966 resultados para Social Regulation
Resumo:
Dieser Artikel zeigt die Relevanz eines nachhaltigen Ressourcenansatzes auf, nach dem die Nachhaltigkeit vor allem eine Frage der nachhaltigen Ressourcennutzung ist, sei es im normativen oder im analytischen Blickwinkel. Der Artikel: (1) Zeigt in welchem Masse das nachhaltige Management der Ressourcensysteme eine Bedingung für Nachhaltigkeit sine qua none darstellt, (2) bietet einen auf den Konzepten „Ressource“ und „institutionelles Regime“ begründeten Analyserahmen, (3) illustriert die zwei genannten Konzepte anhand einer Analyse des Bodenregimes und anhand der Entwicklungen des Raumplanungsrechts und (4) schliesst mit einer normativen Anwendung des Ansatzes. Dabei werden die Entscheidungsvorgänge bei der Schaffung eines integrierten Regimes zum Management eines Ressourcensystems modelliert.
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BACKGROUND: Most theories of health-behavior change focus exclusively on individual self-regulation without taking social factors, such as social support, into account. This study's first aim was to systematically test the added value of received instrumental and emotional social support within the Health Action Process Approach (HAPA) in the context of dietary change. In the social support literature, gender effects emerge with regard to the effectiveness of social support. Thus, a second aim was the examination of gender differences in the association of social support with dietary behavior. METHODS: Participants were 252 overweight and obese individuals. At baseline and 12 months later, participants completed questionnaires on HAPA variables; diet-specific received social support and low-fat diet. RESULTS: For the prediction of intentions 12 months later, instrumental support was more beneficial for men than for women over and above individual self-regulation. In terms of dietary behavior at T2, a moderate main effect of instrumental support emerged. Moreover, received emotional social support was beneficial for men, but not for women in terms of a low-fat diet 12 months later. CONCLUSIONS: Effects of received instrumental social support found in this study provide new evidence for the added value of integrating social support into the HAPA.
On reaching goals: Emotional expression and display regulation in workplace and private interactions
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Recent research demonstrates that response inhibition-a core executive function-may subserve self-regulation and self-control. However, it is unclear whether response inhibition also predicts self-control in the multifaceted, high-level phenomena of social decision-making. Here we examined whether electrophysiological indices of response inhibition would predict self-control in a social context. Electroencephalography was recorded as participants completed a widely used Go/NoGo task (the cued Continuous Performance Test). Participants then interacted with a partner in an economic exchange game that requires self-control. Results demonstrated that greater NoGo-Anteriorization and larger NoGo-P300 peak amplitudes-two established electrophysiological indices of response inhibition-both predicted more self-control in this social game. These findings support continued integration of executive function and self-regulation and help extend prior research into social decision-making processes.
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Self-control is defined as the process in which thoughts, emotions, or prepotent responses are inhibited to efficiently enact a more focal goal. Self-control not only allows for more adaptive individual decision making but also promotes adaptive social decision making. In this chapter, we examine a burgeoning area of interdisciplinary research: the neuroscience of self-control in social decision making. We examine research on self-control in complex social contexts examined from a social neuroscience perspective. We review correlational evidence from neuroimaging studies and causal evidence from neuromodulation studies (i.e., brain stimulation). We specifically highlight research that shows that self-control involves the lateral prefrontal cortex (PFC) across a number of social domains and behaviors. Research has also begun to directly integrate nonsocial with social forms of self-control, showing that the basic neurobiological processes involved in stopping a motor response appear to be involved in social contexts that require self-control. Further, neural traits, such as baseline activation in the lateral PFC, can explain sources of individual differences in self-control capacity. We explore whether techniques that change brain functioning could target neural mechanisms related to self-control capacity to potentially enhance self-control in social behavior. Finally, we discuss several research questions ripe for examination. We broadly suggest that future research can now turn to exploring how neural traits and situational affordances interact to impact self-control in social decision making in order to continue to elucidate the processes that allow people to maintain and realize stable goals in a dynamic and often uncertain social environment.
Resumo:
Background Workflow interruptions during surgery may cause a threat to patient's safety. Workflow interruptions were tested to predict failure in action regulation that in turn predicts near-accidents in surgery and related health care. Methods One-hundred-and-thirty-three theater nurses and physicians from eight Swiss hospitals participated in a cross-sectional questionnaire survey. The study participation rate was 43%. Results Structural equation modeling confirmed an indirect path from workflow interruptions through cognitive failure in action regulation on near-accidents (p < 0.05). The indirect path was stronger for workflow interruptions by malfunctions and task organizational blockages compared with workflow interruptions that were caused by persons. The indirect path remained meaningful when individual differences in conscientiousness and compliance with safety regulations were controlled. Conclusion Task interruptions caused by malfunction and organizational constraints are likely to trigger errors in surgery. Work redesign is recommended to reduce workflow interruptions by malfunction and regulatory constraints.
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In the aftermath of the 2008 crisis, scholars have begun to revise their conceptions of how market participants interact. While the traditional “rationalist optic” posits market participants who are able to process decisionrelevant information and thereby transform uncertainty into quantifiable risks, the increasingly popular “sociological optic” stresses the role of uncertainty in expectation formation and social conventions for creating confidence in markets. Applications of the sociological optic to concrete regulatory problems are still limited. By subjecting both optics to the same regulatory problem—the role of credit rating agencies (CRAs) and their ratings in capital markets—this paper provides insights into whether the sociological optic offers advice to tackle concrete regulatory problems and discusses the potential of the sociological optic in complementing the rationalist optic. The empirical application suggests that the sociological optic is not only able to improve our understanding of the role of CRAs and their ratings, but also to provide solutions complementary to those posited by the rationalist optic.
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The federal regulatory regime for addressing airborne toxic pollutants functions fairly well in most of the country. However, it has proved deficient in addressing local risk issues, especially in urban areas with densely concentrated sources. The problem is especially pronounced in Houston, which is home to one of the world's biggest petrochemical complexes and a major port, both located near a large metropolitan center. Despite the fact that local government's role in regulating air toxics is typically quite limited, from 2004-2009, the City of Houston implemented a novel municipality-based air toxics reduction strategy. The initiatives ranged from voluntary agreements to litigation and legislation. This case study considers why the city chose the policy tools it did, how the tools performed relative to the designers' intentions, and how the debate among actors with conflicting values and goals shaped the policy landscape. The city's unconventional approach to controlling hazardous air pollution has not yet been examined rigorously. The case study was developed through reviews of publicly available documents and quasi-public documents obtained through public record requests, as well as interviews with key informants. The informants represented a range of experience and perspectives. They included current and former public officials at the city (including Mayor White), former Texas Commission on Environmental Quality staff, faculty at local universities, industry representatives, and environmental public health advocates. Some of the city's tools were successful in meeting their designers' intent, some were less successful. Ultimately, even those tools that did not achieve their stated purpose were nonetheless successful in bringing attention and resources to the air quality issue. Through a series of pleas and prods, the city managed to draw attention to the problem locally and get reluctant policymakers at higher levels of government to respond. This work demonstrates the potential for local government to overcome limitations in the federal regulatory regime for air toxics control, shifting the balance of local, state, and federal initiative. It also highlights the importance of flexible, cooperative strategies in local environmental protection.^
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The transition into formal schooling is a crucial foundation that can set children on a cycle of success or failure in both academic and social domains. A child’s abilities to express healthy emotions, understand emotions of self and others, regulate emotion, attention, and behavior, make good decisions regarding social problems, and engage in a range of prosocial behaviors, all work together to promote a successful school experience. However, many children have deficits in these skills by school entry, and educators lack the requisite tools to identify, track and assess skills these children need to learn. Thus, because social-emotional learning (SEL) is so crucial, assessment tools to pinpoint children’s skills and progress are vitally necessary. Previous work by the authors and other researchers has led to the development of strong assessment tools; however, these tools are often developed solely for research use, not practitioner application. In the following, using our assessment battery as an example, we will discuss the steps necessary to adapt SEL assessment for computer-based administration and optimal utility in early childhood education programs.
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En esta tesina presentamos los resultados de un proceso de investigación orientado a describir y analizar las influencias que tienen los mecanismos desarrollados por los trabajadores sobre la estructuración de algunas dimensiones claves del mercado de trabajo en el sector de producción de cine publicitario (PcP). La PCP se caracteriza por una modalidad de organización muy flexible y efímera, basada en proyectos individuales, que congrega a los trabajadores y recursos necesarios de forma temporaria. La transitoriedad de los proyectos plantea desafíos formidables con respeto a su coordinación y regulación en el tiempo. Sin embargo, los mismos funcionan sobre una organización permanente sustentada sobre una red de contactos sociales gestados entre los miembros. En este marco, surge nuestro interrogante acerca del papel que juegan las lógicas de los propios trabajadores en el incierto mercado de trabajo de la PCP. La perspectiva teórica adoptada en nuestro trabajo, parte de la consideración de que los mercados de trabajo son producto de construcciones sociales que se diferencian histórica y espacialmente y que por tanto, se hallan socialmente regulados por una diversidad de influencias. Por ello, hemos priorizado la investigación empírica del caso particular. Nuestro objetivo principal, ha supuesto la indagación de distintas dimensiones analíticas. Así, en primer lugar, presentamos las características socioproductivas y económicas más relevantes del sector para luego centrarnos en las cuestiones nodales de nuestro estudio que contemplaron un análisis detallado de los procesos de regulación de algunas dimensiones del mercado de trabajo, a saber: acceso, reclutamiento, calificación y movilidad. Así, esta tesina pretende ser un aporte al análisis de la dinámica de los mercados de trabajo en contextos productivos flexibles, así como una contribución al conocimiento de sectores escasamente abordados por los estudios del trabajo
Resumo:
En esta tesina presentamos los resultados de un proceso de investigación orientado a describir y analizar las influencias que tienen los mecanismos desarrollados por los trabajadores sobre la estructuración de algunas dimensiones claves del mercado de trabajo en el sector de producción de cine publicitario (PcP). La PCP se caracteriza por una modalidad de organización muy flexible y efímera, basada en proyectos individuales, que congrega a los trabajadores y recursos necesarios de forma temporaria. La transitoriedad de los proyectos plantea desafíos formidables con respeto a su coordinación y regulación en el tiempo. Sin embargo, los mismos funcionan sobre una organización permanente sustentada sobre una red de contactos sociales gestados entre los miembros. En este marco, surge nuestro interrogante acerca del papel que juegan las lógicas de los propios trabajadores en el incierto mercado de trabajo de la PCP. La perspectiva teórica adoptada en nuestro trabajo, parte de la consideración de que los mercados de trabajo son producto de construcciones sociales que se diferencian histórica y espacialmente y que por tanto, se hallan socialmente regulados por una diversidad de influencias. Por ello, hemos priorizado la investigación empírica del caso particular. Nuestro objetivo principal, ha supuesto la indagación de distintas dimensiones analíticas. Así, en primer lugar, presentamos las características socioproductivas y económicas más relevantes del sector para luego centrarnos en las cuestiones nodales de nuestro estudio que contemplaron un análisis detallado de los procesos de regulación de algunas dimensiones del mercado de trabajo, a saber: acceso, reclutamiento, calificación y movilidad. Así, esta tesina pretende ser un aporte al análisis de la dinámica de los mercados de trabajo en contextos productivos flexibles, así como una contribución al conocimiento de sectores escasamente abordados por los estudios del trabajo
Resumo:
En esta tesina presentamos los resultados de un proceso de investigación orientado a describir y analizar las influencias que tienen los mecanismos desarrollados por los trabajadores sobre la estructuración de algunas dimensiones claves del mercado de trabajo en el sector de producción de cine publicitario (PcP). La PCP se caracteriza por una modalidad de organización muy flexible y efímera, basada en proyectos individuales, que congrega a los trabajadores y recursos necesarios de forma temporaria. La transitoriedad de los proyectos plantea desafíos formidables con respeto a su coordinación y regulación en el tiempo. Sin embargo, los mismos funcionan sobre una organización permanente sustentada sobre una red de contactos sociales gestados entre los miembros. En este marco, surge nuestro interrogante acerca del papel que juegan las lógicas de los propios trabajadores en el incierto mercado de trabajo de la PCP. La perspectiva teórica adoptada en nuestro trabajo, parte de la consideración de que los mercados de trabajo son producto de construcciones sociales que se diferencian histórica y espacialmente y que por tanto, se hallan socialmente regulados por una diversidad de influencias. Por ello, hemos priorizado la investigación empírica del caso particular. Nuestro objetivo principal, ha supuesto la indagación de distintas dimensiones analíticas. Así, en primer lugar, presentamos las características socioproductivas y económicas más relevantes del sector para luego centrarnos en las cuestiones nodales de nuestro estudio que contemplaron un análisis detallado de los procesos de regulación de algunas dimensiones del mercado de trabajo, a saber: acceso, reclutamiento, calificación y movilidad. Así, esta tesina pretende ser un aporte al análisis de la dinámica de los mercados de trabajo en contextos productivos flexibles, así como una contribución al conocimiento de sectores escasamente abordados por los estudios del trabajo
Resumo:
This paper will analyze the Menem administration's social policy reforms during the 1990s. Neo-liberal reforms in Argentina are well-known both in the economy and in the social arena, but in the latter we can discern the presence of tripartite negotiations. The form of such negotiations, the type of agreements reached as a result, and the background to those agreements will be discussed. We also pay attention to the concept of competitive corporatism, which was established under the increase in market competition brought about by globalization.
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La historiografía ha presentado tradicionalmente la planificación urbana como una técnica progresista que, nacida en el contexto de los reformismos del siglo XIX, tiene por objeto principal la mejora de la calidad de vida a través del tratamiento del espacio urbano y la ordenación del territorio. Sin embargo un estudio detallado de la articulación histórica entre planificación urbana, economía política de la producción de espacio y dinámicas de evolución y cambio de las formaciones sociales revela un escenario muy distinto. Este trabajo sintetiza los planteamientos de la tesis Urbanismo y reproducción social. La planificación territorial de la multitud. A través de una serie de estudios de caso, esta investigación presentó la planificación urbana y territorial como un dispositivo gubernamental encargado de regular espacialmente la reproducción social de las clases subalternas en beneficio de los bloques hegemónicos. Prestando especial atención al efecto de la planificación sobre la vida cotidiana y a través de una historiografía social reflexiva y crítica, se muestra cómo la multitud fue paulatinamente desposeída de recursos materiales, capitales sociales y representaciones colectivas a medida que sus prácticas cotidianas fueron reescritas, recodificadas, reterritorializadas. Historians have traditionally pictured town planning as a progressive technique. Born in the context of nineteenth-century reformist policies, its aim would have been to improve the quality of life through the regulation of urban development and the urban fabric. However a close study of the relationship between town planning, the politics of space and the dynamics of evolution and change of social formations reveals a very different scenario. This work summarizes the main findings of the PhD thesis Urbanism and social reproduction. The territorial planning of the multitude. Through a series of historical case studies, this research showed how town and regional planning evolved to become a governmental dispositif in charge of the spatial regulation of social reproduction. Paying special attention to the effect of planning over everyday life and subaltern classes, and deploying a critical, reflexive social historiography, the thesis described how the multitude was dispossessed of material resources, social capitals and collective imaginaries as its practices were spatially re-written, re-coded, re-territorialised.
Resumo:
Recent applications of Foucauldian categories in geography, spatial history and the history of town planning have opened up interesting new perspectives, with respect to both the evolution of spatial knowledge and the genealogy of territorial techniques and their relation to larger socio-political projects, that would be enriched if combined with other discursive traditions. This article proposes to conceptualise English parliamentary enclosureea favourite episode for Marxist historiography, frequently read in a strictly materialist fashioneas a precedent of a new form of sociospatial governmentality, a political technology that inaugurates a strategic manipulation of territory for social change on the threshold between feudal and capitalist spatial rationalities. I analyse the sociospatial dimensions of parliamentary enclosure’s technical and legal innovations and compare them to the forms of communal self-regulation of land use customs and everyday regionalisations that preceded it. Through a systematic, replicable mechanism of reterritorialisation, enclosure acts normalised spatial regulations, blurred regional differences in the social organisation of agriculture and erased the modes of autonomous social reproduction linked to common land. Their exercise of dispossession of material resources, social capital and community representations is interpreted therefore as an inaugural logic that would pervade the emergent spatial rationality later known as planning.