output of scientific publications has led to new challenges to keep up to date with the literature. In the biomedical area, this growth has introduced new requirements for professionals, e.g., physicians, who have to locate the exact papers that they need for their clinical and research work amongst a huge number of publications. Against this backdrop, novel information retrieval methods are even more necessary. While web search engines are widespread in many areas, facilitating access to all kinds of information, additional tools are required to automatically link information retrieved from these engines to specific biomedical applications. In the case of clinical environments, this also means considering aspects such as patient data security and confidentiality or structured contents, e.g., electronic health records (EHRs). In this scenario, we have developed a new tool to facilitate query building to retrieve scientific literature related to EHRs. Results: We have developed CDAPubMed, an open-source web browser extension to integrate EHR features in biomedical literature retrieval approaches. Clinical users can use CDAPubMed to: (i) load patient clinical documents, i.e., EHRs based on the Health Level 7-Clinical Document Architecture Standard (HL7-CDA), (ii) identify relevant terms for scientific literature search in these documents, i.e., Medical Subject Headings (MeSH), automatically driven by the CDAPubMed configuration, which advanced users can optimize to adapt to each specific situation, and (iii) generate and launch literature search queries to a major search engine, i.e., PubMed, to retrieve citations related to the EHR under examination. Conclusions: CDAPubMed is a platform-independent tool designed to facilitate literature searching using keywords contained in specific EHRs. CDAPubMed is visually integrated, as an extension of a widespread web browser, within the standard PubMed interface. It has been tested on a public dataset of HL7-CDA documents, returning significantly fewer citations since queries are focused on characteristics identified within the EHR. For instance, compared with more than 200,000 citations retrieved by breast neoplasm, fewer than ten citations were retrieved when ten patient features were added using CDAPubMed. This is an open source tool that can be freely used for non-profit purposes and integrated with other existing systems.