3 resultados para Social groups
em Repositório Científico da Universidade de Évora - Portugal
Resumo:
Este estudo foi desenvolvido com a finalidade de conhecer as representações sociais de enfarte agudo do miocárdio, junto de três grupos sociais: doentes com enfarte agudo do miocárdio; respectivas famílias; e profissionais de saúde que cuidam desses doentes. A base conceptual do estudo foi a teoria das representações sociais. Como metodologia optámos por uma abordagem multi-método, com etapas complementares de recolha de dados: questionário e entrevista. Obtivemos uma amostra de 210 participantes, aplicá-mos o questionário a todos e realizámos 120 entrevistas. Analisámos os dados com re-curso à análise de conteúdo auxiliada por quatro softwares: Evoc, Simi, Trideux Alces-te. Encontrámos na interpretação das ancoragens e objectivação uma teia de sentidos compartilhados nas práticas sociais, nos diferentes grupos. Emergiram sentidos maiori-tariamente ancorados no biológico/físico e psicológico, com especial relevância na di-mensão emocional. O grupo dos profissionais de saúde fica detentor de um conjunto de representações que constituem um importante instrumento de trabalho; ### SUMMARY: Social representations of Myocardial Infarction, built by patient, family and health professionals This study was developed with the purpose of knowing the social representations of acute myocardial infarction considering three social groups: patients with acute myo-cardial infarction, respective families and health professionals who care for these pa-tients. The conceptual basis of this study was the theory of social representations. We have chosen a multi faceted method as methodology with additional gather of data col-lection through questionnaire and interviews. We obtained a sample of 210 participants applying the questionnaire to all and executing 120 interviews. The data was analyzed using content analysis supported by four software: Evoc, Simi, Trideux and Alceste. The interpretation of anchoring and objectification showed a set of shared meanings in social practices in the different groups. The biological / physical and psychological meanings emerged largely anchored with particular emphasis on the emotional dimen-sion. The group of health professionals held a set of representations that were an im-portant instrument of work.
Resumo:
This chapter explores the relationship between environmental conflicts and technical progress, trying to understand, in the case of large mines of the Iberian Pyrite Belt, in Alentejo, how emerging environmental problems conditioned the performance or led to the search for alternative technical solutions, taking as chronological limit for this observation the beginning of World War II. In the absence of the archives of the companies, the research was based on existing administrative documents in the state archives (mining engineers reports, the licensing of mining activities), on reports and documents published in specialized mining press, in particular, the Bulletin of the Ministry of Public Works, Trade and Industry, the Journal of Public Works, Trade and Industry (both in Portuguese), and finally in the local press. Despite that limitation, the information available shows that in global competition markets, the success of the British enterprise in Santo Domingo had the active search for new technical solutions for the creation and adaptation of existing knowledge to local problems in order to maximize the mineral resources available. The early development of the hydrometallurgical processes for the treatment of poor ores, named ‘natural cementation’, can be explained as the way these companies tried to solve problems of competitiveness, boosting economies of scale. Thus, they transferred the environmental costs previously limited to agriculture to more fragile social groups, the poor fishermen of Guadiana River and of Vila Real de Santo António. Therefore, the hydrometallurgy of pyrites was developed locally, pioneered in Santo Domingo that allowed the survival and expansion of the British company from the late 1870s, that is, at a time when most small mines shut since they were not able to compete globally. Through different consented and regulated processes (judicial), through conflict or parliamentary mediation, the State imposed exceptionally additional costs to companies, either for compensation, the imposing the application of remediation measures to reduce the environmental damage in some cases, thus contributing to derail some projects. These cases suggest that the interaction between local conflicts, corporate behavior and technological progress proves to be complex. This article aims to contribute to the debate on economic and social history between the environment and technological progress, arguing that the fixed costs and economic imponderable social risks were factors that encouraged the companies to search for new solutions and to introduce innovations since that would allow the expansion of their activity. In this process the companies sometimes faced environmental dilemmas and unforeseen costs with consequences on the economy of firms. The nature of the knowledge needed to address the environmental problems they created, however, is of a very different nature from that knowledge needed to face the environmental burdens that were inherent to the development of its activity.
Resumo:
This article seeks to justify why it is possible to speak about a culture of background investigations in Portugal, or even in the Iberian Peninsula, especially in the 17th-18th centuries. It will emphasize three points: the huge number of people who made qualifications in Portugal and in the overseas Empire; how it created specialized knowledge and the need for specialized officers to deal with it; to demonstrate how the culture of qualification conditioned behaviors in different social groups.