39 resultados para Political work
em Institute of Public Health in Ireland, Ireland
Resumo:
Irish society today is dramatically different from the one in which youth work services were first provided on a spontaneous and philanthropic basis more than one hundred years ago. At no time has the process of change been more striking than in the last ten to fifteen years. At least four major types of recent change, all clearly interrelated, can be identified: economic, political, technological and cultural. A further important aspect of cultural change in Ireland has been the continuing trend towards urbanisation, and the corresponding impact, largely negative, on rural communities. Particularly significant in the context of a Development Plan for Youth Work is the migration of young people away from rural areas to study or work, with most of them unlikely to return on a permanent basis. This, along with the rapid reduction in farm holdings and other changes in the countryside, has profound sociological and psychological repercussions for rural Ireland and indeed for Irish society as a whole. For young people living in rural areas the challenge is to provide youth work opportunities which are specially tailored to their needs and which take account of the ways in which their circumstances (e.g. regarding transport and access) are different from those of their urban peers
Resumo:
Lessons from the Decent Food for All(DFfA) Intervention
Resumo:
Standards and criteria drawn from the recommendations of A Study of Approved Social Work.
Resumo:
Student Bursaries Incentive Scheme
Resumo:
Issues Paper: Practice Learning
Resumo:
Report: Access to the New Social Work Degree for Relevant Graduate in Northern Ireland
Resumo:
Review of the Diploma in Social Work (JM Consulting Report)
Resumo:
Proposed Consultation on Implementation of the EC Directive on the Protection of Young People at Work (94/33)