968 resultados para Social suffering
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This work aims at understanding of social suffering, caused by unsolved homicides in the black population. Thus, when the homicide occurs, family and friends become hidden or indirect victims of this crime. So, It will be made a historical imbalance of Afro-Brazilians to the capitalist system after slavery. Those who suffered from the absence of inclusive public policies. Also try to contextualize them within the current data with that place as the immediate victims of murder. Finally, reports from family members, through their life stories, and snippets from the ethnographic field notes were the methodologies used
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Cancer has been affecting people all around the world; disregard sex, ethnicity or social class. Despite the fact it is not always deadly, to be diagnosed and treated of cancer brings a lot of physical, emotional and social suffering, specially for those with less economic resources. Considering the complexity of the problem, there has been perceived that medical treatment is not enough to support cancer patients. There is an increasing understanding about their necessity of integral care, supposed to be given by a multidisciplinary health care equip that can consider all the different aspects involved in the illness process. Everyone has a particular way of been ill or healthy, and gives different meanings to the experienced events. The starting point of the research was the contact with a called work `group of shelter', developed with cancer patients by a multidisciplinary health care equip working on the LIGA Norte Riograndense Contra o Câncer. The research goal is to identify meanings people give to the shelter they receive in the group and to understand the way they experience the disease. Considering it singularity of this process, one worked with individually half-structuralized interviews, carried through with nine patients of the chemotherapy clinics and suck, that they had passed for the experience of the group of shelter, having approached getting ill, the treatment, the shelter and the recreation of the psychosocial processes (or not) after all this process. It was chosen as focus of analysis the creation of psychosocial processes and production of felt of these social actors through its discourse analysis perspective, boarded in accordance with the following thematic axles: the experience of the cancer, the shelter and recreation of the psychosocial processes the life. It was found that shelter has an extensive meaning going beyond the the group and involving others besides the multidisciplinary health care equip, and being important to give each patient the best possible benefit. It was also identified the importance of other social actors, such as relatives, friends and neighbors; added of religious faith, mentioned by all interviewees. It is to be considered the recovering capacity shown by eight interviewees, demonstrated by changing the way of interacting with others, getting new values and behaviors, and demonstrating more wisdom. We can consider the possibility of making this strategy to become part of the everyday practices of others health services working with cancer patients, what we think can help to minimize their suffering
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Pós-graduação em Psicologia do Desenvolvimento e Aprendizagem - FC
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A idéia central desenvolvida neste trabalho é que os estudos realizados sobre o deslocamento compulsório provocado pela construção de barragens, embora mencionem a dimensão do sofrimento social, não a submetem à análise. E, portanto, contornam ou deslocam o sentido subjetivo expresso no lamento e na dor, que é constitutivo deste processo social. Partindo do princípio de que os fatos analisados são socialmente compartilhados e construídos, portanto, portam sentidos mais ou menos duradouros ou mais ou menos perceptíveis - de todo modo, publicizados - que, por vezes, entre si interagem sob a forma de conflito, busco realizar uma análise do modo pelo qual esses sentidos se conformam em três situações sociais distintas e interligadas. Na primeira, a arena pública, examino a controvérsia sobre as principais categorias de classificação do processo de deslocamento compulsório, seus contextos e principais atores, tentando evidenciar os fundamentos de construção das retóricas, na disputa para fazer prevalecer uma determinada avaliação política e social deste processo. Nessa análise, destaco o conteúdo que se estabiliza e a intervenção de um ator o Banco Mundial e o seu papel na conformação de uma expertise sobre o tema. Na segunda situação social, o universo acadêmico, busco evidenciar o atual estágio dos estudos sobre o deslocamento compulsório, situando os principais eixos teóricos, de modo a salientar a relação entre campo disciplinar e interpretação, sobretudo, a hegemonia de temas disciplinares, nos quais não se inclui a análise do sofrimento. Por outro lado, ressalvo que, graças ao rigor desses estudos (muitos de cunho etnográfico), pode-se encontrar a referência ao sofrimento social vivido pelos grupos submetidos ao processo de deslocamento compulsório, permitindo-me fundamentar a hipótese advinda de minha própria investigação. Na terceira, analiso o processo de deslocamento compulsório, a partir de pesquisa realizada em Tucuruí (Pará Amazônia Brasil), evidenciando os sentidos do sofrimento social evocados por atores que o vivenciaram, destacando: a) a ausência de parâmetros para avaliar as conseqüências do processo vivido, tanto porque é uma situação inusitada quanto porque o próprio empreendimento desencadeia outras transformações locais e regionais que não são dadas a priori; b) a incessante busca de reposição de uma situação perdida ou almejada, que pode ser vista nos fóruns públicos (assembléias, reuniões, encontros), aqui considerados como fóruns de lamento, porque são, concomitantemente, lugar da reivindicação pública e espaços de encontro com a própria história e, por conseqüência, espaços de recordação e enunciação das perdas; c) o caráter de irreversibilidade, que reveste a construção social do sofrimento. Por fim, tento mostrar os constrangimentos, sobretudo econômicos, que se verificam na passagem da dimensão do sofrimento para a arena pública.
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Since its introduction into the United States in the 1980s, crack cocaine has been a harsh epidemic that has taken its toll on a countless number of people. This highly addictive, cheap and readily available drug of abuse has permeated many demographic sectors, mostly in low income, lesser educated, and urban communities. This epidemic of crack cocaine use in inner city areas across the Unites States has been described as an expression of economic marginality and “social suffering” coupled with the local and international forces of drug market economies (Agar 2003). As crack cocaine is a derivative of cocaine, it utilizes the psychoactive component of the drug, but delivers it in a much stronger, quicker, and more addictive fashion. This, coupled with its ready availability and cheap price has allowed for users to not only become very addicted very quickly, but to be subject to the stringent and sometimes unequal or inconsistent punishments for possession and distribution of crack-cocaine. ^ There are many public health and social ramifications from the abuse of crack-cocaine, and these epidemics appear to target low income and minority groups. Public health issues relating to the physical, mental, and economic strain will be addressed, as well as the direct and indirect effects of the punishments that come as a result of the disparity in penalties for cocaine and crack-cocaine possession and distribution. ^ Three new policies have recently been introduced into the United Stated Congress that actively address the disparity in sentencing for drug and criminal activities. They are, (1) Powder-Crack Cocaine Penalty Equalization Act of 2009, (HR 18, 111th Cong. 2009), (2) The Drug Sentencing Reform and Cocaine Kingpin Trafficking Act of 2009, (HR 265, 111th Cong. 2009) and (3) The Justice Integrity Act of 2009, (111th Cong. 2009). ^ Although they have only been initiated, if passed, they have potential to not only eliminate the crack-cocaine disparity, but to enact laws that help those affected by this epidemic. The final and overarching goal of this paper is to analyze and ultimately choose the ideal policy that would not only eliminate the cocaine and crack disparity regardless of current or future state statutes, but will provide the best method of rehabilitation, prevention, and justice. ^
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Pautado pelos conceitos de “conflito” e “poder”, este estudo tem por objetivo analisar a percepção dos atores relativa aos conflitos de poder e à sua gestão pelas partes da relação intersetorial, no contexto da implantação de um projeto minerador de grande porte no município de Morro do Pilar, Minas Gerais, Brasil. A proposta é apresentar estratégias de gestão construtiva de conflitos que respondam aos interesses das partes envolvidas – Estado, empresa e sociedade civil, de forma a alcançar o equilíbrio de interesses necessário ao desenvolvimento sustentável do território. Para tal, a presente pesquisa, inserida na vertente qualitativa e de perfil descritivo e exploratório, valeu-se do método de estudo de caso para avaliar os conflitos de poder envolvendo o processo de intersetorialidade objeto deste estudo, visando sua gestão construtiva. Ao seu término, verificou-se que os projetos desenvolvimentistas mostram-se prejudiciais nos planos socioeconômico, ambiental e institucional, produzindo uma miríade de conflitos de relacionamento entre os setores envolvidos, por afetar de forma negativa a vida da população, interferindo nas condições de reprodução e permanência. Consequentemente, conclui-se pela premência de se repensar os processos de sofrimento social desencadeados pelos modelos adotados, principalmente por governos e empresas, provocando desastres ambientais oriundos da má gestão dos conflitos de poder, para que se compreenda como eles afetam a vida das pessoas reais que fazem história em condições que não escolheram.
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This two part paper considers the experience of a range of magico-religious experiences (such as visions and voices) and spirit beliefs in a rural Aboriginal town. The papers challenge the tendency of institutionalised psychiatry to medicalise the experiences and critiques the way in which its individualistic practice is intensified in the face of an incomprehensible Aboriginal „other‟ to become part of the power imbalance that characterises the relationship between Indigenous and white domains. The work reveals the internal differentiation and politics of the Aboriginal domain, as the meanings of these experiences and actions are contested and negotiated by the residents and in so doing they decentre the concerns of the white domain and attempt to control their relationship with it. Thus the plausibility structure that sustains these multiple realities reflects both accommodation and resistance to the material and historical conditions imposed and enacted by mainstream society on the residents, and to current socio- political realities. I conclude that the residents‟ narratives chart the grounds of moral adjudication as the experiences were rarely conceptualised by local people as signs of individual pathology but as reflections of social reality. Psychiatric drug therapy and the behaviourist assumptions underlying its practice posit atomised individuals as the appropriate site of intervention as against the multiple realities revealed by the phenomenology of the experiences. The papers thus call into question Australian mainstream „commonsense‟ that circulates about Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people which justifies representations of them as sickly outcasts in Australian society.
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This is the second part of a paper that explores a range of magico-religious experiences such as immaterial voices and visions, in terms of local cultural, moral and socio-political circumstances in an Aboriginal town in rural Queensland. This part of the paper explores the political and cultural symbolism and meaning of suicide. It charts the saliency of suicide amongst two groups of kin and cohorts and the social meaningfulness and problematic of the voices and visions in relation to suicide, to identity and family forms and to funerals and a heavily drinking lifestyle. I argue that voices and visions are used to reinterpret social experience and to establish meaning and that tragically suicide evokes connectivity rather than anomie and here cannot be understood merely as an individualistic act or evidence of individual pathology. Rather it is about transformation and crossing a threshold to join an enduring domain of Aboriginality. In this life world, where family is the highest social value and where a relational view of persons holds sway, the individualistic practice of psychiatric and other helping professions, is a considerable problem.
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The broad objective of the study was to better understand anxiety among adolescents in Kolkata city, India. Specifically, the study compared anxiety across gender, school type, socio-economic background and mothers’ employment status. The study also examined adolescents’ perceptions of quality time with their parents. A group of 460 adolescents (220 boys and 240 girls), aged 13-17 years were recruited to participate in the study via a multi-stage sampling technique. The data were collected using a self-report semi-structured questionnaire and a standardized psychological test, the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory. Results show that anxiety was prevalent in the sample with 20.1% of boys and 17.9% of girls found to be suffering from high anxiety. More boys were anxious than girls (p<0.01). Adolescents from Bengali medium schools were more anxious than adolescents from English medium schools (p<0.01). Adolescents belonging to the middle class (middle socio-economic group) suffered more anxiety than those from both high and low socio-economic groups (p<0.01). Adolescents with working mothers were found to be more anxious (p<0.01). Results also show that a substantial proportion of the adolescents perceived they did not receive quality time from fathers (32.1%) and mothers (21.3%). A large number of them also did not feel comfortable to share their personal issues with their parents (60.0% for fathers and 40.0% for mothers).
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Narratives of forced migration are open to a variety of interpretations. In mental health, refugee narratives of arduous journeys in the face of systemic macro socio-political forces are often transformed from this context into a medicalized micro context of inner individual worlds. Both the dominant pathogenic lens of trauma studies and the growing salutogenic lens embodied in resilience research, often reflect a western cultural idiom of focusing on the individualized nature of these phenomena. Using qualitative data collected from refugees from Burma now settling in Australia, the article emphasizes the need for a more reflexive and expansive account of both suffering and hope within refugee narratives. It recounts these narratives within a conceptual framework which acknowledges the importance of the connections between the micro individual experience and the macro, socio-political context. This is not only a question of political principle, but also a matter of listening to the voice of those who know most about the relationship between macro forces of human rights violations and their impact on individual, family and community trajectories.
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This paper reports research into teacher-‐librarians’ perceptions of using social media and Web 2.0 in teaching and learning. A pilot study was conducted with teacher-‐librarians in five government schools and five private schools in southeast Queensland. The findings revealed that there was a strong digital divide between government schools and private schools, with government schools suffering severe restrictions on the use of social media and Web 2.0, leading to an unsophisticated use of these technologies. It is argued that internet ‘over-‐ blocking’ may lead to government school students not being empowered to manage risks in an open internet environment. Furthermore, their use of information for academic and recreational learning may be compromised. This has implications particularly for low socioeconomic students, leading to further inequity in the process and outcomes of Australian education.
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Training for bodybuilding competition is clearly a serious business that inflicts serious demands on the competitor. Not only did Francis commit time and money to compete, but he also arguably put winning before his physical well-being—enduring pain and suffering from his injury. Bodybuilding may seem like an extreme example, but it is not the only activity in which people suffer in pursuit of their goals. Boxers fight each other in the ring; soccer players risk knee and ankle injuries, sometimes playing despite being hurt; and mountaineers risk their lives in dangerous climbs. In the arts there are many examples of people suffering to achieve their goals: Beethoven kept composing, conducting, and performing despite his hearing loss; van Gogh grappled with depression but kept painting, finding fame only posthumously; and Mozart lived the final years of his life impoverished but still composing. These examples show that many great achievements come at a price: severe suffering...