58 resultados para Banking institution
Resumo:
Cette thèse de doctorat porte sur le vécu et l'adaptation des couples âgés séparés par l'entrée de l'un des conjoints en institution. Notre démarche se fonde sur le paradigme compréhensif en sciences humaines. Nous avons rencontré sept couples dont l'un des conjoints vivait dans un Etablissement Médico-Social (EMS) de Suisse Romande, alors que l'autre continuait de vivre dans la communauté. Pour chaque situation, nous avons mené une interview individuelle de chacun des conjoints ainsi qu'une interview de couple. Nous avons effectué une analyse thématique du discours des interviewés. En outre, adoptant une perspective à la fois scientifique et clinique, nous avons étudié la dynamique conjugale des couples. Enfin, nous avons élaboré une typologie des différentes trajectoires de ces couples, en mettant en évidence les liens entre la dynamique de couple antérieure à l'hébergement, le vécu du moment de l'hébergement et le vécu lors des interviews. Nous avons montré le rôle central de l'ambivalence, vis-à-vis de la relation conjugale ou vis-à-vis de l'hébergement, dans les difficultés d'adaptation des couples à leur nouvelle situation de vie. -- This thesis is about the experience and adaptation of older couples separated by the accommodation of one spouse in a specialised institution. Our approach is based on the comprehensive paradigm in human sciences. We have met seven couples, of which one spouse was living in an institution (EMS) in the French speaking part of Switzerland, as the other spouse was still living in the community. In every situations, we have interviewed each spouse individually and both spouses together. We have carried out a thematic analysis of the discourses. Moreover, taking a scientific as well as a clinical perspective, we have studied the spousal dynamics of the couples. Finally, we have elaborated a typology of couples' trajectories, from earlier spousal dynamics to their experience of the transition and their experience in the time of the interviews. We have showed the crucial role of ambivalence, towards the couple relation or towards the accommodation, in couples' difficulties to adapt to their new living situation.
Resumo:
BACKGROUND: Postoperative chemoradiotherapy (CRT) of gastric carcinoma improves survival among high- risk patients. This study was undertaken to analyse long-term survival probability and the impact of certain covariates on the survival outcome in affected individuals. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Between January 2000 and December 2005, 244 patients with gastric cancer underwent adjuvant radiotherapy (RT) in our institution. Data were retrieved retrospectively from patient files and analysed with SPSS version 21.0. RESULTS: A total of 244 cases, with a male to female ratio of 2.2:1, were enrolled in the study. The median age of the patients was 52 years (range, 20-78 years). Surgical margin status was positive or close in 72 (33%) out of 220 patients. Postoperative adjuvant RT dose was 46 Gy. Median follow-up was 99 months (range, 79-132 months) and 23 months (range, 2-155 months) for surviving patients and all patients, respectively. Actuarial overall survival (OS) probability for 1-, 3-, 5- and 10-year was 79%, 37%, 24% and 16%, respectively. Actuarial progression free survival (PFS) probability was 69%, 34%, 23% and 16% in the same consecutive order. AJCC Stage I-II disease, subtotal gastrectomy and adjuvant CRT were significantly associated with improved OS and PFS in multivariate analyses. Surgical margin status or lymph node dissection type were not prognostic for survival. CONCLUSIONS: Postoperative CRT should be considered for all patients with high risk of recurrence after gastrectomy. Beside well-known prognostic factors such as stage, lymph node status and concurrent chemotherapy, the type of gastrectomy was an important prognostic factor in our series. With our findings we add to the discussion on the definition of required surgical margin for subtotal gastrectomy. We consider that our observations in gastric cancer patients in our clinic can be useful in the future randomised trials to point the way to improved outcomes.
Resumo:
During the last decade, conservation banking mechanisms have emerged in the environmental discourse as new market instruments to promote biodiversity conservation. Compensation was already provided for in environmental law in many countries, as the last step of the mitigation hierarchy. The institutional arrangements developed in this context have been redefined and reshaped as market-based instruments (MBIs). As such, they are discursively disentangled from the complex legal-economic nexus they are part of. Monetary transactions are given prominence and tend to be presented as stand alone agreements, whereas they take place in the context of prescriptive regulations. The pro-market narrative featuring conservation banking systems as market-like arrangements as well as their denunciation as instances of nature commodification tend to obscure their actual characteristics. The purpose of this paper is to describe the latter, adopting an explicitly analytical stance on these complex institutional arrangements and their performative dimensions. Beyond the discourse supporting them and notwithstanding the diversity of national policies and regulatory frameworks for compensation, the constitutive force of these mechanisms probably lies in their ability to redefine control, power and the distribution of costs and in their impacts in terms of land use rather than in their efficiency.
Resumo:
This paper analyses how banking regulation was introduced in Switzerland - one of the world's most prominent financial centres - which remained in place until the beginning of the twenty-first century. It shows that the law adopted on 8 November 1934 is a perfect example of capture of the regulator by the regulated. Essentially a political response in the context of the economic crisis of the 1930s, it largely reflected the interests of banking circles by limiting the intervention of the State as much as possible. The introduction of the new legislation was facilitated by the temporary weakness of Swiss banking circles, as they depended on the State to delay or prevent the collapse of many major credit institutions. They did not manage to derail the law as they had two decades earlier when they scuppered the federal bill on banks drawn up between 1914 and 1916. But this time they were better organized and more united, and intervened all the more effectively in the legislative process itself. The 1934 law is thus distinctive in that it made no structural changes to the architecture of the financial centre but merely codified its practices through flexible legislation meant to reassure the public. The law was aimed less at controlling banking activity than at keeping - thanks to skilfully calibrated political concessions - the State from having to intervene more directly in the internal management of banks or in the fixing of interest rates and the export of capital.
Resumo:
Most universities and higher education systems have formally taken up a third mission, which involves various public outreach and engagement activities. Little is known regarding how higher education institutions' organisations interact with academic's level of public outreach. This article examines to which extent the perceptions academics have of their institutions' culture and management style, as well as some of their own individual and statutory characteristics interact with their level of public outreach. Using the Academic Profession in Europe comparative and quantitative research database, this article focuses on two countries on the extremities of the spectrum - Switzerland and the United Kingdom.