819 resultados para visitor agendas
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In Responsibility to Protect and Women, Peace and Security: Aligning the Protection Agendas, editors Davies, Nwokora, Stamnes and Teitt address the intersections of the Responsibility to Protect (R2P) principle and the Women, Peace, and Security (WPS) agenda. Widespread or systematic sexual or gender-based violence is a war crime, a crime against humanity and an act of genocide, all of which are clearly addressed in the R2P principle. The protection of those at risk of widespread sexual violence is therefore not only relative to the Women, Peace and Security (WPS) agenda, but a fundamental sovereign obligation for all states as part of their commitment to R2P. Contributions from policy-makers and academics consider both the merits and the utility of aligning the protection agendas of R2P and WPS. Ultimately, a number of actionable recommendations are made concerning a unification of the agendas to best support the global empowerment of women and prevention of mass atrocities.
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This paper aims to develop a comprehensive approach to innovate urban policymaking and planning to successfully deliver the knowledge-based agenda. The paper, first, examines the concept of knowledge-based urban development, which has become a popular urban development policy and strategy in recent years, through a comprehensive review of the literature. It, then, introduces and discusses a novel methodological approach for effective policymaking and planning mechanism to deliver the knowledge-based agenda of cities. The paper, with the proposed methodology, brings together urban policymaking and planning approaches, and introduces a novel way to assess knowledge-based urban development achievements and potentials of emerging and prosperous knowledge cities. The paper, thus, provides an invaluable instrument to inform local and regional decision and plan making mechanisms to deliver their knowledge-based agendas and help them in moving towards building their sustainable knowledge cities.
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In various parts of the world, Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples are actively working towards Reconciliation. In Australia, the context in which we each undertake our work as educationalists and researchers, the Reconciliation agenda has been pushed into schools and English teachers have been called on to share responsibility for facilitating the move towards a new national order. The recently introduced Australian Curriculum mandates that Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Histories and Cultures be embedded with “a strong” but “varying presence” into each learning area (Australian Curriculum, Assessment and Reporting Authority, 2013). In this paper we consider the tensions between policy and practice, when discourses external to education are recontextualised into the discipline of English. We do so by applying an analytical framework based on Bernstein’s (1990, 1996,2000) sociological theories about the structure of instructional and regulative discourses. Our findings suggest that the space to exert Reconciliatory agendas in the Australian Curriculum English is ambiguous and thus holds the potential to not only marginalise Indigenous knowledges but also to create tensions between policy and practice for non-Indigenous teachers of English.
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Handbooks serve an important function for our research community in providing state-of-the-art summations, critiques, and extensions of existing trends in research. In the intervening years between the second and third editions of the Handbook of International Research in Mathematics Education, there have been stimulating developments in research, as well as new challenges in translating outcomes into practice. This third edition incorporates a number of new chapters representing areas of growth and challenge, in addition to substantially updated chapters from the second edition. As such, the Handbook addresses five core themes, namely, Priorities in International Mathematics Education Research, Democratic Access to Mathematics Learning, Transformations in Learning Contexts, Advances in Research Methodologies, and Influences of Advanced Technologies...
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The space and positioning of Indigenous knowledges (IK) within Australian curricula and pedagogy are often contentious, informed by the broader Australian socio-cultural, political and economic landscape. Against changing educational policy, historically based on the myth of terra nullius, we discuss the shifting priorities for embedding Indigenous knowledges in educational practice in university and school curricula and pedagogy. In this chapter, we argue that personal and professional commitment to social justice is an important starting point for embedding Indigenous knowledges in the Australian school curricula and pedagogy. Developing teacher knowledge around embedding IK is required to enable teachers’ preparedness to navigate a contested historical/colonising space in curriculum decision-making, teaching and learning. We draw one mpirical data from a recent research project on supporting pre-service teachers as future curriculum leaders; the project was funded by the Office of Learning and Teaching (OLT). This project aimed to support future curriculum leaders to develop their knowledge of embedding IK at one Australian university. We propose supporting the embedding of IK in situ with pre-service teachers and their supervising teachers on practicum in real, sustained and affirming ways that shifts the recognition of IK from personal commitment to social justice in education, to one that values Indigenous knowledges as content to educate (Connell, 1993). We argue that sustained engagement with and appreciation of IKhas the potential to decolonise Australian curricula, shift policy directions and enhance race relations between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians .
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As more people discover coastal and marine protected areas as destinations for leisure-time pursuits, the task of managing coastal resources while providing opportunities for high quality visitor experiences becomes more challenging. Many human impacts occur at these sites; some are caused by recreation and leisure activities on-site, and others by activities such as agriculture, aquaculture, or residential and economic development in surrounding areas. Coastal management professionals are continually looking for effective ways to prevent or mitigate negative impacts of visitor use. (PDF contains 8 pages) Most coastal and marine protected area managers are challenged with balancing two competing goals—protection of natural and cultural resources and provision of opportunities for public use. In most cases, some level of compromise between the goals is necessary, where one goal constrains or “outweighs” the other. Often there is a lack of clear agreement about the priority of these competing goals. Consequently, while natural resource decisions should ultimately be science-based and objective, such decisions are frequently made under uncertainty, relying heavily upon professional judgment. These decisions are subject to a complex array of formal and informal drivers and constraints—data availability, timing, legal mandate, political will, diverse public opinion, and physical, human, and social capital. This paper highlights assessment, monitoring, and planning approaches useful to gauge existing resource and social conditions, determine feasibility of management actions, and record decision process steps to enhance defensibility. Examples are presented from pilot efforts conducted at the Rookery Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve (NERR) and Ten Thousand Islands National Wildlife Refuge (NWR) in South Florida.
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Este trabalho procura abordar desenvolvimentos teóricos recentes dos estudos sobre democracia, com foco na democratização dos governos representativos, a partir da ênfase na participação social, nas transformações da idéia de representação política e na proliferação de novos espaços de deliberação pública. Sob esse pano de fundo, analisamos a criação e estruturação do Poder Cidadão no Equador, com ênfase em seu organismo fundamental, o Conselho de Participação Cidadã e Controle Social (CPC), o qual desempenha a dupla função de incentivar os âmbitos locais de deliberação e participação político-propositivos, e promover o controle social do Estado. Nesse sentido, o quinto poder da República equatoriana evidencia a ênfase concedida pela Constituição de 2008 à participação social e à redefinição das relações de representação política. Argumentamos, sobretudo, que o atual processo de refundação estatal vivido pelo país perpassa a institucionalização da participação e dos novos atores e lugares da representação política como forma de irrigação da esfera pública e reaproximação entre política e cidadania, debatendo algumas das potencialidades e desafios envolvidos nessa trajetória.
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Durante os dois mandatos presidenciais de Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva (2003-2010), percebeu-se, em virtude de pressões intra e extraburocráticas e de causalidades sistêmicas, maior acentuação do esboroamento da histórica condição insular do Ministério das Relações Exteriores (MRE). A participação de novos entes que não o Itamaraty na configuração da política externa, notadamente em seu vetor de execução, enseja novas agendas cooperativas e processos decisórios. Atores da burocracia federal, como os ministérios, vocalizam preferências que influenciam o jogo interburocrático e têm o condão de estabelecer possíveis pontes com a instituição diplomática, unidade de decisão por excelência. Na perspectiva intraburocrática, a ascensão de corrente de ação e de pensamento dos autonomistas, frente aos institucionalistas pragmáticos, permite escolhas de inserção internacional como o reforço da perspectiva sul-sul, na qual se inserem as parcerias com a África, o que indica a inexistência de monolitismo de opiniões no interior do MRE. Essa dinâmica faz-se presente e é necessária para o entendimento da Cooperação Brasileira para o Desenvolvimento Internacional (CBDI), tipo de Cooperação Sul-Sul (CSS) do Brasil que tem na Cooperação Técnica, Científica e Tecnológica (CTC&T) em segurança alimentar uma de suas modalidades mais atuantes e complexas. Convencionada como instrumento de política externa durante a ascendência dos autonomistas, corrente influenciada por quadros do Partido dos Trabalhadores, a cooperação em segurança alimentar teve o continente africano como locus primordial de manifestação. Embasado na internacionalização de políticas públicas domésticas, o compartilhamento de conhecimentos nas agendas de combate à fome, de combate à pobreza e de desenvolvimento agrário é fenômeno tributário da abertura da caixa preta estatal, o que ratifica o argumento de que há correlação entre níveis de análise. As diversas iniciativas cooperativas para com parceiros da outra margem do Atlântico Sul, eivadas de componente retórico de promoção de ordem internacional menos assimétrica, donde também subjace a busca consecução de interesses diretos e indiretos dos formuladores diplomáticos, guardam relação com as diretrizes mais gerais da política externa articulada no período estudado nesta dissertação.
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Garrod, Brian, Leask, Anna and Fyall, Alan (2007) An assessment of ?international best practice? in visitor attraction management: does Scotland really lag behind? International Journal of Tourism Research, 9 (1), 21-42. RAE2008
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Garrod, Brian; Fyall, A.; Leask, A., (2002). 'Scottish visitor attractions: managing visitor impacts'. Tourism Management 23(3), 265-279. RAE2008
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Nistor, N., Dascalu, M., Stavarache, L.L., Serafin, Y., & Trausan-Matu, S. (2015). Informal Learning in Online Knowledge Communities: Predicting Community Response to Visitor Inquiries. In G. Conole, T. Klobucar, C. Rensing, J. Konert & É. Lavoué (Eds.), 10th European Conf. on Technology Enhanced Learning (pp. 447–452). Toledo, Spain: Springer.