4 resultados para Institutional Support
em Universidad del Rosario, Colombia
Resumo:
Primera conferencia. Bibliotecas y Repositorios Digitales: Gestión del Conocimiento, Acceso Abierto y Visibilidad Latinoamericana. (BIREDIAL) Mayo 9 al 11 de 2011. Bogotá, Colombia.
Resumo:
En la última década, uno de los problemas considerados más relevantes de la política pública colombiana es la Seguridad Alimentaria y Nutricional, que contempla no sólo la disponibilidad y el acceso a los alimentos, sino también la utilización y estabilidad (disponibilidad continua) de alimentos sanos, limpios e inocuos para el consumo humano. En este marco, el gobierno de Garzón dio inicio política pública Bogotá sin indiferencia, junto con el programa Bogotá sin Hambre, que pretendía a través de diversos proyectos garantizar el derecho a la alimentación de la población de escasos recursos; uno de ellos es el proyecto 319 de Agricultura Urbana, el cual presenta continuidad hasta el momento. La presente investigación, realiza una evaluación externa y participativa al proyecto, desentrañando a través de la metodología del marco lógico, los objetivos y metas de dicho proyecto, para seguidamente evaluarlo apoyándose en la propuesta de Cohen y Franco (1992) y García y Ramírez (1994); bajo el supuesto de que su sostenibilidad depende del tipo de huerta, del apoyo institucional y del empoderamiento de los beneficiarios. Desde la mirada de los beneficiarios, se adelantó la evaluación de tres Estudios de Caso que permitieron desvelar los principios que regulan la política pública, las dificultades y problemas estructurales existentes a la misma.
Resumo:
The present investigation tries to establish the descriptive profile of the academic stress of the students of the masters in education and to identify which sociodemographic and situational variables play a modulator role. This investigation is based on the Person-Surroundings Research Program and the systemical cognitive model of academic stress. The study can be characterized as transectional, correlational and non experimental. The collection of the information was made through the SISCO inventory of Academic Stress which was applied to 152 students. The main results suggest that 95% of the master students report having felt academic stress a few times but with medium-high intensity. Variables gender, civil state, attending masters and institutional support of the attending masters act as modulators in academic stress.
Resumo:
The principal objective of this paper is to identify the relationship between the results of the Canadian policies implemented to protect female workers against the impact of globalization on the garment industry and the institutional setting in which this labour market is immersed in Winnipeg. This research paper begins with a brief summary of the institutional theory approach that sheds light on the analysis of the effects of institutions on the policy options to protect female workers of the Winnipeg garment industry. Next, this paper identifies the set of beliefs, formal procedures, routines, norms and conventions that characterize the institutional environment of the female workers of Winnipeg’s garment industry. Subsequently, this paper describes the impact of free trade policies on the garment industry of Winnipeg. Afterward, this paper presents an analysis of the barriers that the institutional features of the garment sector in Winnipeg can set to the successful achievement of policy options addressed to protect the female workforce of this sector. Three policy options are considered: ethical purchasing; training/retraining programs and social engagement support for garment workers; and protection of migrated workers through promoting and facilitating bonds between Canada’s trade unions and trade unions of the labour sending countries. Finally, this paper concludes that the formation of isolated cultural groups inside of factories; the belief that there is gender and race discrimination on the part of the garment industry management against workers; the powerless social conditions of immigrant women; the economic rationality of garment factories’ managers; and the lack of political will on the part of Canada and the labour sending countries to set effective bilateral agreements to protect migrate workers, are the principal barriers that divide the actors involved in the garment industry in Winnipeg. This division among the principal actors of Winnipeg’s garment industry impedes the change toward more efficient institutions and, hence, the successful achievement of policy options addressed to protect women workers.